Without the communist oppression, I am absolutely sure I would now be a local stupid professor of philosophy in Ljubljana.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
In Georgia, people had already understood that communism couldn't survive, and I came to the institute in Moscow, and people still believed in it. They were completely different people, and I found it very difficult psychologically.
I allowed myself to be taken in by the intellectuals. I believed too much in the Polish intellectuals and followed their advice.
I grew up in a family that despised not only communism but collectivism, socialism, and any 'ism' that deprived the individual of his or her natural rights.
I'm not a communist, just a media theorist.
I want to be the first guy to reverse a communist revolution.
Communism was something so hideous that you had to be an exceptional conformist or a fool not to see the evil around you.
I grew up under Communism so we could only learn Russian, and then when Communism fell in 1989 we could learn a few more things and have the freedom to travel and the freedom of speech - and the freedom of dreaming, really.
I became a Communist because I fell in love with a man who was a Red and entered the Army to take care of the Fascists, and I knew it would please him if I became one.
I work in the most non-Communist job. I work for 'Martha Stewart Living.'
I am a Communist, certainly, but that doesn't mean I have to make films about the wheat harvest.
No opposing quotes found.