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And you are lynching Negroes

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File:Poster35.jpg
Soviet propaganda poster depicting alleged lack of freedom in America (1950, by Nikolay Dolgorukov and Boris Efimov). Freedom of the press is depicted as William Randolph Hearst spreading lies; Freedom of thought is depicted as judge giving a verdict for communist beliefs; Personal freedom is depicted as the lynching of an African American by members of the Ku Klux Klan; Freedom of assembly is depicted as Riot control.

"And you are lynching Negroes" (Template:Lang-ru; literally but at your lynching negroes) is a phrase known in several Eastern European and Southeast European countries (see below) referring to the use of the rhetorical device known as Tu quoque ("You, too") in political contexts.

The image of mobs in the United States lynching African American citizens was a part of the historical image of the United States.

The use of the phrase is traced to a Russian joke from the times of Nikita Khrushchev, about a dispute between an American and a Russian. There were several versions of the joke; one version from 1962 goes as follows: "The Voice of America asks the Soviet radio: 'Is it true that your shops are empty?' In three days the reply is given: And you are lynching negroes."

Variants

Similar phrases are used in various languages of Eastern Europe, in different variants, often in reference to different jokes, albeit with the same idea.

See also

References

  1. Interview with a Soviet emigrant
  2. "СССР в мировом сообществе: от старого мышления к новому", Progress Publishers, 1990 p. 487 Template:Ru icon
  3. Template:Ru icon "Your Letters", at Radio Liberty
  4. Dora Shturman, Sergei Tiktin (1985) "Sovetskii Soiuz v zerkale politicheskogo anekdota" ("Soviet Union in the Mirror of the Politicial Joke"), Overseas Publications Interchange Ltd., London, ISBN 0903868628, p. 58 Template:Ru icon
  5. ^ A record of a session of Bulgarian parliament Template:Bg icon
  6. "Gdzie Murzynów biją albo racjonalizm na cenzurowanym" Template:Pl icon
  7. "Nepoučitelný Topolánek" Template:Cs icon
  8. "A pragmatikus szocializmus évtizedei"Template:Hu icon
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