Me: Come in, 1988. This is 2003 call­ing. Hello, 1988, can you hear me? Shit, where’s the volume con­trol on this thing? Ah, there you are. Hi, Rosanne?

Me (looks up): Who are you? 

Me: I’m you from the future.

Me: Cool. Where are you? Does­n’t look like Sydney.

Me: Prague.

Me: Cool. You know, Vaclav Havel is one of my heroes.

Me: That’s kinda what I need to talk to you about. What’s that you’re reading?

Me: 10 Days that Shook the World by John Reed, it’s…

Me: Yeah, I know what it is. I just bought a replace­ment copy last year off amazon​.com.

Me: Amazon what?

Me: Don’t worry, it’s a thing called a Web site. They get inven­ted next year but you don’t find out about them till 1992. But that’s handy, because it’s com­mun­ism I wanted to talk to you about. There are a lot of changes going on around you right now, a lot of anniversar­ies of key events.

Me: Yeah, I know. I just went to a 20th anniversary of Paris May 68 and what’s hap­pen­ing with Lech Walesa and the whole thing in Prague is so cool.

Me: Mmm. That stuff all has a lot of rami­fic­a­tions next year. The Berlin Wall is going to be knocked down. The Prague protests lead to what they call the Velvet Revolu­tion. The Baltic states are going to stage a huge protest next year that will lead to their inde­pend­ence. But have you actu­ally con­sidered that all these amaz­ing protests that you think are so inspir­ing are reac­tions against the very state estab­lished in the revolu­tion that you think is so inspir­ing in that book?

Me: Hang on a second… You can’t blame Lenin for what Stalin did.

Me: Yeah, I’ve been using that argu­ment for a very, very long time. Next year, when you move on from Marx­ism and become an anarch­ist after a bad encounter with the Inter­na­tional Social­ists and a good encounter with the Beyond Social Con­trol anarch­ist con­fer­ence, you’ll adjust it slightly to say that Lenin was a good guy right up until he estab­lished the Cheka in 1921, but I’m begin­ning to wonder actually. 

Me: I become an anarchist?

Me: Yeah. Can we move on from that? I’m not saying that the need for protest and res­ist­ance in Russia wasn’t great or even that the cour­age to ima­gine another world and pursue that is any less than what I’ve always thought it, but I just think we need to acknow­ledge the con­tra­dic­tion inher­ent in cham­pi­on­ing Lenin and Trot­sky *and* Vaclav Havel and Lech Walesa and the Situ­ation­ists. Have you con­sidered that you might just be in love with the idea of protest qua protest? That you’ve com­pletely roman­ti­cised revolu­tion­ary fer­vour regard­less of its intent? 

Me: Whoa. I can be anti-cap­it­al­ist and anti-State Com­mun­ism at the same time can’t I? I’ve never said I think Sta­lin­ism was a good thing.

Me: Sure. And when you get to here, you’ll have just as big a prob­lem with how the post-Com­mun­ist coun­tries are ideal­ising cap­it­al­ism as the answer to all woes and hell, St Peters­burg is prac­tic­ally return­ing to a dream of mon­archy with its idol­isa­tion of Peter the Great. But this is my point: How come every place that threw off the chains of com­mun­ism cham­pioned cap­it­al­ism? Was there really no other way, no social­ist dream of liberty and equal­ity that could have sur­vived in the middle?

Me: I don’t know. Why the hell you asking me? You’re the older and wiser one right?

Me: Hoped you’d have an answer. You were always such a damned know-it-all. Oh well, nice talk­ing to you anyhow. Enjoy living in the base­ment while you can, by the way. All too soon, you’ll be moving out of home and it’s pretty weird from there. Oh and watch as many epis­odes of Soap as you can, ‘cos they stop show­ing re-runs soon. Did you know that the Czech for white sugar is Bily Krystal?

Me: You’re strange.