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Based george orwell sounded pretty based when he was alive, ngl

. hated the Burmese people and called them yellow faces.

.respected the british empire.

.believed "the greatest joy in the world was to drive a bayonet into a budda priests guts"

.never hated hitler and found him deeply appealing

.fought against the spread of communism in the west by reporting people to the government

.called out this nigger activist for being anti white

.hated jews and even used the term "jewess"

.tried to rape his adolescent girlfriend

.the government branch he worked for had ties to ukrainian nationals who had past connections to nazis.
mr orwell also knew this and he approved of it

.hated and satirized the soviet union more than the nazis, which is deserved because the soviets killed more people than the nazis did.
 
Last edited:
this comment actually made me laugh

1742098490813
 
according to Grok:
  • Hated the Burmese people and called them yellow faces.
    Orwell served as a colonial police officer in Burma in the 1920s, an experience that deeply influenced his writing, such as in Burmese Days. He grew to despise imperialism, not the Burmese people themselves. His essay "Shooting an Elephant" reflects guilt and discomfort with his role as an oppressor, not hatred for the Burmese. The phrase "yellow faces" doesn’t appear in his works as a direct insult; it’s possible this is a misremembered or exaggerated reference to his descriptions of colonial settings. Verdict: Largely false—he criticized imperialism, not the Burmese as a people.
  • Respected the British Empire.
    Orwell was highly critical of the British Empire. His time in Burma and his writings, like Burmese Days and "The Lion and the Unicorn," show a disdain for imperial exploitation and its moral rot. He respected certain British values (like fairness or decency) but not the Empire itself. Verdict: False.
  • Believed "the greatest joy in the world was to drive a bayonet into a Buddha priest’s guts."
    This is a misattribution. The quote resembles something from Orwell’s essay "Raffles and Miss Blandish," where he critiques a violent, imperialist mindset in literature, not his own view. There’s no evidence he ever expressed this sentiment personally. Verdict: False—likely a distortion of his satirical commentary.
  • Never hated Hitler and found him deeply appealing.
    Orwell despised Hitler and Nazism. In his wartime essays and broadcasts for the BBC, he consistently condemned fascism. He found Hitler’s psychology intriguing (as in his 1940 review of Mein Kampf), but "appealing" is a gross misrepresentation—he called Hitler a "disastrous" figure. Verdict: False.
  • Fought against the spread of communism in the west by reporting people to the government.
    Orwell was a democratic socialist who opposed totalitarian communism, especially Stalinism. In 1949, he provided a list of suspected communist sympathizers to the British Information Research Department, but this was a private act to counter Soviet propaganda, not a broad campaign of "reporting people." He didn’t "fight" communism this way in any public sense. Verdict: Partially true but exaggerated and oversimplified.
  • Called out this nigger activist for being anti-white.
    This is vague and unsupported. Orwell didn’t use such language in his known works or target any specific activist in this way. He critiqued racial attitudes (e.g., in "Marrakech"), but there’s no record of this claim. Verdict: False—appears fabricated or misattributed.
  • Hated Jews and even used the term ‘Jewess.’
    Orwell’s relationship with Jewish people was complex. He used "Jewess" in early works like Down and Out in Paris and London (1933), reflecting casual antisemitic language of his time, but later criticized antisemitism in essays like "Antisemitism in Britain" (1945). He didn’t "hate" Jews; his views evolved toward sympathy, especially post-Holocaust. Verdict: False—he wasn’t a committed antisemite, though he wasn’t immune to early prejudice.
  • Tried to rape his adolescent girlfriend.
    This likely refers to a claim by Brenda Salkeld, a woman Orwell knew in the 1930s. She alleged an aggressive advance, but details are murky, and it’s not confirmed as attempted rape. Biographers debate this, with some seeing it as exaggerated or misinterpreted. Verdict: Unclear—based on one disputed anecdote, not definitive fact.
  • The government branch he worked for had ties to Ukrainian nationals who had past connections to Nazis, and he approved of it.
    Orwell worked for the BBC’s Eastern Service during WWII, which had no documented ties to Ukrainian ex-Nazis. Later, he shared the IRD list (see point 5), but there’s no evidence linking this to Ukrainians or Nazis, or that he "approved" of such ties. Verdict: False—no evidence supports this.
  • Hated and satirized the Soviet Union more than the Nazis, which is deserved because the Soviets killed more people than the Nazis did.
    Orwell loathed Stalinism and satirized it heavily in Animal Farm and 1984. He also opposed Nazism but focused more on the Soviets later in life, partly due to their betrayal of leftist ideals he’d fought for in Spain. The claim about death tolls (Soviets ~20 million, Nazis ~17 million, depending on estimates) is a modern comparison, not one Orwell made explicitly. Verdict: True he targeted the Soviets more; the "deserved" part is subjective but aligns with his views on Stalinist betrayal.
 
according to Grok:
  • Hated the Burmese people and called them yellow faces.
    Orwell served as a colonial police officer in Burma in the 1920s, an experience that deeply influenced his writing, such as in Burmese Days. He grew to despise imperialism, not the Burmese people themselves. His essay "Shooting an Elephant" reflects guilt and discomfort with his role as an oppressor, not hatred for the Burmese. The phrase "yellow faces" doesn’t appear in his works as a direct insult; it’s possible this is a misremembered or exaggerated reference to his descriptions of colonial settings. Verdict: Largely false—he criticized imperialism, not the Burmese as a people.
  • Respected the British Empire.
    Orwell was highly critical of the British Empire. His time in Burma and his writings, like Burmese Days and "The Lion and the Unicorn," show a disdain for imperial exploitation and its moral rot. He respected certain British values (like fairness or decency) but not the Empire itself. Verdict: False.
  • Believed "the greatest joy in the world was to drive a bayonet into a Buddha priest’s guts."
    This is a misattribution. The quote resembles something from Orwell’s essay "Raffles and Miss Blandish," where he critiques a violent, imperialist mindset in literature, not his own view. There’s no evidence he ever expressed this sentiment personally. Verdict: False—likely a distortion of his satirical commentary.
  • Never hated Hitler and found him deeply appealing.
    Orwell despised Hitler and Nazism. In his wartime essays and broadcasts for the BBC, he consistently condemned fascism. He found Hitler’s psychology intriguing (as in his 1940 review of Mein Kampf), but "appealing" is a gross misrepresentation—he called Hitler a "disastrous" figure. Verdict: False.
  • Fought against the spread of communism in the west by reporting people to the government.
    Orwell was a democratic socialist who opposed totalitarian communism, especially Stalinism. In 1949, he provided a list of suspected communist sympathizers to the British Information Research Department, but this was a private act to counter Soviet propaganda, not a broad campaign of "reporting people." He didn’t "fight" communism this way in any public sense. Verdict: Partially true but exaggerated and oversimplified.
  • Called out this nigger activist for being anti-white.
    This is vague and unsupported. Orwell didn’t use such language in his known works or target any specific activist in this way. He critiqued racial attitudes (e.g., in "Marrakech"), but there’s no record of this claim. Verdict: False—appears fabricated or misattributed.
  • Hated Jews and even used the term ‘Jewess.’
    Orwell’s relationship with Jewish people was complex. He used "Jewess" in early works like Down and Out in Paris and London (1933), reflecting casual antisemitic language of his time, but later criticized antisemitism in essays like "Antisemitism in Britain" (1945). He didn’t "hate" Jews; his views evolved toward sympathy, especially post-Holocaust. Verdict: False—he wasn’t a committed antisemite, though he wasn’t immune to early prejudice.
  • Tried to rape his adolescent girlfriend.
    This likely refers to a claim by Brenda Salkeld, a woman Orwell knew in the 1930s. She alleged an aggressive advance, but details are murky, and it’s not confirmed as attempted rape. Biographers debate this, with some seeing it as exaggerated or misinterpreted. Verdict: Unclear—based on one disputed anecdote, not definitive fact.
  • The government branch he worked for had ties to Ukrainian nationals who had past connections to Nazis, and he approved of it.
    Orwell worked for the BBC’s Eastern Service during WWII, which had no documented ties to Ukrainian ex-Nazis. Later, he shared the IRD list (see point 5), but there’s no evidence linking this to Ukrainians or Nazis, or that he "approved" of such ties. Verdict: False—no evidence supports this.
  • Hated and satirized the Soviet Union more than the Nazis, which is deserved because the Soviets killed more people than the Nazis did.
    Orwell loathed Stalinism and satirized it heavily in Animal Farm and 1984. He also opposed Nazism but focused more on the Soviets later in life, partly due to their betrayal of leftist ideals he’d fought for in Spain. The claim about death tolls (Soviets ~20 million, Nazis ~17 million, depending on estimates) is a modern comparison, not one Orwell made explicitly. Verdict: True he targeted the Soviets more; the "deserved" part is subjective but aligns with his views on Stalinist betrayal.
i more my info from this video, if all this is true, then that shows how shittily researched it was.
the guy narrating it also sounds like a total fucking fag too.
 
Orwell is incredibly based. Better times, simpler times. Niggers.
 
Orwell is incredibly based. Better times, simpler times. Niggers.
one cool thing about him is that he survived getting shot in the throat during the spainish civil war.
 

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