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468 pages, Paperback
First published January 1, 1990
"the system has degenerated into one that penalizes initiative, efficiency, decency, and responsibility while rewarding opportunism, laziness, sloganeering, and deviousness."Gorbachev was acutely aware of various insanities of the Soviet centrally planned economy, nationwide corruption, cynicism, alcoholism, overall inertia, and, perhaps the worst of all, the unparalleled degree of resistance from the party bureaucracy. From the very beginning of his term Gorbachev wanted to reform the Soviet empire so that it could overcome the monstrous crisis and perhaps even thrive.
"[...] the term has acquired more complex political connotations. It stands for greater openness and candor in government affairs and for an interplay of different and sometimes conflicting views in political debtaes, in the press, and in Soviet culture."The authors show that Gorbachev used glasnost as a strategy to overcome the monstrously immovable, entrenched party bureaucracy, totally unable to change.