this post was submitted on 17 Feb 2026
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I'm reading Anne Applebaum's Gulag: A History. If you can't tell, it's about the history of the Gulag system, a collection of Soviet concentration camps. Interesting stuff, though gruesome.
I recently also read through IAEA's INSAG-7 report on the Chernobyl accident. HBO's Chernobyl is a wonderful series, but the last episode bothered me since I knew it gets a lot of things wrong. After digging around YouTube videos for a bit, I found a lot of them confused and contradictory. Eventually I decided to go to the source and read the report in an effort to understand what happened. It's a surprisingly understandable and not terribly long, and pretty much the most authoritative source on the accident. It's amazing how many people make videos about Chernobyl who clearly haven't read it. What really boiled my coolant, however, was how it was clear the Soviet nuclear institutes knew about the design flaws that caused the accident and even knew how to fix them, but they chose to do nothing. They. Fucking. Knew. They just blamed the operators and got away with it.
The HBO series is great, but it is really inaccurate.
Applebaum's book on the Soviet take over of Eastern Europe was a fascinating read.