I decided that these merry days leading to Christmas, when we're infused with positive sentiments and hope for humanity, are as good as any other to read… 's _Mein Kampf_.

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Not really! In fact, I'm a bit embarrassed to leave my e-book reader lying around so that others can see what I'm reading… But my Theory of Reading actually supports and encourages reading _anything_ that has been very influential (for good or for ill) regardless of its literary merits, its veracity, its applicability today, or its moral qualities.

Not to put them all necessarily in the same bucket, but I have read _The Iliad_, _The Odyssey_, _The Communist Manifesto_ and _Atlas Shrugged_ — and I would read _The Bible_ and _The Quran_ too: all of them that are ( in a way or another) wrong, false, corrosive, harmful, evil, racist, sexist, pro-violence, or pro-war — or even all of those things at the same time!

Granted: may well be the wrongest among the wrong books… And in a way, that contributes to making it “useful” as a reading.

goodreads.com/review/list/6493

@tripu there was a dude in college I knew from my medieval course that said similar things. Granted he went on to discuss other things that he felt the book got right. I feigned interest and we lost contact. I wonder, what is he up to these days? Is he like that handicapped individual (he is physically disabled) in the 300?

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@caranmegil What “handicapped individual” “in the 300”?

@tripu the guy rejected by Spartans who switched to the side of Xerces

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