(long post about communism and post-communism)
While I haven't "lived" in communism, I've worked in communist countries, and I've seen the post-communism process in my own country (luckily, from the right side of the fence).
I can only agree with everything you said there. Though, from what I've seen, that's still a very forgiving judgement. In Vietnam, I've seen that typical "live with parents and children in 50 square meters" as well as "man on street owns no shirt", side by side with "man owns two building blocks". I've seen
"50 patients in one room, two nurses, relatives doing the daily care and sleeping on floor under patient's bed" in hospital, and
"air-conditioned single bed rooms with dedicated nurse and maid, marble-floor, oil paintings, and television" in the same hospital, three floors higher. For, you know, the comrades who are a bit better than that vermin below.
I've seen "Oh, you got no thousand dollars in cash (note: monthly salary being 40-50 dollars)? Too bad for you, looks like you will lose your leg. Come on, what's a thousand dollars. There's always loan sharks, or you could sell a child to a Thai prostitution band. No joking there. That's the communism I've seen. Same communism would arrest tourists on the airport for taking photographs (clearly, if you take a photo at an airport, you must be spy!). Same communists would only let you leave the country after you paid a $100 ransom. Again, no joke.
I've also seen the German reunion, which I guess was not much different from what you Czechs saw. Except in our case, there were two sides, and both sides were lied to, both sides were cheated, and both sides were unhappy with each other afterwards. A lot of people (on both sides, funnily) wish the wall was rebuilt, and twice as high.
I've seen Dresden a week before the reunion, which from my point of view looked as if you were in the middle of World War II (black buildings, destroyed buildings, meter-deep holes in the street, tank tracks).
What Kohl promised was Lands of Milk and Honey for everybody. Turned out the "trustees" responsible for the privatization were the biggest criminals of all (none being better than the previous, really). Openly accepting bribes and then selling companies for one euro each, just to be cannibalized. Turned out the people in the East were unsuitable for the western work market. Turned out nobody really wanted to invest in the East (rather, just buy cheap and take what you can). Turned out some of the most basic things like "see a doctor" still don't work out 20 years later in some quite big regions in the East, and don't even try to find a job or such there.
On the other hand, there's cities which have been leeching on the "solidary tax" and every other form of support for the last 20 years, and in these places, everything is golden. Some cities in the East (especially at the Ostsee) are much nicer cities than any city in the West, in perfectly flawless condition (whereas here we have a 60 year old telephone network and holes in the streets). Yet they refuse to let go on leeching on the solidary tax (which by the way, was "limited to 2 years", uh huh) in the typical socialist "no, why... this is our good right" manner.
The single biggest problem is that there's no negative consequences whatsoever. There's immunity for most people involved in the decisions to begin with, but even for the few who don't have immunity, the consequences are .... zero.
Anything where the state has a say in, you can basically do what you want. Take the postal service as an example. Used to be owned by the state, everybody working there was a public officer. Result: they were maximally lazy, they worked maximally bad, they went on "regimen" twice per year (which is nothing but a different word for "I'm having four weeks of extra holiday and the state is paying for it"), etc etc etc. Eventually they accumulated so much debt that the state couldn't afford it any longer, so it was privatized.
Privatized, huh... except it's all lies, the state still acts as major stock holder, the only difference is now you have two classes of employees. One class is the lazy bastard class of officials, and the other ones are exploited in a sheer unethical manner. Because, after all, the company must find its way towards being profitable again. You can tell
exactly at first sight who is an officer and who isn't. Same story for national railway and telephone.
Telephone is yet another such sheer unbelieveable thing. Telekom is now a "private company" (for the most part owned by the state), yet they not only use the phone lines that were paid from tax payer's money for free, they also charge other competing companies if they want to use these same lines. Excuse me? WTF?
Same thing in France, by the way... where autoroutes are first built from tax payer's money, and then handed over to a privately owned company which subsequently charges that same tax payer who paid for the road to be constructed in the first place, only so they may use it. Socialists, yay.