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by nnq 3044 days ago
Wait, so somebody actively tried to kill the scourge of communism in it womb, and you say it like it's a bad thing?!

Maybe that civil war should've been bloodier, if only the other side could have won... it would have spared the rest of the world at least (hint: Eastern Europe) from the hideous ideology and politics that spread from Rusia and infested them and dragged them down for decades after decades.

4 comments

Please don't use this site for refighting old ideological battles, regardless of how right you are or feel. There's nothing more destructive of the intellectual curiosity that is HN's raison d'ĂȘtre.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

OK. Sorry. I said it in a very over the top and inflammatory way, in a sort of "ideological trolling" way. Anyway, thanks for the civil reply and for me still having an account :) I'll try to refrain from using HN when I'm too bored/annoyed to say anything of value and not too inflammatory.
Thanks! Much appreciated.
You can't really look at history in a compartmentalized manner like this, or rather, I guess I'm arguing that your "maybe" is closer to "probably not". If we're going to explore hypotheticals, it is very likely that without the harsh policies of forced industrialization in the USSR at the hands of Stalin that Russia would not have been in a position to resist Nazi Germany. Which would spell a worse fate for Eastern Europe at the hands of the Nazis (extermination, enslavement of the Slavic races, etc), not to mention a much bigger problem for the rest of the world in terms of dealing with Hitler.
It is also quite possible that without USSR to run interference in Weimar, and Stalin's support for NSDAP, nazis might not have come to power, or would have fewer resources to work with.

It is also not a given that Russia would not have industrialized even by more reasonable means.

Russia is in a geographical position where it will always have pretensions on Eastern Europe. Communism was a veneer for imperialism, and if it weren't for NATO and the EU, the same would happen today.
You realize that communism didn't drag Russia down but actually improved their quality of life from the reign of the Czars right? They were an unindustrialized starving shithole and became 2nd world power. Communism was far from perfect, but it was a step forward at least up until the mid 1950s.
"it was a step forward" that is no way to move forward. Setting aside political ideology it was one of the most murderous regiemes the planet has ever seen. For the tens of millions who it intentionally starved to death, worked to death in the gulag, or just summarily murdered it was certainly not better than living in an undeveloped shithole. For them its forward movement was only toward the grave.

Imagine all the good that might have been done by these millions if their human dignity were upheld and they were allowed to live. Perhaps one of them would have developed a great medical breakthrough. Imagine the inumerable works of art and music, theater that might have been made. Imagine the things they could have built and done to make the world a better place. If they had children and grand-children what of their potential contributions? Russia might actually have become the greatest world power.

> For the tens of millions who it intentionally starved to death, worked to death in the gulag, or just summarily murdered

Tens of millions? Intentionally starved? Citations needed, to say the least.

Fair enough, combined all purposive deaths, though hotly debated, per wikipedia under Stalin alone the number ranges from 8 to 61 million. So my tens of millions in that context is not out of line though safer to say millions. Either way its abhorrent.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mass_killings_under_Communist_...

You cannot be serious.

Unindustrialized? Sure. Starving? You could add up the death counts of all known famines in Russia's pre-Bolshevik history and you end up with no more than half the amount dead in just the famine referenced in OP. And that's largely due to the policies implemented by Lenin[1] to ensure that food went primarily to supporters of the Bolsheviks.

How about the famine of 1932-1933[2][3] in which ~10 million (the number is disputed, but when it varies by millions, the point is made) died due to dekulakization[4], in which those farmers that had proved to be competent enough to gather some wealth after having been liberated by the Tsars a half-century earlier were brutally raped and murdered. Guess what happens when you kill all the competent farmers?

You've said that it was a "step forward at least up until the mid 1950's", meaning during Lenin and Stalin's reign? Do some damned reading[5] before you make claims like this.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prodrazvyorstka [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Holodomor [3] http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4076244/Distressing-... [4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dekulakization [5] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Gulag_Archipelago

It is actually very questionable if communists did improve the quality of life for anyone other than themselves.

For tens of millions of Soviet citizens their life had improved straight into the afterlife.

Russia had an elected parliament since 1905.

>You realize that communism didn't drag Russia down but actually improved their quality of life from the reign of the Czars right?

Did it improve faster than it would have under democratic rule?

And then there is the whole business with making half of Europe a 'starving shithole'.

I'm going to assume that you are just reaching out for counterfacts without being particularly well-versed on the history here, because the Russian Duma was, from inception to the revolution, a very bad joke. It was only barely tolerated by Nicholas, and dissolved for years at a time whenever it tried to compel the autocracy toward meaningful reforms. That parliament has a very great deal to do with why events took the radical course they did - it effectively discredited everyone who tried to work within the system.
> Did it improve faster than it would have under democratic rule?

That wasn't an option for Russia at any point, as it isn't even today.

It's sad. Russia only had less than a decade of somewhat democratic rule over the last... I don't even know... years.
Things had been on the up and up for the commoners in Russia since ~1860s, and Nicholas II was a relatively fair minded ruler. His biggest flaw was a thirst to maintain power, even though he objectively was impressed with constitutional monarchy. If he had let Russia transition peacefully into that form of government, we could have avoided communism.
I'm taking none of your ancestors or grandparents lived during Stalin's reign?