Regarding punishing “left-leaning anti-communists,” opposition to socialism within socialism isn’t left in any capacity, but reactionary. Considering the intense siege placed on the USSR by the imperialist countries, and the lingering holdouts of prior ruling classes, this was taken incredibly seriously. Had they not done so, it’s likely they would have ended after mere years, rather than near a century.
As for abortion, I am really not sure what you’re talking about here. Abortion was fully legalized for the majority of the soviet union’s existence, and the eras where it was not so were seen as a mistake. More than abortion, however, what impacted birth rates were the dramatic and rapid industrialization, the folding of women into the workplace, and the impact of World War II.
As for the curbing of certain civil liberties, it’s important to ask why, and against who. States don’t restrict civil liberties for fun. The USSR, as previously mentioned, was in a massive state of siege by the west. As a consequence, it built up systems to defend its system internally and externally. It was never allowed the breathing room for “normal” development, like China comparatively is due to being connected to the global marketplace. Instead, the USSR was sanctioned and cordoned off. Reaction grew over time and overthrew socialism, resulting in the modern humanitarian crisis we see today.
Had socialism continued, steady improvements would have also continued, and the post-soviet countries would be in a far better position today. A return to socialism is the only path forward.
I whole-heartedly agree with socialism and replacing capitalism. I disagree with the notion that USSR and it’s satellite states implemented it properly. I wouldn’t want to live in a state that actively criminalised homosexuality, implemented anti-semitic policies in education, and did not allow (in practice) freedom of religion.
Maybe if the USSR had the chance to cool down into actual socialism it wouldn’t have had the issues mentioned above. But looking at how things unfolded, it failed for a reason.
P.S: I do appreciate the actual sources, and upon some reading I did clear out some misconceptions I had about my country under soviet rule
The USSR implemented socialism successfully. The bumps it ran into along the way were bumps any socialist state would have to run into, especially the first set of socialist states. After all, it was socialism that ended famine, doubled life expectancies, went from squalid shacks for most people to functional apartments for all, and much more.
Re-criminalizing homosexuality was certainly a mistake, but was not especially repressive compared to peer countries. Moreover, this wasn’t particularly straightforward. The soviet union was still enormously socially progressive contextually, even if existing in siege did end up hampering that progress.
The USSR was also the opposite of anti-semitic. Anti-semitism was punishable by death. Moreover, Nazis and their sympathizers warned of “Judeo-Bolshevism,” as the soviet union fought heavily against the popular anti-semitism at the time. George Orwell in fact kept a list of Jews and communists, and was a professional snitch for the British government.
As for freedom of religion, it still existed in the USSR. The CPSU took an active stance against religion, as dialectical materialism leaves no room for religion, but one thing we did learn from the soviet experience is that you cannot force people out of religion. They have to develop out of it, though you can help that along. Still, the USSR had churches and existing religion, just preventing it from gaining a hold over society.
The USSR didn’t fail, it was dissolved from the top-down. The economy didn’t explode until after it dissolved. Nobody really believed it would dissolve until right before it did. It’s dissolution was not inevitable.
No worries on the sources, being a communist in the English-speaking world pretty much requires doing a good deal of research due to the sheer number of anti-communists.
The bumps it ran into along the way were bumps any socialist state would have to run into, especially the first set of socialist states.
Criticizing the first attempt of a socialist state of being imperfect is especially dishonest since if we compare it with first attempts at capitalism we see literally all the genocidal euro empires at the forefront of building capitalism.
Regarding punishing “left-leaning anti-communists,” opposition to socialism within socialism isn’t left in any capacity, but reactionary. Considering the intense siege placed on the USSR by the imperialist countries, and the lingering holdouts of prior ruling classes, this was taken incredibly seriously. Had they not done so, it’s likely they would have ended after mere years, rather than near a century.
As for abortion, I am really not sure what you’re talking about here. Abortion was fully legalized for the majority of the soviet union’s existence, and the eras where it was not so were seen as a mistake. More than abortion, however, what impacted birth rates were the dramatic and rapid industrialization, the folding of women into the workplace, and the impact of World War II.
As for the curbing of certain civil liberties, it’s important to ask why, and against who. States don’t restrict civil liberties for fun. The USSR, as previously mentioned, was in a massive state of siege by the west. As a consequence, it built up systems to defend its system internally and externally. It was never allowed the breathing room for “normal” development, like China comparatively is due to being connected to the global marketplace. Instead, the USSR was sanctioned and cordoned off. Reaction grew over time and overthrew socialism, resulting in the modern humanitarian crisis we see today.
Had socialism continued, steady improvements would have also continued, and the post-soviet countries would be in a far better position today. A return to socialism is the only path forward.
I whole-heartedly agree with socialism and replacing capitalism. I disagree with the notion that USSR and it’s satellite states implemented it properly. I wouldn’t want to live in a state that actively criminalised homosexuality, implemented anti-semitic policies in education, and did not allow (in practice) freedom of religion. Maybe if the USSR had the chance to cool down into actual socialism it wouldn’t have had the issues mentioned above. But looking at how things unfolded, it failed for a reason.
P.S: I do appreciate the actual sources, and upon some reading I did clear out some misconceptions I had about my country under soviet rule
The USSR implemented socialism successfully. The bumps it ran into along the way were bumps any socialist state would have to run into, especially the first set of socialist states. After all, it was socialism that ended famine, doubled life expectancies, went from squalid shacks for most people to functional apartments for all, and much more.
Re-criminalizing homosexuality was certainly a mistake, but was not especially repressive compared to peer countries. Moreover, this wasn’t particularly straightforward. The soviet union was still enormously socially progressive contextually, even if existing in siege did end up hampering that progress.
The USSR was also the opposite of anti-semitic. Anti-semitism was punishable by death. Moreover, Nazis and their sympathizers warned of “Judeo-Bolshevism,” as the soviet union fought heavily against the popular anti-semitism at the time. George Orwell in fact kept a list of Jews and communists, and was a professional snitch for the British government.
As for freedom of religion, it still existed in the USSR. The CPSU took an active stance against religion, as dialectical materialism leaves no room for religion, but one thing we did learn from the soviet experience is that you cannot force people out of religion. They have to develop out of it, though you can help that along. Still, the USSR had churches and existing religion, just preventing it from gaining a hold over society.
The USSR didn’t fail, it was dissolved from the top-down. The economy didn’t explode until after it dissolved. Nobody really believed it would dissolve until right before it did. It’s dissolution was not inevitable.
No worries on the sources, being a communist in the English-speaking world pretty much requires doing a good deal of research due to the sheer number of anti-communists.
Criticizing the first attempt of a socialist state of being imperfect is especially dishonest since if we compare it with first attempts at capitalism we see literally all the genocidal euro empires at the forefront of building capitalism.
Absolutely.
somehow a www seems to have sneaked it’s way into that nadeko link? I can’t connect to it with it at least.
Ah that’s my bad, fixed it. Thanks!