There, but for the grace of God, goes John Bradford
My aim, then, was to whip the rebels, to humble their pride, to follow them to their inmost recesses, and make them fear and dread us. Fear is the beginning of wisdom.
I am tired and sick of war. Its glory is all moonshine. It is only those who have neither fired a shot nor heard the shrieks and groans of the wounded who cry aloud for blood, for vengeance, for desolation.
Or overcrowding political prisoners into spaces meant for less than half of their number! Or getting personal pleasure from ordering or carrying out executions!
The list goes on. And lenin96, we can do precisely the same thing for your choice.
Yes, he never quite thought the Soviets were radical enough...Disliked the soviet attitude especially to the Cuban Missile Crisis
Last edited by Evil_Maniac From Mars; 01-29-2009 at 03:53.
Most of the time it doesn't matter what someone does but why someone does something, you could say killing is always bad, no, the Tzar died and there wasn't much wrong with that, because all of that reasonless opression something had to be done about it. Now in Soviet times you could say people were opressed, if they were it didn't matter because they were helping Socialism, it doesn't really matter what you do to help Socialism, what matters is its effectiveness.
It doesn't matter? So I suppose Communists don't care about how their own people (Which they supposedly represent) live? The Soviets did create the best political heirarchy ever, in theory. Pity is that they deturped the idea from the beginning. I certainly wouldn't mind having the Soviet system in Portugal. It is by far and wide the best model of a workable Direct Economy for a Normal State (Contrary to City-State)
EDIT: Something like this: http://grazian-archive.com/politics/...ior/Fig_10.gif
You can go from a mere village to the Parlament if you're good enough.
Last edited by Jolt; 01-30-2009 at 12:46.
BLARGH!
I suppose what I said about it mattering about oppression is wrong, but the point is that it doesn't always matter what the people think, do things for thier own good, the loyal servant learns to obey and apreciate things that they wouldn't want but need in order for the state to become strong, as long as people are equal in wealth.
What you say is in theory, right to an extent. Right in the way that the "psychology of the masses" (I have learned this from a man who knows Marxism and Comunism ideology more thoroughly than most modern communist wannabes, even though he isn't a communist himself.), are conservative at heart, since they always despise, reject and struggle against reforms. However, Soviet leaders clearly passed any line of "reasonability" in dealing with the masses, by imposing one of the most oppressive regimes ever. If the Tzar was branded as an "Oppressor of the Masses", for his 20 year rule, where Russia did experience, despite numerous setbacks and errors, a growth in GNP, pre-war entrance, and did indeed oppress the people, how much more did the communist leaders do, Lenin with his "War Communism", and Stalin with "Stalinism"? Lenin was heading the way of China is today because he saw Communism couldn't triumph in one country alone (And thus had to crush any opposition to establish his own original regime.). The only way for Communism to work would be for Capitalism to disapear altogether, which isn't happening. I would be a Communist as well if I thought that Communism was viable from a financial and welfare points of view for my people, but in good truth communism isn't. The problem is that Communist leaders enforced an ideology on a people which did not want it altogether and done it so through force, and that is wrong by definition.
BLARGH!
I will except that some Soviet leaders didn't care much about the people, but Lenin did, collectivism for example is good, when it works bad it's devastating but when it goes good it's great.
I think it would be better to discuss historical people like we are now belongs in the backroom.
Russia's GDP knew a much larger growth under Lenin and Stalin than under most of the Tzars' rule. USSR would never have become the 1st/2nd military power on earth otherwise.
Not to say that communism is awesome and what not, but on a purely economical and social basis, it wasn't worse than what have been done previously in Russia.
But yeah, overall, neither Stalin nor Che Guevara are worth being mentioned in this topic. I'm more relunctant about Lenin, because I think he really wanted to improve things and wasn't a complete power-hungry dictator. I completely understand the symbol represented by Che Guevara, but the man himself was an incompetent idiot.
Actually after thinking about it, I can't decide on my favorite personality between Thomas Paine or Thomas Jefferson. Each spoke brilliantly and passionately. Can't stop reading either.
Eisenhower. Great man. If not for his military accomplishments, but also his terms as President of the US. Plus his Military-Industrial Complex Speech.
#Hillary4prism
BD:TW
Some piously affirm: "The truth is such and such. I know! I see!"
And hold that everything depends upon having the “right” religion.
But when one really knows, one has no need of religion. - Mahavyuha Sutra
Freedom necessarily involves risk. - Alan Watts
My most favorite pal in history always was frederick II (stupor mundi). He was one of the smartest rulers in the middle ages, wrote books and tried to solve the problem between muslims and christianity by peacefull means. He was way ahead in time of his own people and thus failed.
This man was one of the few rational kings who tried to explain things by logic and research rather then solve the worlds riddles by pointing out to god.
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