BobbyFischer Posted April 22, 2013 Report Posted April 22, 2013 and collapse of Communism , what really happened in Russia from 1917-1991...Can you please throw some light on this...I have my own set of arguements to come up with...
BobbyFischer Posted April 22, 2013 Author Report Posted April 22, 2013 I will say it's just because of revisionism policies introduced by Kruschev during his era caused a demise...am gathering the info from a caste study...
BobbyFischer Posted April 22, 2013 Author Report Posted April 22, 2013 @ Ukku manishi elanti country kavalanukuntunnav ani adigav kada...am here to show some statistics...naku koncham time paduthundi...please be patient...
BobbyFischer Posted April 22, 2013 Author Report Posted April 22, 2013 [quote name='Mama77' timestamp='1366674656' post='1303648409'] malla start chesinava [/quote] erra jenda ni egareyalsinde erra kota meeda...na poratam agadu appati daka..
tom brady Posted April 22, 2013 Report Posted April 22, 2013 chantabbayi movie lo suttivelu, chiru head banging gif plzzz [img]http://i.imgflip.com/pe3n.gif[/img]
paampachak Posted April 22, 2013 Report Posted April 22, 2013 [quote name='BobbyFischer' timestamp='1366674566' post='1303648405'] I will say it's just because of revisionism policies introduced by Kruschev during his era caused a demise...am gathering the info from a [b]caste [/b]study... [/quote]
BobbyFischer Posted April 22, 2013 Author Report Posted April 22, 2013 [quote name='Ukkumanishi' timestamp='1366674808' post='1303648417'] [/quote] case study of revisionism... kallu mamulu ga pettu...
paampachak Posted April 22, 2013 Report Posted April 22, 2013 nuv raayi chepta evadu aapado chuddam rayi anthe asalu taggaku
BobbyFischer Posted April 23, 2013 Author Report Posted April 23, 2013 [b]ABANDONING THE CLASS STRUGGLE[/b] The significance of Khrushchev’s attack on Stalin The 20th Party Congress (1956) of the CPSU marked the first step along the road of revisionism taken by the Khrushchevite leadership, which came into ascendancy following the death of Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin in 1953. At that congress, on the pretext of ‘combating the personality cult’, Khrushchev, in his ‘secret’ speech, launched a vituperative attack on Stalin, accusing him of suffering from ‘persecution mania’, indulging in ‘brutal arbitrariness’, resorting to ‘mass repression and terror’, as someone who ‘knew the country and agriculture only from films’, who ‘planned operations on a globe’, and whose leadership ‘became a serious obstacle in the path of Soviet social development’.* There was method in Khrushchev’s madness. His attack on Stalin, his attempt to paint Stalin in the darkest of colours, cannot solely be explained by or attributed to his personal dislike of, and animosity towards, Stalin. The truth is that Stalin had led the Soviet people for three long decades of extraordinary difficulty and epoch-making achievements against all internal and external enemies in the heroic struggle for socialist construction, in the arduous struggle to defend and consolidate the first socialist country in the world, and achieving the crowning victory in the Great Patriotic War of the Soviet people against the fascist hordes of Hitlerite German imperialism. During the long years of his leadership of the CPSU, Stalin fought with might and main against all opportunistic distortions of Marxism Leninism. In defending and safeguarding the revolutionary teachings of the science of Marxism Leninism, he helped to enrich and further develop the theory and practice of the science of proletarian revolution. In attacking and negating Stalin at the 20th Party Congress of the CPSU, Khrushchev was, in effect, attacking and negating the dictatorship of the proletariat and the fundamental teachings of Marxism Leninism – teachings which Stalin had throughout his life so vehemently, so brilliantly and so successfully defended and developed. This is the true significance, the essence, of Khrushchev’s attack on Stalin. It is, therefore, no mere coincidence that, at the same congress, Khrushchev, in his report, began the repudiation of Marxism Leninism on several questions of principle, which I shall deal with shortly. The attacks on Stalin, and the erroneous propositions put forward by Khrushchev, at the 20th Party Congress, serving as they did to discredit the Soviet Union, the dictatorship of the proletariat and communism, gladdened the hearts of the imperialist bourgeoisie and its agents in the working-class movement – the revisionists, Trotskyists and social democrats – providing them with a weapon with which to destroy the prestige and influence of the communist movement all over the world. Khrushchev’s ‘secret’ report served the imperialists as a battering ram for attacking the communist fortress; it provided them with a manifesto for unleashing a worldwide tidal wave against the Soviet Union, against communism and against revolutionary and national-liberation movements. Indeed, it handed them an opportunity, which they grasped with great alacrity, to advocate ‘peaceful transition’ back to capitalism in the USSR.
BobbyFischer Posted April 23, 2013 Author Report Posted April 23, 2013 [b]Lessons of Capitalism Restoration [/b] In just the first four years following the collapse of the USSR (1991-95), production halved, followed by two years of stagnation, only to plunge again consequent upon the crisis that engulfed the Russian economy in 1998. The standard of living of 85 percent of the Russian population today is far below that which was enjoyed by the citizens of the Soviet Union. A third of the population live below the official subsistence minimum, with 10 percent being chronically short of food. Between 1990 and 1994, male life expectancy in Russia fell by six years (from 64 to 58) and that of women by three years (from 74 to 71). In the 18 years since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the population of Russia has declined by a staggering 15 million – the biggest peacetime loss anywhere in the world – approaching the scale of losses incurred by the Soviet Union during the Great Patriotic War. This loss of population, solely attributable to the restoration of capitalism, can only be described as genocide on a grand scale. Unemployment, which was eliminated in the USSR in 1932, is today rampant, with an estimated 40 million people out of work in the territory of the former USSR. During the time of Stalin, more than 20,000 schools were built every five years, while under the rule of the capitalist thieves, more than 12,000 schools were destroyed between 1991 and 2008, that is, their number was reduced from 48,600 to 36,300.
BobbyFischer Posted April 23, 2013 Author Report Posted April 23, 2013 DB lo tables create cheyatam evarikaina telisthe cheppandi... Interesting facts and figures between USA and USSR gurinchi chala data undi...
BobbyFischer Posted April 23, 2013 Author Report Posted April 23, 2013 Death Rate in USSR in 1970 was 8.2 where as in USA that was 9.4 ! Life expectany in USA was 70.8 which is higher than that of USSR's 69.8.. Divorce rate in 1970 USA - 3.5 , USSR - 2.6 ( Communist countries lo relationships ki value undadu ani cheppe valla kosam ) Infant Mortality Rate ( Infant deaths ) in 1970 USA - 24.7, USSR - 20.0 Total physicians and Nursers ( per 100000 residents ) in 1970 USA - 168 , USSR -237 Hospital Beds ( per 1000 residents ) in 1970 USA - 1616 , USSR - 2663 Housing units completed ( in thousands ) IN 1975 USA - 1317 , USSR - 1969 Movie Theaters ( in thousands ) in 1975 USA - 15 , USSR - 157
sigsegv Posted April 23, 2013 Report Posted April 23, 2013 [quote name='BobbyFischer' timestamp='1366677003' post='1303648494'] DB lo tables create cheyatam evarikaina telisthe cheppandi... Interesting facts and figures between USA and USSR gurinchi chala data undi... [/quote] excel lo petti screenshots pettu
BobbyFischer Posted April 23, 2013 Author Report Posted April 23, 2013 e facts anni choosi meeru USA Population , USSR kante chala takkuva anukovaddu.... population was almost in the same range... In 1970 USA - 203,984,000 , USSR - 241,436,000
Recommended Posts