• @RidcullyTheBrown
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    1 year ago

    it took a bunch of peasant farmers under exploitative monarchy and literally rocketed them into a global superpower in, what, 2 generations?

    Russia was a superpower to begin with. The communists took over the Russian empire and it nearly lost them ww2 (in the beginning). What are you talking about?

    Edit: clarity about losing the war.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      I don’t think you can really compare pre and post industrial superpowers, especially measured specifically against the ridiculously advantageous position of the mid century USA (perhaps I should have said nuclear superpower, or space-faring). And pretty much everyone in the hemisphere “nearly” lost WW2

      • @RidcullyTheBrown
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        31 year ago

        pretty much everyone in the hemisphere “nearly” lost WW2

        I reread my comment and it was ambiguous. I meant nearly lost the war in the beginning due to lack of leadership which they basically executed early in the revolution.

        You’re right, nearly all of Europe lost in that war. The only two winners were USA and USSR

        • @[email protected]
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          -11 year ago

          nearly lost the war in the beginning due to lack of leadership which they basically executed early in the revolution.

          The only two winners were USA and USSR

          A puzzling juxtaposition, that.

          • @RidcullyTheBrown
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            11 year ago

            What would you call the siedge of Moscow if not nearly losing?

            • @[email protected]
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              1 year ago

              History is rife with "nearly"s. The USSR had to content with y’know, actually being in the middle of both world wars and suffering the material consequences. And then went on to go toe-to-toe with the golden child of capitalism (safely nestled on its distant continent, far from the material consequences of war, with all the post-war industrial economic advantages that wrought).

              The US had a freakish advantage, no one should have gotten even close. And the USSR got smacked down bad through both wars. And yet, they were stiff competition. It’s like gloating that your thoroughbred greyhound barely beat out a half-blind, 3-legged street dog in a race. The fact that it was close should be your sign.

              • @RidcullyTheBrown
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                01 year ago

                That’s a very narrow view of what happened after the second world war. URSS occupied half of the European continent. It basically was the last empire in Europe with all the resources and human capital at its disposal to do anything it wanted. Not to mention war reparations.

                And it lost. The ideology wasn’t working. It took 40 years for that empire to collapse, but collapse it did because it was built on the wrong principles.

                  • @RidcullyTheBrown
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                    01 year ago

                    There was no famine in URSS post world war 2. What are you talking about?

    • @[email protected]
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      11 year ago

      It was WWI, not WWII. And the war was lost under the monarchy.

      And Russia wasn’t a superpower back then, it was barely a Great Power.

      The leadership of the USSR was a genocidal imperialistic regime, but it did in fact get Russia specifically from snowsleds to space shuttles.

      In the meantime it caused irreparable harm to most of Eastern Europe.

      • @RidcullyTheBrown
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        11 year ago

        They did lose WW1 because of the revolution, that’s true, or rather stepped out of it, but that’s not what I was talking about. I meant the beginning of the WW2 and the Russian invasion which was a huge disaster overall. They managed to come out of it on top, but the cost was ridiculous. (Edited my original comment for clarification).

        I’m calling them a superpower even if they were not on par with UK, France and Prussia, they were a bigger power than the Austro-Hungarian empire or the Ottoman empire at the time.

        I’m not praising tzarist Rusia. It was a shit place, a reminesscence of feudalism after the industrial revolution. I’m simply trying to argue the fact that it was communism which allowed them the progress. They started from pretty high up to begin with. In fact, the two major examples, China and Rusia, while in some sort of identity crisis when they switched to communism, were historical powerhouses to begin with.

        Other, no power houses who went communist didn’t fare so well. Cuba, North Korea, countries in the Balkans …