Al Khabir wrote:If the man we were talking about was anyone but Stalin, most people would be horrified if he had killed 50 people.
That logic is fallacious. There's no statesman who wouldn't be indirectly responsible for atleast that many people (for not being able to save them).
Now we suppose you are right- it was not Stalin who killed the 100 million (a vastly inflated figure I expect).
The number is not overestimated if you choose to believe what certain Russian scholars say. You can have whatever numbers you like. There's everything ranging from tens of millions to one hundred million. Just go ahead and choose. It's a contest: Who dares to make the biggest estimation.
It was other members of the party and Beaurocracy- perhaps it was Beria and the secret police. But to make Stalin exampt of any guilt we must presume he was a man of either very limited intelligence or was completely ignorant about what was happening.
Well, he often got the news late. You remember what happened to Yagoda?
Therefore it would seem that Stalin assumes much of the guilt even if he did not order the deaths because he chose to ignore them. He was perhaps the only man who could have stopped this.
I don't think I could have been any better, unless I did have the knowledge of today. The internal and external conditions demanded the the use of harsh methods. Also, in addition to agents, spies, saboteurs and terrorists, there also were provocateurs infiltrated in the state apparatus who chose their targets randomly.
Thank you for the links by the way. I will get round to reading more than the little I have already but I already have so much to read!
We all have. I can't read half of what I should.
WHat I do say is that no communist organisation should support him publicly, because true or not most people believe that he murdered millions. This does not inspire popularity.
Defending the socialist era of USSR is a mean of ideological class struggle. And of course I'm taking into account the psychological factors in what comes to communist propaganda and agitation. But when someone slanders Stalin, I will raise my voice in opposition. And this is the 'history' section of PoFo, where I'm don't see a reason to 'modify' the presentation of my views to any degree. This is purely for intellectual debate, and I won't put any restrictions to my self-expression here. Here I expect people to be mature enough for not to go berserk because of someone else not following the mainstream of anti-communist presentation of history.