• Luke
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    1 month ago

    Oh you mean like is currently happening right now without socialism?

        • volodya_ilich@lemm.ee
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          1 month ago

          Wait, you’re telling me that a preindustrial society, the successor state to an empire that had 10 famines a century, had one last famine during some failed policy of land collectivisation and then ended hunger for 300 million people? How does that make the USSR look bad?

            • volodya_ilich@lemm.ee
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              1 month ago

              I don’t know, ask a Kulak. Oh wait, you can’t.

              Again with the ahistorical bullshit.

              First of all, the process of dekulakization was only state-directed, but it was primarily peasant-enforced. There were some guidelines to the process, but it was poor peasants who organized themselves, who decided which kulaks to expropriate, and who oversaw the process. But the poor peasants were so extreme towards kulaks because of how they had been exploited by them, that the soviet government had to introduce maximum quotas of percentage of kulaks per region, in order to prevent poor peasants from going overboard.

              Additionally, the elimination of Kulaks didn’t mean the elimination of each individual Kulak, it meant the elimination of the social class. A kulak getting a death sentence (or, more commonly, being killed by the poor peasants) was a rare thing, and forced relocation to Eastern territories was a much more common penalty. The vast majority of Kulaks survived dekulakization. But you couldn’t bother to read a book and your here spouting ahistorical nonsense.

      • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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        1 month ago

        Because they continue what they have historically done: outsourcing the most extreme poverty and suffering to the countries they exploit for resources.

      • nyar@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        You do know that hunger and malnutrition in the US impacts millions of people every year, and Cuba has eliminated food insecurity for its entire population, right?

        If not, now you do.

          • volodya_ilich@lemm.ee
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            1 month ago

            That’s not data, that’s a newspaper article. Come back with serious sources.

                • Eheran@lemmy.world
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                  1 month ago

                  He literally countered a baseless claim, which would have the burden of proof and could have been dismissed, and you still want more?

                  • volodya_ilich@lemm.ee
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                    1 month ago

                    The article is the classic example of concern-trolling.

                    Instead of showing statistics or actual data, it talks about this “economic crisis” of Cuba, it interviews a particular person to make people feel pity, shows a few pictures of people selling produce on the streets (normal in Cuba since the 1990s’ periodo especial)… The writers don’t know about Cuba, and don’t care about Cubans. It’s just a wannabe hit-piece to create concerns in the West about the conditions of Cubans. That’s why I’m dismissing it. The claim “there’s hunger in Cuba” requires statistical evidence supporting it.

      • volodya_ilich@lemm.ee
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        1 month ago

        All capitalist countries are well-functioning, it’s just some are exploiters and some are exploited. But that’s not a malfunction, that’s there by design.

        Or, to quote Chomsky:

        We therefore conclude that in India the democratic capitalist “experiment” since 1947 has caused more deaths than in the entire history of the “colossal, wholly failed…experiment” of Communism everywhere since 1917: over 100 million deaths by 1979, tens of millions more since, in India alone.

      • Cowbee [he/him]
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        1 month ago

        Exporting your poverty and starvation to foreign countries where you super-exploit and plunder does not mean that the cause isn’t with the “well functioning Capitalist country.”