REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

nobody starves due to laziness

POSTED BY: 1KIKI
UPDATED: Sunday, July 17, 2016 18:02
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VIEWED: 11493
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Friday, July 1, 2016 6:35 PM

THGRRI


Ah 1kiki, once again you get taken to school due to your inferior intellect. You're to stupid not to argue points that have been documented in one reference source after another. All disputing you and showing you to be a liar. Not incorrect mind you, but because of the way you try and manipulate the facts, a liar.

It's got to be terribly painful for you being a narcissistic troll to constantly be revealed to be a moron.

____________________________________________


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Saturday, July 2, 2016 12:07 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

In case it isn't clear to anyone yet, kiki is only pretending to care about starving people to push what she really cares about - her own communist ideology.
KIKI has been paying attention to starving children for a long time. http://www.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?tid=60398 but in case it isn't clear to EVERYONE, THUGR is so disinterested in caring about starving people that he can't imagine anyone doing it for pure motives. And he can't even be bothered to pretend that he cares. All he can focus on is trolling and hating.

--------------
I'll tell you what I DON'T like about Trump: I think that he has never confronted either the international banking cartel, nor the CIA-State Dept multi-headed hydra, nor the military-industrial complex. The last person to confront them was JFK (BTW, ALL immigration was illegal under JFK) and look what happened to him.

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Saturday, July 2, 2016 3:04 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"Actually I gave 2 sources, you cherry picked the one from earlier in the thread (the Wikipedia one) and within that article you cherry picked the views of the one historian most sympathetic to the Soviet Union ..."

Was there bad weather leading to a reduced harvest? That should be easy enough to find out.

And in under a minute I found this: "the USSR experienced an unusual environmental disaster in 1932: extremely wet and humid weather that gave rise to severe plant disease infestations, especially rust. Ukraine had double or triple the normal rainfall in 1932. Both the weather conditions and the rust spread from Eastern Europe, as plant pathologists at the time documented. Soviet plant pathologists in particular estimated that rust and other fungal diseases reduced the potential harvest in 1932 by almost nine million tons, which is the largest documented harvest loss from any single cause in Soviet history."


Regrettably, while humanity has changed the climate, no country has been able to control the weather so as to increase resources,.




Let me just point out that the author left out vital relevant facts in the opinion piece. Doing that is known as cherry-picking. And whether you do that in the news, in discussion, in debate or in opinion, when you distort the facts, you've changed the nature of your communication into propaganda. But WE don't have any of THAT in the US, do we?!

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Saturday, July 2, 2016 6:39 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by 1kiki:

Was there bad weather leading to a reduced harvest?

Intellectuals have ushered the world into a dangerous age of political nihilism
http://qz.com/721914/intellectuals-have-ushered-the-world-into-a-dange
rous-age-of-political-nihilism
/

Written by Lisandro Claudio
July 01, 2016

On the surface, it would seem that intellectuals have nothing to do with the rise of global illiberalism. The movements powering Brexit, Donald Trump and Third-World strongmen like Philippine president Rodrigo Duterte all gleefully reject books, history and higher education in favor of railing against common enemies like outsiders and globalization. And you’ll find few Trump supporters among the largely left-wing American professoriate.

Yet intellectuals are accountable for the rise of these movements—albeit indirectly. Professors have offered stringent criticisms of neoliberal society. But they have failed to offer the public viable alternatives. In this way, they have promoted a political nihilism that has set the stage for new movements that reject liberal democratic principles of tolerance and institutional reform.

Intellectuals have a long history of critiquing liberalism, which relies on a “philosophy of individual rights and (relatively) free markets.” Beginning in the 19th century, according to historian Francois Furet, left-wing thinkers began to arrive at a consensus “that modern liberal democracy was threatening society with dissolution because it atomized individuals, made them indifferent to public interest, weakened authority, and encouraged class hatred.”

For most of the 20th century, anti-liberal intellectuals were able to come up with alternatives. Jean-Paul Sartre famously defended the Soviet Union even when it became clear that Joseph Stalin was a mass murderer. French, American, Indian, and Filipino university radicals were hopelessly enamored of Mao Zedong’s Cultural Revolution in the 1970s.

The collapse of Communism changed all this. Some leftist intellectuals began to find hope in small revolutionary guerrillas in the Third World, like Mexico’s Subcomandante Marcos. Others fell back on pure critique.

Academics are now mostly gadflies who rarely offer strategies for political change. Those who do forward alternatives propose ones so vague or divorced from reality that they might as well be proposing nothing. (The Duke University professor of romance studies Michael Hardt, for example, thinks the evils of modern globalization are so pernicious that only worldwide love is the answer.)

Such thinking promotes political hopelessness. It rejects gradual change as cosmetic, while patronizing those who think otherwise. This nihilism easily spreads from the classroom and academic journals to op-ed pages to Zuccotti Park, and eventually to the public at large.

For academic nihilists, the shorthand for the world’s evils is “neoliberalism.” The term is used to refer to a free market ideology that forced globalization on people by reducing the power of governments. The more the term is used, however, the more it becomes a vague designation for all global drudgery.

Democratic politics in the age of neoliberalism, according to Harvard anthropologists Jean and John Comaroff, is “something of a pyramid scheme: the more it is indulged, the more it is required.” They argue that our belief that we can use laws and constitutional processes to defend our rights is a form of “fetishism” that is ultimately “chimerical.”

For the University of Chicago literary theorist Lauren Berlant, the democratic pursuit of happiness amid neoliberalism is nothing but “cruel optimism.” The materialist things that people desire are “actually an obstacle to your flourishing,” she writes.

According to this logic, we are trapped by our own ideologies. It is this logic that allows left-wing thinkers to implicitly side with British nativists in their condemnation of the EU. The radical website Counterpunch, for example, describes the EU as a “neoliberal prison.” It also views liberals seeking to reform the EU as “coopted by the right wing and its goals—from the subversion of progressive economic ideals to neoliberalism, to the enthusiastic embrace of neoconservative doctrine.”

Across the Atlantic, Trump supporters are singing a similar tune. Speaking to a black, gay, college-educated Trump supporter, Samantha Bee was told: “We’ve had these disasters in neoconservatism and neoliberalism and I think that he [Trump] is an alternative to both those paths.”

The academic nihilists and the Trumpists are in agreement about a key issue: The system is fundamentally broken, and liberals who believe in working patiently toward change are weak. For the Portuguese sociologist Boaventura de Sousa Santos, “indifference” is the “the hallmark of political liberalism.” Since liberals balance different interests and rights, Santos writes, they have no permanent friends or foes. He proposes that the world needs to “revive the friend/foe dichotomy.” And in a profane way, it has: modern political movements pit Americans against Muslims, Britain against Europe, a dictatorial government against criminals.

Unfortunately, academic anti-liberalism is not confined to the West. The Cornell political scientist Benedict Anderson once described liberal democracy in the Philippines as a “Cacique Democracy,” dominated by feudal landlords and capitalist families. In this system, meaningful reform is difficult, since the country’s political system is like a “well-run casino,” where tables are rigged in favor of oligarch bosses. Having a nihilist streak myself, I once echoed Anderson when I chastised Filipino nationalists for projecting “hope onto spaces within an elite democracy.” Like Anderson, I offered no alternative.

The alternative arrived recently in the guise of the Duterte, the new president of the Philippines. Like Anderson and me, Duterte complained about the impossibility of real change in a democracy dominated by elites and oligarchs. But unlike us, he proposed a way out: a strong political leader who was willing to kill to save the country from criminals and corrupt politicians.

The spread of global illiberalism is unlikely to end soon. As this crisis unfolds, we will need intellectuals who use their intellects for more than simple negation—professors like the late New York University historian Tony Judt, who argued that European-style social democracy could save global democracy. Failing that, we need academics who acknowledge that liberal democracy, though slow and imperfect, enables a bare minimum of tolerance in a world beset by xenophobia and hatred. For although academics have the luxury of imagining a completely different world, the rest of us have to figure out what to do with the one we have.

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Saturday, July 2, 2016 7:04 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


SECOND, I'm going to copy your post to the ELITES RISE UP AGAINST THE IGNORANT MASSES THREAD, and dispute it there. In the meantime, this response belongs in the TRUMP thread and the ELITES RISE UP AGAINST THE IGNORANT MASSES thread, and I'm going to post it in the ELITES thread, but I want to cite it here, too, in response to your spamming so many threada with anti-Trump messaging.

In Response to Trump, Another Dangerous Movement Appears
Published on Friday, July 01, 2016 by Rolling Stone

Fears of demagoguery are provoking a frightening swing in the other direction

Quote:

The "too much democracy" train rolls on.

Last week's Brexit vote prompted pundits and social media mavens to wonder aloud if allowing dumb people to vote is a good thing.

Now, the cover story in The Atlantic magazine features the most aggressive offering yet in an alarming series of intellectual-class jeremiads against the dangers of democracy.

In "How American Politics Went Insane," Brookings Institute Fellow Jonathan Rauch spends many thousands of words arguing for the reinvigoration of political machines, as a means of keeping the ape-citizen further from power.

He portrays the public as a gang of nihilistic loonies determined to play mailbox baseball with the gears of state.

"Neurotic hatred of the political class is the country's last universally acceptable form of bigotry," he writes, before concluding:

"Our most pressing political problem today is that the country abandoned the establishment, not the other way around."

Rauch's audacious piece, much like Andrew Sullivan's clarion call for a less-democratic future in New York magazine ("Democracies end when they are too democratic"), is not merely a warning about the threat posed to civilization by demagogues like Donald Trump.

It's a sweeping argument against a whole host of democratic initiatives, from increased transparency to reducing money in politics to the phasing out of bagmen and ward-heelers at the local level. These things have all destabilized America, Rauch insists.

More at http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/news/in-response-to-trump-another
-dangerous-movement-appears-20160630



--------------
I'll tell you what I DON'T like about Trump: I think that he has never confronted either the international banking cartel, nor the CIA-State Dept multi-headed hydra, nor the military-industrial complex. The last person to confront them was JFK (BTW, ALL immigration was illegal under JFK) and look what happened to him.

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Saturday, July 2, 2016 12:09 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"Professors have offered stringent criticisms of neoliberal society."

Hillary is a neoliberal, which goes along with being a neo-con - just for your information. Because a neoliberal is an economic and political (though not necessarily cultural) colonial.

"But they have failed to offer the public viable alternatives."

Well, look, here I am trying to find alternatives to whatever specific thing or things there are in capitalism that brings death by starvation to millions of people every year and brings malnutrition to hundreds and hundreds of millions of people every year, and our neoliberals here, including you and THETHREESTOOGES, are giving me a ration of shit for even DISCUSSING the ideas. I must be crazy! Stupid! And have some nerve! Or at least be a Russian bot.
I know in the larger world anyone who disputes the goodness of neoliberalism is being disputed and reviled on the one hand, and ignored and dismissed on the other. People like Robert Reich and Bernie Sanders for example. (You know you do.)
In the intellectual world so is Noam Chomsky.
So this whole notion that alternatives aren't being proffered is just a lie. The problem is, you can lead an ass to water, but ...




Let me just point out that the author left out vital relevant facts in the opinion piece. Doing that is known as cherry-picking. And whether you do that in the news, in discussion, in debate or in opinion, when you distort the facts, you've changed the nature of your communication into propaganda. But WE don't have any of THAT in the US, do we?!

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Saturday, July 2, 2016 1:56 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"And it doesn't matter what "ism" you prefer."

SOMETIMES, the problem comes down to that there just isn't enough, no matter what you do.

But not in today's world where there is plenty of food to go around. The problem today is DISTRIBUTION. (I wonder if I did a count on that word what the number would be. I know I've repeated that concept quite often. WOW. Almost a dozen times! 'G'STOOGE, WAY TO MISS THE POINT - over, and over, and over, and ... !)

That's why I hold as a good example systems where no one starves while another has too much. So I prefer the 'isms' that don't starve their people to death, or malnourish them so badly they suffer permanent effects as long as there's plenty of food to go around. The 'isms' that meet those criteria are command/ communist economies.

What 'ism' do you prefer, and why?




Let me just point out that the author left out vital relevant facts in the opinion piece. Doing that is known as cherry-picking. And whether you do that in the news, in discussion, in debate or in opinion, when you distort the facts, you've changed the nature of your communication into propaganda. But WE don't have any of THAT in the US, do we?!

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Wednesday, July 6, 2016 3:10 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

And in under a minute I found this:

Lol, you're quoting the same historian as before.

Quote:

Was there bad weather leading to a reduced harvest?

Did Stalin throw millions of farmers off their land in the years leading up to the famine - YES
Did Stalin EXPORT millions of tonnes of grain during the years of the famine - YES
Did Stalin seal the Ukrainian borders so that no food could get in - YES

A bad harvest year in a region that is a massive grain exporter (known for centuries beforehand as the breadbasket of Europe) should not, and did not cause 7-10 million people to starve. Stalin's actions on top of the bad harvest, did.


The UN statement again:

"In the former Soviet Union millions of men, women and children fell victims to the cruel actions and policies of the totalitarian regime. The Great Famine of 1932–1933 in Ukraine (Holodomor), took from 7 million to 10 million innocent lives and became a national tragedy for the Ukrainian people."

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Wednesday, July 6, 2016 3:24 PM

THGRRI


Putin’s Grudging Perestroika

Quote:

There is a widespread view in the West that Russia’s aggressive actions in Ukraine and confrontational policies toward the United States and Europe are an attempt to revitalize aspects of its lost Soviet glory days. But if we look at some of the Kremlin’s domestic policy initiatives, we see a country struggling to become less “Soviet” in its actions and reform its decrepit institutions before it’s too late.

Many of the reforms now underway reflect Moscow’s long-overdue recognition that the Russian state simply cannot afford to maintain costly Soviet-designed structures, such as free higher education for all students or an oversized military based on mass mobilization. Though many of the current changes are forced by dire necessity rather than any grand progressive vision, they are reforms nonetheless. This in itself is a striking development. In general, Russians are ready to tolerate the loss of personal freedom, but they still cherish Soviet social benefits like free health care, and the Kremlin has always been afraid to tamper with them.

But now that President Vladimir Putin’s patriotic propaganda has managed to distract popular attention from dismal political and economic conditions, the reforms, haphazard though they might be, are going forward. The irony is that the leaders who have been trumpeting Soviet grandeur on the world stage are presiding over its retreat at home.

A case in point is health care. Today, a few years into the reforms launched when Mr. Putin returned to the presidency in the spring of 2012, the overall picture remains bleak. Moscow has been giving regional governments incentives to close inefficient, duplicative and deteriorating hospitals and health centers, trim the medical work force and improve efficiency in exchange for more funds for modern equipment, renovation and better pay for health workers.

While many hospitals are being revitalized, the number of closures is too drastic. Rural areas are bearing the brunt of the disruption. More than 17,000 towns and villages once served by small health clinics now have no medical services at all. Between 2005 and 2013, the number of health centers was cut from 8,249 to 2,085, and the number of rural hospitals plunged from 2,631 to 124, according to government reports.



http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/07/opinion/maxim-trudolyubov-putins-gru
dging-perestroika.html?_r=0



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Wednesday, July 6, 2016 3:48 PM

THGRRI



Government Name: Democratic People's Republic of Korea


Constitution: Adopted: 1942; Last amended in 2012. Establishes status as a socialist state and defined as dictatorship of people's democracy. People have civil and political rights but they are superseded by safeguarding political and ideological unit of the people.


Government Type: Communist State under Totalitarian Dictatorship.

For the first time, the United States has sanctioned North Korean leader Kim Jong Un for human rights abuses.

The U.S. Department of the Treasury added Kim, along with 10 other North Korean individuals and five entities, to the U.S. sanctions list today. The young ruler is among 23 total individuals and entities cited for their role in serious human rights violations, hunting down defectors or censorship in the Democratic People's Republic of Korea.

http://abcnews.go.com/International/us-sanctions-north-korea-leader-ki
m-jong-human/story?id=40378256



____________________________________________


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Thursday, July 7, 2016 5:16 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collectivization_in_the_Soviet_Union
Ukraine
This article contains weasel words: vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information. Such statements should be clarified or removed. (April 2014)




Let me just point out that the author left out vital relevant facts in the opinion piece. Doing that is known as cherry-picking. And whether you do that in the news, in discussion, in debate or in opinion, when you distort the facts, you've changed the nature of your communication into propaganda. But WE don't have any of THAT in the US, do we?!

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Friday, July 8, 2016 1:02 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Originally posted by 1kiki:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collectivization_in_the_Soviet_Union
Ukraine
This article contains weasel words: vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information. Such statements should be clarified or removed. (April 2014)


Is this a weak attempt at a strawman? Posting a link to an article no one else has posted before, and then pointing out that there are errors in it?

Are you trying to make it look like you have an answer to my post, when in fact you don't?

#Embarrassing

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Friday, July 8, 2016 1:30 PM

THGRRI


Quote:

Originally posted by kpo:
Quote:

Originally posted by 1kiki:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collectivization_in_the_Soviet_Union
Ukraine
This article contains weasel words: vague phrasing that often accompanies biased or unverifiable information. Such statements should be clarified or removed. (April 2014)


Is this a weak attempt at a strawman? Posting a link to an article no one else has posted before, and then pointing out that there are errors in it?

Are you trying to make it look like you have an answer to my post, when in fact you don't?

#Embarrassing



Yep KPO, just another post made by 1kiki that missrepresents the truth. She presents a link to an article and then responds to the article as though it was you, or someone else who posted it. Very funny and sad at the same time. As you know, SIG does the same thing. She posts quotes that are actually made by her, then she responds to them as though she is responding to someone else.

I wish we had started a link a long time ago like the predictions thread where we could cut and paste these type of posts, along with our catching them at it. Then we could put a link to it in our signatures so others could check it out on occasion.

They are lairs plain and simple.

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Friday, July 8, 2016 11:58 PM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"Is this a weak attempt at a strawman?"

The article from WIKI is one THAT EVEN THE EDITORS RECOGNIZE IS FLAWED (and they're a pretty tolerant bunch), and it recreates every argument you all have been making.




Let me just point out that the author left out vital relevant facts in the opinion piece. Doing that is known as cherry-picking. And whether you do that in the news, in discussion, in debate or in opinion, when you distort the facts, you've changed the nature of your communication into propaganda. But WE don't have any of THAT in the US, do we?!

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Saturday, July 9, 2016 12:08 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


But to address the history very briefly before I move off this topic ... there's a general recognition that the weather was bad, in this case too much rain rather than drought. Some articles indicate productive areas of Ukraine received three to five times the normal amount of rain, leading to the inability to harvest grain and having it rot in the field. One article traces a series of bad years, from 1929 onwards. You'd THINK that that kind of disastrous weather would get a mention in the historical accounts.

But, like a lot of other bullshit you all eat with gusto, the bullshit on this topic leaves out the very salient fact that weather led to greatly reduced harvests.

So, done with you now.

I've wasted enough time on you THREESTOOGES.




Let me just point out that the author left out vital relevant facts in the opinion piece. Doing that is known as cherry-picking. And whether you do that in the news, in discussion, in debate or in opinion, when you distort the facts, you've changed the nature of your communication into propaganda. But WE don't have any of THAT in the US, do we?!

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Saturday, July 9, 2016 1:40 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by 1kiki:
But to address the history very briefly before I move off this topic ... there's a general recognition that the weather was bad, in this case too much rain rather than drought. Some articles indicate productive areas of Ukraine received three to five times the normal amount of rain, leading to the inability to harvest grain and having it rot in the field. One article traces a series of bad years, from 1929 onwards. You'd THINK that that kind of disastrous weather would get a mention in the historical accounts.

But, like a lot of other bullshit you all eat with gusto, the bullshit on this topic leaves out the very salient fact that weather led to greatly reduced harvests.

Weather is localized but food is transportable. You would think that Stalin would have shared Russian food with Ukrainians so that all Soviets could experience the same difficulties and eat the same number of calories. Or did Stalin decide that it was not right forcing Russians to share and that Ukrainians should justly suffer because of the rain? Or did Stalin believe it was God's will that Ukraine got too much rain and how could Stalin defy Heaven? You need to point out to us the speeches Stalin made where he tells Ukrainians that their starvation is not his problem to solve and that they are on their own. He'd have to give that speech and variations on it many times because the famine stretched out for many weeks, months, years. There must be abundant record of all those speeches where Stalin explains why he can't help Ukrainians.

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Saturday, July 9, 2016 2:17 AM

1KIKI

Goodbye, kind world (George Monbiot) - In common with all those generations which have contemplated catastrophe, we appear to be incapable of understanding what confronts us.


"Weather is localized ..."

What a stupid statement. Do you think weather patterns don't encompass large areas, covering entire countries, even continents? How much of Europe would you say is under cloud cover in this image?



"... but food is transportable. You would think that Stalin would have shared Russian food with Ukrainians so that all Soviets could experience the same difficulties and eat the same number of calories."

I already addressed this regarding the China example. You must not have read it. And I'm not going to bother repeating it.

As to Stalin's speeches about how intended to starve Ukrainians, perhaps you mean this one:
In August, 1932, at a critical juncture in the events leading to the Holodomor, Stalin expressed his concern that “if we do not correct the situation … we could lose Ukraine.” ... “That explains the fact that the peasantry constitutes the main army of the national movement, that there is no powerful national movement without the peasant army, nor can there be. That is what is meant when it is said that, in essence, the national question is a peasant question."
Pretty ambiguous statements, wouldn't you say?


But I'm sure you have lots and lots of quotes ready. Let's see them




Let me just point out that the author left out vital relevant facts in the opinion piece. Doing that is known as cherry-picking. And whether you do that in the news, in discussion, in debate or in opinion, when you distort the facts, you've changed the nature of your communication into propaganda. But WE don't have any of THAT in the US, do we?!

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Saturday, July 9, 2016 9:00 AM

SECOND

The Joss Whedon script for Serenity, where Wash lives, is Serenity-190pages.pdf at https://www.mediafire.com/two


Quote:

Originally posted by 1kiki:
"Weather is localized ..."

What a stupid statement. Do you think weather patterns don't encompass large areas, covering entire countries, even continents? How much of Europe would you say is under cloud cover in this image?

"... but food is transportable. You would think that Stalin would have shared Russian food with Ukrainians so that all Soviets could experience the same difficulties and eat the same number of calories."

I already addressed this regarding the China example. You must not have read it. And I'm not going to bother repeating it.

As to Stalin's speeches about how intended to starve Ukrainians, perhaps you mean this one:
In August, 1932, at a critical juncture in the events leading to the Holodomor, Stalin expressed his concern that “if we do not correct the situation … we could lose Ukraine.” ... “That explains the fact that the peasantry constitutes the main army of the national movement, that there is no powerful national movement without the peasant army, nor can there be. That is what is meant when it is said that, in essence, the national question is a peasant question."
Pretty ambiguous statements, wouldn't you say?


But I'm sure you have lots and lots of quotes ready. Let's see them.

Nasa lost two space shuttles. I remember very clearly the second time where Nasa spoke of an act of god as being at fault. That is very much like blaming the weather, as you have done for starvation in Ukraine. The very first crash of a shuttle was actually blamed on the weather – too cold a day to launch – so no fault of management.

After much study and digging for facts that management did not want to speak about by people NOT in management at Nasa, the true causes of each shuttle crash were known. The blame rested on management, which needed to anticipate that not every day is sunny, even at Kennedy Space Center in Florida.

Starvation in Ukraine has been studied by people NOT in management of the Soviet Union or even present day Russia. The blame rested on management, which, just like Nasa, also needed to anticipate bad weather and remember to store food for those raining days.

P.S. I lived only 480 seconds away from Nasa, which is why the Space Shuttle example. https://goo.gl/maps/vyw65pxDkjH2

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Thursday, July 14, 2016 6:28 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

Originally posted by 1kiki:
"Is this a weak attempt at a strawman?"

The article from WIKI... recreates every argument you all have been making.


A simple "Yes" would have sufficed.

So you couldn't argue against any of my points or my links (which trump yours by the way - there were plenty of reasons for the bad harvest besides rain, most of them Stalin's fault, and you can't blame rain for Stalin exporting millions of tonnes of food out of Ukraine), so what do you do? You go away and find an entirely separate Wikipedia article and point to flaws in that instead...??

Does anyone doubt that ideology makes people stupid? They need only look at kiki's performance in this thread.

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Thursday, July 14, 2016 8:39 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Another good article on the famine - http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/holodomor-what-man-made-famine-that-killed-mi
llions-1529803


Quote:

The catastrophe - often labelled as a genocide - took place under the brutal Soviet regime of Joseph Stalin, who was determined to crush the rebellious Ukrainian peasants and force them into collective farms. The policy meant farmers conceding their land and livestock to the state, and Stalin would then sell the excess grain abroad in a bid to catalyse Soviet Russia's industrialisation and make it a military superpower.

Hell-bent on teaching farmers "a lesson they would not forget" for resisting collectivisation, millions died in areas that were heavily populated by Ukrainians "while the Soviet Union simultaneously denied the famine and exported a quantity of grain great enough to feed the entire Ukrainian population," notes Rutgers University.

Bolshevik forces marauded through villages taking food and carrying out mass executions. Those who were caught stealing food or trying to leave the region in search of bread were imprisoned, turned back or executed.

At the height of the Holodomor, 17 people died each minute, 1,041 people died each hour and 25,000 people died each day. "It was the Soviet regime's deliberate seizure of Ukrainian crops and refusal to provide food relief that turned Europe's breadbasket into a land of immeasurable human suffering," a US statement read.

The trauma which swept through the nation was unimaginable. Entire villages starved to death as cities and roads lay strewn with the corpses of people searching for food in some of the world's most fertile land. People were forced to use dried nettle leaves and other weeds to make bread as they desperately tried to evade death. Villagers used wax in place of cooking oil, women were forced to offer sex in return for food and there are even reports of cannibalism.

"The peasants ate dogs, horses, rotten potatoes, the bark of trees, anything they could find," witness Fedor Bleov wrote. A young communist named as as Lev Kopolev observed "women and children with distended bellies turning blue, with vacant lifeless eyes. And corpses. Corpses in ragged sheepskin coats and cheap felt boots; corpses in peasant huts in the melting snow of Vologda [in Russia] and Kharkov [in Ukraine]." Citizens were banned from travelling abroad to obtain food, effectively decreeing a death sentence on the population.

...


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Sunday, July 17, 2016 6:02 PM

KPO

Sometimes you own the libs. Sometimes, the libs own you.


Quote:

KIKI has been paying attention to starving children for a long time. http://www.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?tid=60398

Oh really?

65 starved to death this year in just ONE of Assad's besieged towns in Syria - and hundreds across the country - and I haven't heard a peep out of Kiki.

http://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-hunger-report-idUSKCN0ZS2C1

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