Krawtchouk's Mind 260
A reader writes: "Central Europe Review is running an article on a gulag-condemned Soviet scientist whose contribution to the first computer is virtually unknown because of the Cold War mentality that infected much of society on both sides of the Iron Curtain.
The story tells of how in 1937, American digital computer pioneer John Atanasoff came across a Myhailo Krawtchouk paper on a new method for finding approximate solutions to differential equations. Atanasoff tried sending a letter to him, but received no response. Krawtchouk had been attainted for giving a favorable review of the work of "enemies of the people" and shipped to Siberia for 20 years of gold mining, where he died four years later. Krawtchouk's biography gives a more detailed account of how Krawtchouk was labeled a "Polish spy" and "Ukrainian nationalist," stripped of his Academy of Sciences membership, and forced to sign a confession -- that he later retracted -- under torture and threats upon his family.
"
First Computer? (Score:2, Interesting)
Interesting story... (Score:3, Insightful)
err... (Score:5, Informative)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the Cold War and the Iron Curtain didn't begin until after WWII, in the late 1940's.
Re:err... (Score:5, Informative)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the Cold War and the Iron Curtain didn't begin until after WWII
Correct, Churchill gave the Iron Curtain speech after World War II. However, a "cold war" did exist between the Soviet Union and leading western states ever since the October Revolution. Until the Axis invasion of 1941, the Soviet Union was seen as much of a bogeyman as Hitler's Germany. In fact, Britain had toyed with the idea of declaring war on the USSR in the Winter of 1939 - under the pretext of aiding Finland which was being invaded by Stalin at the time, but really as an excuse to occupy ore-rich Sweden.
Chris
Re:err...(Frink satire) (Score:5, Funny)
What you say? One country invading another for natural resources under the pretext of liberation and justice?
Why, that is so far-fetched it's incomprehensible-flaven-goyven. With the oil, and the grudges, and cowboy hats, and the terrrism, and the nuculur threat, and the weapons of mass destruuuuuuuction.
Re:err... (Score:4, Informative)
So, you see, Churchill's plan to invade Sweden was designed to distrupt the German war effort, not simply a land-grab.
Re:err... (Score:2)
Re:err... (Score:2, Informative)
We should thankful that this piece of scientific history
Re:err... (Score:5, Informative)
Wow, that's quite an accomplishment for a guy that died in 1924 [marxists.org]. Must have been all the borsch and vodka.
From '22 to '53 it was all Joe
Re:err... (Score:3, Informative)
You are correct, Winston Churchill coined the phrase "Iron Curtain" on March 5, 1946, while accepting an honorary degree in the US.
Re:err... (Score:2)
Ah, but what editors are supposed to do is edit! Either correct the original, or put a note on it. That's what they've done in the past, when they've bothered.
Cold Wars (Score:4, Informative)
Churchill's famous speech referred to the effective extension of Soviet borders to that of the European countries under their influence after the war.
Re:Cold Wars (Score:3, Informative)
The loss of a good proportion of the officer corps contributed to the Red Army's lousy performance throughout the Winter War, but there were other reasons why an invasion was going to be difficult. It was the coldest winter in living memory, and the Soviet troops were poorly clothed for it. Tanks proved ineffectual in the forest conditions above Lake Ladoga. Along with the small numbe
Re:Cold Wars (Score:2)
From where I come from, it is now commonly believed that the officer corps extermination was a result of German intelligence operation executed to weaken Soviet Army command. As the most capable officers came from military dynasties, they had no problem labeling them as hidden
Re:err... (Score:3, Informative)
The good guys won. (Score:2)
No kidding. Did anyone else catch the irony in the poster's writeup?
"Central Europe Review is running an article on a gulag-condemned Soviet scientist whose contribution to the first computer is virtually unknown because of the Cold War mentality that infected much of society on both sides of the Iron Curtain.
Sheesh. We apparently had a shameful "Cold War mentality", although the other side
Re:The good guys won. (Score:2)
So it's not quite as bad as sending people to the Gulag but it's not altogether nice, wouldn't you say?
Re:The good guys won. (Score:2)
What do you mean by 'not quite as bad'? Those sent to the Gulag were forced into years of manual labor. Many died of hunger, exhaustion, or exposure.
Your attempt at moral equivalence borders on the ridiculous.
Re:err... (Score:4, Insightful)
We were the good guys, they were the bad guys, they lost, end of story.
It must be so nice to live in such a black and white world as yours. Look up the history of the McCarthy years in the United States for a start. It's finally getting some real historical analysis, having been brushed under the carpet for a long time. The Hoover-era FBI could give the Soviet secret police a few lessons in ethics-free techniques as well. Yes, your local Socialist Worker seller is undoutedly deluded by a bankrupt political creed, but there wasn't much honour amongst the Cold War warriors of either side.
Chris
Re:err... (Score:2)
I'm quite familiar with McCarthy; yes some people unjustly lost their jobs, etc, but c'mon, was anyone sent to a gold mine in Alaska, then left to freeze or starve to death? No, nothing like that happened at all.
Drawing any sort of parallel between McCarthyism and Stalin's purges is just absurd.
Re:err... (Score:2)
Re:err... (Score:2)
Besides, it's absolutely ridiculous to compare Hoover with Dzerzhinski, or McCarthyism (hundreds accused) with Stalinism (millions sent to labor camps, children encouraged to report on their parents, etc.).
I don't live in a "black and white world." The US did bad things as part of the Cold War. But
Re:err... (Score:4, Insightful)
Doing fewer evil things only makes you less evil, not "good". Let's just say the magnitude of evil displayed the the US was far far less than the magnitude displayed by the USSR. Someone suffering under a pro-US dictatorship may have suffered less than their counterparts in the Soviet Union, but they suffered nevertheless.
The collapse of communism got rid of something very evil. Now we have to work on those "lesser" evils perpetrated by the winning team. THEN we can start talking about the "good guys" winning.
Re:err... (Score:2)
The people that respond to you will, of course, point out that Soviet transgressions were far "worse" than what happened in the US during the McCarthy era. Worse is a relative term. They appear to be capable of detecting something other than absolutes. How do you reason that they live in a "black and white" world?
Yet,
Re:err... Umm..... (Score:2)
Could be BS.
Re:err... (Score:2)
No... Here in the US, you just got labeled as a communist, and were (defacto) denied most any future employment.
Sure, (as much as I hate to use the term) ``they" may have been worse, but I would act so terribly proud of the American stance on human rights.
Re:err... (Score:2)
The guys who win always say that.
Re:err... (Score:2)
> The guys who win always say that.
Ah yes, people feel so smart when they point out that the winners write the history. Just like it makes them feel smart to accuse others of seeing the world in black and white, having a simplistic reading of history, etc.
But these are all simply cliches that do not and should not end the argument, and the people who use them, more often than not, are simply parroting something they heard s
Re:err... (Score:2)
I haven't heard the phrase I used before, if it makes you feel better. Besides, your moralist p.o.v. is hardly any original too.
My point was that there aren't really many 'bad guys' around. Your average GI, if he happened to be born in North Korea, would defend their politics with the same self-righteousne
Re:err... (Score:2, Insightful)
Blacklisting.
These two are related, and should be a single point. Yes, this was a dark time. Civil rights were being trounced upon. However, no one was tortured or sent to forced labor camps. Not to mention that it didn't take long before sanity prevailed and McCarthy was denounced. Unfortunately, many careers were damaged.
Internment camps.
This was bad. Plain and simple. You're right. We are just now apologizing about this, and doing what we can to reconcile. This should never have happened
Re:err... (Score:2)
You've mentioned isolated occurances that for some reason slipped through the cracks of the safeguards put in place by the constitution. Those occurances are dealt with and measures are taken to make sure that they never happen again. Can you say that for the former Soviet Union?
Please show the measures that are taken to make sure that these things never hapen again. The Patriot Act, perhaps? The imprisonment of lots of people they picked up off the streets and carting them off to Cuba with no formal c
Re:err... (Score:2)
What? Our history books don't mention such disturbing stories. Tell me again how great we are, Unky Propaganda!
Re:err... (Score:2)
I don't think people like Stalin ever thought of themselves as "good". The rhetoric about "the people" was all for show. Stalin knew what he was doing wasn't really about "the people" and simply didn't care, he just wanted all the power.
Say what you want about the West, about corruption, etc, but the fact is, you can say it without fear of reprisal, and every few years we have an election. If a politician is too corrupt, the f
Actually... (Score:5, Interesting)
You know, it's really funny how things can be invented in several places at the same time... Like the modern guitar as we know it was come up with in China, the Middle East and Spain at the exact same times (and not chronologically, implying that the invention would have traveled)... Or how Pythagores, Zarathustra, Buddha and Lao-Tse, who each pioneered philosophy in their own continent, were contemporaries.
First electronic digital.. (Score:2)
Fail math? (Score:2)
Re:Actually... (Score:2, Informative)
A lot of comp. sci folks hold that it's not a computer until it can branch and do conditional logic. Zuse's work was impressive, especially considering they were built way cheap (they used like recycled tin from soupcans and whatnot - very MacGyver) but they were really more like an automated adding machine than a computer as we know it.
At least th
Re:Actually... (Score:2, Informative)
From your link:
The Z3 did not contain the conditional branch. The ENIAC or MARK I did not have the conditional branch, either
And like I said, some consider it the first computer because of this, some dont (nor do some consider ENIAC or MARK I fully programmable either).
It could do math, but it couldnt make decisions.
Re:Actually... (Score:2)
The difference is that the Zuse machines were fully binary and had a system clock, so in that sense they are more closely related to our current computers.
FWIW, you can find an online simulator of the Z3 (written in Java) here [www.zib.de]. It's all in German, though.
Re:Actually... (Score:2)
Re:Not Turing Machines? (Score:5, Interesting)
This, its "Turingness", came about almost by accident - in breaking the Lorenz codes it ran a computation step where it worked out some property of captured cipher text against generated enciphering text. This produced a potential deciphered text, which an operater would look at to see if it made sense. The second generation machine was designed to calculate some statistical properties of the text, which could tell resonably well if it had been broken properly. It was when they were building the capability of doing this that the computed goto snuck in (which gave them the ability to do conditional branching), and the equivalent of "if Text looks like German then Stop".
After the war the runners of the machine tried to program it to do base 10 arithmetic, but clock speed was against them, so it never quite worked (not that they spent a lot of time on it as shortly after the war almost all the colossi were scrapped).
It was an odd machine - extremely fast at what it was built to do, with the bonus that it could do anything (given enough vacuum tubes!). Different to the ABC and Zuse machines in that these were non-Turing machines (I think that's true of the Atanasoft-Berry machine too - having looked at the information available it doesn't seem Turing complete, but it is fairly sketchy).
Geek Persecution (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Geek Persecution (Score:5, Informative)
This isn't really even a communist thing. Geek persecution on both sides of the wall was rough. I mean, where's Alan Turing?
While the establishment's treatment of Turing was a disgrace, I think it pales into insignificance compared to Stalin's terror. For an excellent introduction to life at the time of the purges, I can highly recommend Solzhenitsyn's "One Day In The Life of Ivan Denisovich", closely followed by his "Gulag Archipelago". It's a while since I read the latter, but I'm pretty sure it's the one that fictionalised Russian scientists working in an "intelligentsia prison".
Chris
That had more to do with him being *gay* (Score:4, Insightful)
Wtf? (Score:2)
In 1952, Turing's home was burglarized by a friend of a man with whom he was having an affair. Refusing to be intimidated, he reported the crime. During the investigation, he did not hide his homosexuality from the police. He was labeled a pervert and was charged with gross indecency. He agreed to submit to hormone treatments rather than go to prison. He was injected with the female hormone
Re:Geek Persecution (Score:2)
No, you're thinking of "The First Circle". "Gulag" is entirely non-fiction, it's more of a huge reference work detailing the whole Soviet system of repression.
Re:Geek Persecution (Score:2)
That one is "First Circle".
Thanks for the clarification. I read most of Solzhenitsyn's books at univeristy, but that was quite a few years ago. I guess "Gulag Archipelago" could be the one that collected various accounts of arrest, torture, trial and imprisonment. If so, then it's the one I read in little more than a single sitting, only pausing to punch the wall in frustration at the injustice it described. Christ knows what the guy in the next room thought I was doing!
Chris
Re:Geek Persecution (Score:2)
Yeah, there's no way you read the Gulag Archipelago in one sitting.
I'm one hell of a fast reader, but no, the book I'm thinking of is one hefty hardback number. Could have been the first volume of the Gulag Archipelago, and it took me about ten to twelve hours to read. Despite it being over ten years ago, I still remember starting it in the late afternoon and still being sat there with at the crack of dawn the next day. Student life ... sigh.
Chris
Hrm, (Score:4, Informative)
Go Cyclones!
Infected both sides? (Score:4, Insightful)
sPh
Re:Infected both sides? (Score:2)
When I read about the kinds of things the Soviets did it really makes me feel blessed that I live in a society where enough of the people fight to defend their rights that everyone's rights are protected.
http://www.nra.org
http://www.aclu.org
Lee
Re:Infected both sides? (Score:2)
Close. It was Mao who started it, along with the whole "non-aligned" movement. Left-wing revisionist wackos have just done their best to perpetuate the idea.
Re:Post-stalin USSR was not nearly as bad - Bunk! (Score:2)
Gulags existed until the USSR collapsed in 1991, and some of those camps are still in business as Russian prisons.
And, it is not at all important that the U.S. supported "supported dictators who were every bit as bad as Stalin." (so you say). U.S. support for any government cannot be used to justify the existence and actions of the Soviet Union. Nor can any cause-and-effect linkage be established between U.S. diplomacy and the existence of the Soviet Union. This assertion is nothing more tha
Re:Post-stalin USSR was not nearly as bad - Bunk! (Score:2)
So what?
Btw, if what you say is true, does that mean that Soviet existence cannot be used to Justify US support for corrupt and murderous regimes?
Re:Post-stalin USSR was not nearly as bad - Bunk! (Score:2)
What are you talking about? (Score:3, Insightful)
building bridges (Score:5, Interesting)
this is just beyond stupidity. so, apparently, the entire world can know the dimensions of soviet vessels, but not the soviets??
Re:building bridges (Score:2)
Re:building bridges (Score:5, Interesting)
the entire world can know the dimensions of soviet vessels, but not the soviets
It got worse than that - in fact the truth seems more like a Kafka novel at times. I can't remember the book I read about Soviet industrial and scientific cock ups, but some of the more absurd epsisodes have stuck in my mind.
An attempt was made to build a permanent railroad across the Northern expanse of Siberia. Despite the protestations of engineers that building it without firm pilings and at the wrong time of year was foolhardy, the project went ahead. Unsuitable labour was used, in the form of ill-equipped and inexperienced gulag inmates. Track was lain during harsh Winter conditions. And of course, come the thaw, the lines buckled, embankments collapsed and trains toppled over. Their are still rusting remains of trains and track littering the region.
Stalin was quite prepared to listen to crackpots and cranks, often promoting them to high academic positions. Genuine academics were either too frightened to speak out against Stalin's favourites, or sent to gulags for disagreeing with lunatic theories. Similarly, several of the Soviet Unions leading aircraft designers spent the Second World War working in prison having falling out of favour with Stalin.
Chris
Re:building bridges (Score:2)
True, but even Stalin wasn't a complete idiot when it came to things like this. Tupolev was sent to the gulag after falling out of favor, but it was not the typical work-till-you-die gulag - it was an intellegensia one. Tupolev may have pissed off Stalin, but Stalin still realized he was of more use alive than dead and "merely" forced him to continue doin
Re:building bridges (Score:2)
the soviets really have a bad history of blocking science from progressing in fear of spies / enemies of the ppl
Much worse was the endorsement of bogus science that was supposed to be in accordance with Marxism, and the supression and destruction of real science. For example, Lysenkoism [skepdic.com] instead of real genetics.
JP
Re:building bridges (Score:2)
Yes, that's very bad. What could be WORSE AND MORE STUPID than that? Ummm... what oh what could be so absolutely ridiculous to outweight that one?
I KNOW!!! Promoting CREATIONISM in State-own schools and sue the professors that require a basic degree of confidence in science to pass a recomm
Re:building bridges (Score:2)
Here's a sad truth you'll probably never grow enough to understand: you're just as bad as those you hate.
Damn grammar nazis again... (Score:2)
Re:Damn grammar nazis again... (Score:2)
Ripped off! (Score:5, Informative)
Have you Ever Read any History? (Score:2)
that explains where the equivocating leftist crap comments comparing the the West with the USSR came from.
Excuse me! Have you ever learned any history from the 1950's? Have you ever heard of McCarthy or Hoover? I suggest you read about their actions before you off and spout baseless crap about the innocence of America. Although we didn't condem people to labor camps, McCarthy's inquiries caused many to be 'blacklisted'. As a result, they lost their jobs, couldn't find new ones, and worse. Before you ma
attained? (Score:2)
Similar things continue... (Score:5, Insightful)
Although similar persecutions continue in some countries to these days, the public opinion in many democracies would not tolerate any outside action against the oppressing governments.
Living your life under Stalin, Kim of North Korea, Castro, Saddam Hussein is worse than war... Trade sanctions -- a modern democracies' usual "civilized" weapon against each other -- don't work against these scumbags. They pass the suffering onto their people...
Re:Similar things continue... (Score:2)
The greatest failing of international law, the UN and the entire current international structure is its demonstrated willingness to respect sovereignity more than the welfare of individuals. The world decries the evils of people like Stalin, Kim, Castro, Saddam, Mugabe, etc., but lacks the courage and will to remove them. It's excuse: We Cannot Violate The Sovereignty of Any Member of the International Community.
This is nonsense. All totalitarians regimes are illegitimate, ha
It's no excuse (Score:2)
Alas, so far it was the best thing that people came up with. Because otherwise, you just have the rule of the strongest on the international scene. This time it is you, but next time the coin can flip the other side. Last two world wars are good enough arguments against Social Darwinism.
No, really, did you ever considered why Lynch law is outlawed? After all, there are lots of evil people who look guilty, but whos
Re:It's no excuse (Score:2)
That's true, unfortunately. What I was saying is, that the current situation is still flawed in a major way, and we should continue to look for better policies.
Did you ever consider, why the Lynch law emerged in the first place? Depending on the number of the subjects and the level of the s
Re:It's no excuse (Score:2)
Sure, there is always place for improvement. I don't see the current development as an improvement though. Last time someone decided to screw the Nations, my home country lost quarter of its population in direct casualities, so pardon me my alertness.
Even if we assume, that we should be looking for inter-sovereign principles in the domain of the inter-individual ones, we sh
Re:It's no excuse (Score:2)
This applies only if you believe that individual the soverieignty of individual nation is inviolate, and that the international community has no right to police itself.
What is needed is an elected extra-national international body with the means and the authority to police the globe.
Re:Similar things continue... (Score:3, Insightful)
Doesn't change a thing. Totalitarian regimes threaten the well-being of the people they rule, and block the spread of true democracy. Failing to eliminate an elected totalitarian regime is an analog to failing to treat someone who has inflicted himself with plague.
And, yes, so long as people who profess to support so-called interna
Re:Similar things continue... (Score:2)
jjayson on kuro5hin.org got ripped off (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.kuro5hin.org/story/2003/4/27/5153/7362
note the word-for-word plagiarization/ lifting
just trying to keep it honest
Re:jjayson on kuro5hin.org got ripped off (Score:2, Funny)
Oh wait...
Re:jjayson on kuro5hin.org got ripped off (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:jjayson on kuro5hin.org got ripped off (Score:5, Insightful)
But, apparently, won't be. Why was this modded down? It's not offtopic, it isn't trolling, and it isn't flamebait. (And it's hard to be overrated when starting at 0.) It's a statement of someone's opinion, and a rather reasonable one at that. Slashdot has been caught plagarizing another site. So some questions arize: Did the editors really get an anonymous submission and hense didn't know it was plagarized? Or, did the author of the original piece also post to Slashdot? Or, did the authors willingly and knowingly plagarize the article?
A simple acknowledgement of the fact that the story in on Kuro5hin and an explanation of why would do well to calm any conspiracy theorists. Simply ignoring the issue doesn't help and just raises resentment against the editors, who really seem to have an "I don't care" attitude about a site they want us to pay to use.
Not another one... (Score:2)
Other Simultaneous Work. (Score:4, Interesting)
In particular the Cook-Levin Theorem wah proved simultaneously by Steve Cook in the US and Lenoid Levin in the USSR.
Additionally the Immerman-Szelepcsenyi Theorem was proven by Neil Immerman (US) and Richard Szelepcsenyi (Slovakia).
Neither were known for some time due to the lack of communication on both sides.
An earlier Difference Engine.... (Score:5, Informative)
The printer [bbc.co.uk] was completed in 2000. It featured variable spacing and line wrapping. Not bad for something that is 100% mechanical.
It should be noted that as with the machine talked about here, this was a machine for solving simple differential equations (tides) as well as more standard types of maths (i.e., logs, sines and so on) for the production of tables. It was not a general purpose computer, that term was reserved for his Analytical Engine - which was designed but never produced. However Ada Byron, Countess of Lovelace wrote some programs for it, converting equations into algorithms and generating register settings which could be punched on the Jacquard cards (Babbage pinched this idea from the manufacturers of automatic-looms, a long time before Hollerith).
If Babbage had completed the Analytical engine, we could have been in a very different world. One version would have been hypothesized in William Gibson's "The Difference Engine".
USSR Responsible for Cold War, Krawtchouk Abuse (Score:3, Interesting)
His obscurity, yes. But not his abuse by the Soviet Union. Hemos' casual paraphrasing of one line in the Reviews' piece serves to apportion responsibility for the Cold War equally among the Soviets and the U.S. This is wrong. Soviet totalitarianism was responsible for both Krawtchouk's abuse and his obscurity, while Soviet military occupation of one-half of Europe, the imposition of Soviet totalitarianism there and an expressed intent to eliminate democratic governments elsewhere were the causes of the Cold War.
Some revisionist historians -- who always seem to me to be embarrassed by democracy -- will disagree, but can they truthfully imagine the Cold War happening if the Soviet Union had been a free and democratic nation with no expansionist aims?
Re:USSR Responsible for Cold War, Krawtchouk Abuse (Score:2)
Sure thing, because international law and the UN work to sustain and support regimes liike Saddam's. Until that changes -- and we can rely on international law and the UN to actually do something to eliminate dictatorships -- the U.S. must go it alone.
And, as far as I can see, the only things the U.S. want
Re:USSR Responsible for Cold War, Krawtchouk Abuse (Score:2)
But then, what else should we expect from an unelected and undemocractic organization?
As for your assertions about U.S. manipulation of Saddam, prove it.
Re:USSR Responsible for Cold War, Krawtchouk Abuse (Score:2)
It would be nice if you and all the other democracy loathing brats who seem compelled to stand against anything that the U.S. stands for would actually suggest doing something to improve things, rather than just work to maintain the status quo.
What would you have done about Saddam? Wait for the Iraqis to rise up and overthrow him? That'd be a long wait. Viable totalitarian regimes cannot be removed by internal revlot.
This sounds like a story out of Scientology (Score:3, Informative)
The secret Library of scientology:
http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Librar
Operation Clambake:
http://www.xenu.net
(I'm still waiting for my goldenrod)
Russia (Score:2, Funny)
what? (Score:2)
You should do some rereading I think. I don't think it was the "mentality...on both sides" that is responsible for his anonymity.
Scientists persecuted in the West (Score:3, Interesting)
Plenty of American scientists have been persecuted for political reasons, including Oppenheimer, as well as many lesser known ones. Despite being an American, I find it hypocritical that people find a desire to bash the USSR for things the US did as well. Like decry people killed in the early days of the USSR when the US wiped out most of the Indians here, as well as however many Africans were dumped overboard after being packed in like sardines on slave ships. Or remember persecuted scientists in the Soviet Union, when there were persecuted scientists in the United States. I think it would be better to focus on people in Kansas and wherever else in the US that want to burn biology books and replace them with the book of Genesis. Americans have been brainwashed by anti-Bolshevist propaganda since 1917, and had ugly incidents from their past like the Bonus March absent from the history books (except history books like A People's History of the United States), or even incidents of working class power and solidarity (like the San Francisco general strike). I'm not a Marxist-Leninist by any means, but this tendency among the right to try to revive the USSR from the dead to bash it again while trying to whitewash the American ruling classes history is lame, and I don't feel it serves working class Americans like myself.
Wrongly imprisoned? (Score:3, Funny)
In the public doamin, yet... (Score:2)
I'm such a troll.
Re:Do Myhailo a favor... (Score:2, Insightful)
It's mainly that true Marxist communism is an economic theory, and not a political system. Marxist-Leninism, OTOH, has been viewed as what "True Communism" is to the sheepish West. It's so easy to demonize a demonic institution like totalitarianism, and label that as the "Axis of Evil" (1.0)
Re:Do Myhailo a favor... (Score:3, Interesting)
If people were walking around with German SPD t-shirts (supporting socialist economics) - hey, that's cool with me. But communism has only existed as horrible dictatorial regimes. It has no existence other than as horrible dictatorial regimes.
This is not the fault of t
Re:Do Myhailo a favor... (Score:2)
Yeah, but the problem is that Marxism as a theory does not explain AT ALL how it should be put into practice. And the ONLY way it has been put into practice is, well, what you saw in the Soviet Union, China, North Korea, Cuba, Cambodia, etc.
True... it's sometimes so vague that it's hard to define what each person means bu Communism, and even more to explain what road should be taken to achieve it. Is all the countr
Re:Do Myhailo a favor... (Score:2, Informative)
I agree that most kids who espose Communism do not understand the distinction, or if they do, do not understand what actually happened under these Stalinist "leaders".
Re:Do Myhailo a favor... (Score:2)
Re:Bummer! (Score:2)
Well, we got close [mugshots.org] at one point. Slick Billy?
WEAK! (Score:2)
The Ukraine is WEAK!
-Kramer
: )