When evil triumphs: The USSR

I recently read a fictional novel, Child 44 by Tom Rob Smith. It is set in the USSR mainly around the time of Stalin’s death, and the fact that it’s about a serial killer who gruesomely kills scores of children is the least horrendous thing depicted in the story. Stalin’s Soviet Union was something close to Hell on Earth, the more so because unlike Nazi Germany or Khmer Rouge Cambodia, it was not a brief abberation that was destroyed because of it’s shortcomings. The Communist Party ruled the Soviet Union for almost the biblical threescore and ten years, about 1920-1990. And quite simply, evil triumphed. Horrendous evil, against which those who resisted miserably perished. The best that can be said about it is (1). After about 1960 or so (forty years!), the very worst of the purges and mass deportations finally abated. (2). By threatening to blow up the world in a nuclear Armageddon, the United States managed to keep the Soviet Union from claiming even more victims than it did. (3). Although it was never truly defeated, the USSR finally rotted from within.

And the legacy of the USSR? A nation of decaying rust-belt cities, the highest rate of alcoholism in the world, a population crash that if unabated will eventually depopulate half a continent, and an economy based on exporting fossil fuels, organized crime and prostitution. Sauron’s friggin’ Mordor could hardly be said to be worse than the USSR. The history of the Soviet Union puts the lie to any claim that “good will win in the end”. Apparently if you simply have enough raw brutal force, an efficient police apparatus, and you choose your wars carefully, you can fullfill the vision of 1984- a boot stomping the face of humanity- almost forever. It may even be that the end of the USSR was a historical accident, caused by the chance ascendancy of a would-be reformer (Gorbachev) instead of a die-hard neo-Stalinist attempt to solve the USSR’s problems by more brute force.

The more I think about it the more bummed out I am.

Well, for one thing, it’s a novel, dude.

For another, while the USSR was a nasty dictatorship, it was nothing at all like Oceania in 1984. The fact is with countries like the USSR that for the great majority of the populace, politics just wasn’t a factor in their lives. They went to work, raised their kids, and did normal human things. The standard of living was not up to ours, but it was a hell of a lot better than most human beings in history have had it.

And finally, 70 years, in the scope of human history, is a blip.

Overall no. But under Stalin it approached 1984 levels.

Yep, a novel; so, to get you less bummed: From Austin Powers, international man of mystery.

Basil introduces the Russian intelligence commander while at British HQ.

*Austin Powers: *Russian Intelligence!?! [Looks at Basil] are you mad?
*Basil Exposition: *A lot has happened since you were frozen! The Cold War is over!
***Austin Powers: ***Well!! Finally those capitalist pigs will pay for their crimes, eh? Eh comrades? Eh?
Basil Exposition: Austin… we won.
Austin Powers: Oh, smashing, groovy, yay capitalism!

:slight_smile:

Or, you might enjoy this:

Stalin’s Secret Lair

Was there ever a good period in Russian history?

It all depended what end of the Вилы you were on, comrade.

Or, as Lenin said, the question is “Who? Whom?”

Funny. I thought Nazi Germany and Kampuchea fell because they were invaded and conquered.

That’s no coincidence. Orwell based Nineteen Eighty-Four on the USSR. In particular, the state’s ability to rewrite history and erase memory of the change. E.g., the scene during Hate Week when the enemy abruptly changes from Eurasia to Eastasia and it immediately becomes true that it has always been so clearly is based on the European Left’s abrupt change of party line WRT Nazis when Hitler turned on Stalin. Orwell had previously observed, and written about, such selective revision/destruction of history in the Spanish Civil War – and both sides and both sides’ sympathizers were guilty of it. From “Looking Back on the Spanish War” (1942):

At certain times and places, it was far worse. Even the proles in Oceania had rubbery food and cheap beer, but the peasants in the Ukraine in the 1930’s had no food at all, because Stalin ordered it all confiscated. A large portion of the population was reduced to the brink of starvation, merely to break their will and end resistance to collectivization.

That may have been true for the Brezhnev era, but not under Stalin. Estimates of the number of people arrested during the 1936-38 purges vary wildly, but it seems likely that several million people were involved out of a population of a little less than 200 million. Add in family members effected, and others terrorized but not necessarily arrested, and this is a significant fraction of the population. Conditions in the labor camps, to which many of those arrested were deported, were worse than the norm even for landless peasants through most of human history.

Stalin’s USSR was indeed absolutely horrific, but the the period of “De-Stalinization” following his death was called that for a reason. While the USSR was certainly not a happy land of freedom before or after Stalin, the amount of nightmarish 1984-ness decreased drastically thereafter. I would argue that the truly dystopian period in the USSR (apart from the current semi-apocalyptic dystopia, which I think is preferable) lasted from Lenin’s death to Stalin’s death (1924-1953). 29 years is a long time, certainly, but it’s not 70.

I don’t disagree that it’s a super fucked up country and is still in the grasp of criminals today. Russia’s behavior post WWII starting with mass rape and theft of everything that was of possible use in Germany to their “absorption” of Eastern Europe is rightly described as evil.

I think I couldn’t argue that anything really changed until after the Brezhnev era, though. Indeed, largely the USSR wasn’t killing people off as much because it simply couldn’t afford it - they had run out of resources to confiscate, and had too few people as it was. Although on paper it had a large population, so much of it was actively hateful towards the Russians that they needed more people just to keep them down. And they couldn’t really massacre any of the other groups, because they were often the biggest producers.