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spinytree21 2 days ago

afganistan war killed a lot of people, food shortages would kill others too.

you do make a point that nobody revolted during the purges, fear and killing opposition can be stabilizing. Removing fear (by say liberalization) can embolden opposition to act fast and get rid of perceived tyrants / avenge past transgressions.

wqaatwt 2 days ago | parent [-]

> embolden opposition

If there even is one. In the USSR most reformists or people who achieved real power after the collapse were opportunistic party insiders who were at the right place at the right time. There were some exceptions of course.

> afganistan war killed a lot of people, food shortages would kill others too.

Not that many in relative terms. Even according to independent estimates it was ~26k over 10 years (compared to 1-3 million Afghans..). That was of course much more than what NATO/etc. lost in their war but several times less than what Russia is losing now in Ukraine every single year.

And of course there was no famine in the USSR in the late 80s (and as for general shortages the worst came when the collapse was effectively inevitable).

spinytree21 2 days ago | parent [-]

> And of course there was no famine in the USSR in the late 80s.

I'm curious on what you base this information on. Having lived that period and experiencing first hand the shortages, I can say the opposite.

> In the USSR most reformists or people who achieved real power after the collapse were opportunistic party insiders who were at the right place at the right time

That is generally what happens with revolutions. In some places it got better though. Not all ex-USSR ended up like belarus or russia.

wqaatwt a day ago | parent [-]

> I can say the opposite

You mean your are aware of an actual famine in the UUSR in the late 80s?

> Not all ex-USSR ended up like belarus or russia

None besides the Baltic states did well though (and they are somewhat special due to historical and diplomatic reasons). All other states are generally very poor and extremely corrupt (even those that have m have lots of oil like Azerbaijan).

spinytree21 a day ago | parent [-]

> You mean your are aware of an actual famine in the UUSR in the late 80s?

I have lived through the time period and have experienced the shortages first hand...

Can you say the opposite?, that life was good?, that people did not starve?, where did you learn that?

wqaatwt 13 hours ago | parent | next [-]

Did they literally starve in the 80s? I mean I’m not rejecting you experience it would just be interesting to hear more..

> that life was good?

Never made such claims or that there were no shortages. Famine is something else though..

hollerith 10 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

I appreciate your participation here: I did not know that ordinary Soviet citizens were chronically short on calories in the late 1980s.

wqaatwt 9 hours ago | parent [-]

According to data that we have from Western sources (of course still take with a grain of salt since getting accurate statistics from the USSR on any topic was near impossible) average Soviet citizen consumed only slightly less calories than the average American.

Of course they ate much more grain products and potatoes and relatively little meat (and AFAIK it wasn’t very good quality at all anyway).

And of course tropical and out of season fruits were a huge luxury..