Friday, March 22, 2019
Destalinization :: Russian Russia History
de-StalinisationPolitics has always been about image. A good image leads to power, its that simple. sometimes it is hard to draw the line between a leader who is sincerely interested in improving the lives of his people and one that is interested in filling a few more pages of the already crowded register book. A good example of this is the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics in its transition time between 1953 and 1964. The tyrannical rule of Joseph Stalin in the USSR was last over, and the nation sought a new leader after nearly a decade, one man, Nikita Khrushchev, rose up from the ranks with new ideas for the nation, and an extreme anti-Stalin campaign. only was he truly enraged at the way Stalin ruled or was he using this image in an attempt to capture the identical power as his predecessor? The link between the two leaders goes back many years, to nearly the beginning of the communist annexation of Russia. raze today, we find ourselves asking if the politicians we vote for say they will make a reform to actually help the people, or if they say it as an quash promise in a ploy to get elected or to gain power. Was Nikita Khrushchev a man for the people, or was he simply a puppet with motives unseen to the people that pulled his strings?Joseph Stalin ruled the USSR from 1929 until his death in 1953. His rule was one of tyranny, and great change from the society that his predecessor, Lenin, had envisioned (Seton, 34). Stalin rate into effect two self proclaimed five-year plans over the course of his rule. some(prenominal) were very similar in that they were intended to improve production in the nation. The first of these plans began collectivization, in which harvests and industrial products were seized by the authorities and distributed as needed. The government eliminated most private businesses and the state became the leader in commerce. Stalin also initiated a process called Russification. (Great Events, 119)Through this program, he ruled the minority nations of the USSR such as Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan more strictly. This policy of expansion also helped Stalin seize a big(p) portion of Poland, and it was done under the guise that it was to enrich the nation. Stalin established a secret police force which was unyielding and went about its business with an campaign fist, bringing down dissenters, revolutionaries, and those that cheated in collectivization.
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