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Thread: Top 10 Anime Villains: #1 (Stalin)

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    ⚡treet ⚡atyr KuriousKatKommittee's Avatar
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    Arrow Top 10 Anime Villains: #1 (Stalin)




    The "man of steel" needs no introduction.

    Better yet what's the logic in ranking the genocidal circus-orchestrating Stalin as #1 and Trotsky with his innocuous aphorisms and maxims as #2? Or petty "agent provocateur" Farrakhan as #10 with his conduct of smugly driving a wedge between uneducated blacks and uneducated whites? Where's Mao, where's Hitler or any other politically impotent genocidal puppet?

    Stalin did what Minister Farrakhan did except on a grand scale while following Trotsky's manuals to a T. As Wikipedia says, "Trotsky also introduced and provided ideological justification[ for many of the future features characterizing the Bolshevik system, such as "militarization of labor" and concentration camps." If Trotsky was "Lawfully Evil" with his "the end justifies the means" political belief, Stalin was "Chaotically Evil" with his shtick to be in power for the sake of being in power.

    Ironically Stalin was responsible for the death of all the old school and hardcore Communist crew members, totaling 23 million people, mostly Slavs (he himself was Georgian and managed to pull off something Hitler only wet-dreamed about). Post-1948 around the time Israel broke ties with Russia, he also sent Russian Jews to gulags like a jealous mother who harasses her son's wife that she stopped liking after said son's wife allegedly said something bad about the mom behind mom's back, the mischievous nigga.



    Both Trotsky and Stalin were equally "dangerous."
    Trotsky for being a highly competent playa who always moves forward in life (like C.J.) and Stalin a highly incompetent busta (like Big Smoke) and the labor of their love lingers in the geopolitical world today. Repurposed Trotsky ideas of "international communism" (a scheme to turn the entire world "red") Stalin applied to Eastern Europe in the late 1940s, casting an "Iron Curtain" over Europe. The same ideas then ironically ended up influencing the U.S. foreign policy makers in the 1960s who used it against the Communists and started pushing "international conservative capitalism" (a scheme to bring "F R E E D O M" to the entire world) in the Middle East, South America, and Southeast Asia, after moving away from the Marshall Plan-style humanitarian approach. In the 20th century, "American imperialism" went from a nonexistent Stalinist psychological warfare concept to reality indirectly due to one silly wabbit.



    Example of Stalin's domestic conduct and political "hindsight" he showed over and over again from 1924 to 1953 followed by his copycats in North Korea, Eastern Europe, and Russia until the late 1980s and People's Republic of China until the 1950s (look up Sino-Soviet split):
    "Long before Chiang Kalshek crushed the Shanghai workers and concentrated the power in the hands of a military clique, [Trotsky] issued warnings that such a consequence was inevitable. Since 1925, I had demanded the withdrawal of the communists from the Kuomintang. The policy of Stalin and Bukharin not only prepared for and facilitated the crushing of the revolution but, with the help of reprisals by the state apparatus, shielded the counter-revolutionary work of Chiang Kai-shek from our criticism. In April, 1927, at the party meeting in the Hall of Columns, Stalin still defended the policy of coalition with Chiang Kai-shek and called for confidence in him. Five or six days later, Chiang Kai-shek drowned the Shanghai workers and the Communist party in blood."
    (from Leon Trotsky "My Life: An Attempt at an Autobiography" 1930, translated by D. Walters)

    Henceforth (I am a real literary nigga henceforth) I will be quoting David Priestland's "The Red Flag: A History of Communism" (2009). Reading the book feels like watching a captivating documentary that sets the scene so well as if you were there and doesn't stink of patronizing tiresomely archaic snoredom like other history books.

    Stalin's political vision:
    "Stalin’s image of the future society also departed from Lenin’s. When Lenin tried to describe the party or the socialist future, he often looked to the factory or the machine. Stalin’s default model, however, was much more militaristic, and his favoured political metaphors were military, religious or organic.
    [...]
    "His vision of the party was the product of an odd encounter between The Communist Manifesto and chivalric romance. As early as 1905 he called for the party to lead a ‘proletarian army’, in which every member would cultivate a belief in the party programme. It was to be a ‘fortress’, ‘vigilant’ against alien ideas. Its gates were only to be open to the truly faithful, those who had been ‘tested’; to accept people who lacked commitment was tantamount to the ‘desecration of the holy of holies of the party’. Stalin’s party was one of warrior monks, and in 1921 he compared it to the ‘sword-brothers’ (Schwertbrüder), the crusading order founded by the Baltic Bishop of Livonia in 1202 to convert the Slavs." (ibid.)

    Stalin's rise to power:
    "The failure coincided with Lenin’s terminal illness and the resultant power struggle within the Soviet party leadership [c. 1924]. Trotsky’s rivals, including Stalin, fully exploited the disaster, and the humiliation was used as an excuse to centralize power and curtail local radicalism." (ibid.)

    The birth of Stalin's bureaucratic tentacles and Stalin's "Lenin School":
    "Moscow’s International Lenin School for Western Communists, founded in 1926, was another tool by which the Kremlin attempted to exert influence over the movement. [...] But most important for the Comintern, especially after Stalin’s rise to power, was the inculcation of a Bolshevik party culture of discipline and ‘conspiracy’ [psychological warfare]." (ibid.)

    Stalin's personality:
    "Stalin had a calculating, devious side, and was by no means the most radical amongst the seminary students. He also admired modernity, and Marxism became for him, as for his fellow Georgian Marxists, a way of transforming an angry resentment of injustice with a strategy for achieving that modernity. And in the Georgian context, modernity meant Russia." (ibid.)

    Stalin's Nazbol-ism:
    "The most influential contrast, first drawn by Trotsky, set Lenin the intellectual revolutionary against Stalin the dull but cunning bureaucrat. [...] However, Stalin, whilst accepting the Bolshevik vision of a disciplined, industrial society, tended to stress the power of ideological or emotional commitment, whereas for the more Modernist Lenin ‘organization’ was more central. Stalin was therefore more comfortable than Lenin with using the campaigning methods of the Radical left, whilst at other times, he was willing to exploit the powerful force of nationalism – a force he understood well as a former Georgian nationalist." (ibid.)

    Stalin's political modus operandi:
    Step 1: Name The Enemy (A Scapegoat)
    Exhibit A:
    "In 1927 a poor harvest and food shortages forced the leadership to make a decision: to maintain the prices paid to peasants for grain, at the expense of industrialization, or to cling on to ambitious investment targets and use state power (and ultimately force) to extract grain from the peasantry, thus effectively ending the market in grain and destroying NEP [Trotsky's quasi-capitalist policy that Lenin put forward]. Stalin chose the latter.

    [H]e went on a highly publicized visit to Siberia to ‘find’ grain, though in reality he had already decided where it was – in the coffers of ‘selfish’ kulak hoarders. The party, he declared, had to wage a class struggle against kulaks; poor peasants were to be mobilized against the rich proprietors to seize the hidden food, so contributing to the industrialization and defence of the USSR." (ibid.)

    Exhibit B:
    Stalin (1931) (Good Bunny Mode):
    "National and racial chauvinism is a vestige of the misanthropic customs characteristic of the period of cannibalism. Anti-semitism, as an extreme form of racial chauvinism, is the most dangerous vestige of cannibalism.

    Anti-semitism is of advantage to the exploiters as a lightning conductor that deflects the blows aimed by the working people at capitalism. Anti-semitism is dangerous for the working people as being a false path that leads them off the right road and lands them in the jungle. Hence Communists, as consistent internationalists, cannot but be irreconcilable, sworn enemies of anti-semitism.

    In the U.S.S.R. anti-semitism is punishable with the utmost severity of the law as a phenomenon deeply hostile to the Soviet system. Under U.S.S.R. law active anti-semites are liable to the death penalty.
    " (Wikipedia)

    Stalin (1952) (Bad Bunny Mode):
    "Every Jewish nationalist is the agent of the American intelligence service. Jewish nationalists think that their nation was saved by the USA. . . They think they are indebted to the Americans. Among doctors, there are many Jewish nationalists." (Wikipedia)



    Step 2: Make Them Fight Each Other So They Don't Fight You
    "As Kravchenko, who edited a factory newspaper at the time, remembered, ‘self-criticism’ was certainly manipulated, but was not mere rhetoric:
    Within the limits of the party line, we enjoyed considerable freedom of speech in the factory paper… Nothing that might throw a shadow of doubt on industrialisation, on the policy of the Party, could see print. Attacks on the factory administration, trade-union functionaries and Party officials, exposés of specific faults in production or management, were allowed, and this created the illusion that the paper expressed public opinion." (ibid.)

    Step 3: Let God Sort 'Em Out
    "Stalin’s callous pursuit of industrialization at the cost of immense suffering led to a devastating famine, in which an estimated [5.5 to 6.5] million died [between 1931 and 1933]" (ibid.)

    Steps 4 & 5: Reconciliation hook, line, sinker, rinse, and repeat
    "In 1936 the Soviet film industry produced one of its most successful blockbusters – Circus [which was about] an American singer and dancer, ‘Marion Dixon’ who is hounded out of the United States by the racist inhabitants of ‘Sunnyville’ because she has had a child by an African-American. Dixon is rescued by a German impresario, Von Kneischitz, but his intentions are exploitative, not charitable: he sees her as a money-spinner in his circus tour of the Soviet Union. But she then falls for her co-star, the acrobat Martynov, and decides that she wants to stay in the USSR. The callous Hitler-lookalike Von Kneischitz, worried about losing his main attraction, is desperate to keep her. In the film’s climax, during a dance extravaganza featuring rockets, spacemen and dancing girls, he brings her black child into the circus tent, expecting that the Soviet audience, shocked, will drive her out of the USSR. But to his consternation they welcome the infant. Skin colour, the circus-master tells us, whether black, white or green, is of no consequence in the land of the Soviets. Representatives of the various nationalities of the USSR in traditional dress pass the smiling toddler from group to group, each singing a lullaby verse in their own language; most pointedly, given Nazi policies at the time, the Jewish actor Solomon Mikhoels was shown singing a verse in Yiddish. The film ends with Marion Dixon and her fellow circus artists miraculously appearing in the midst of a Red Square rally, holding aloft red flags, Politburo portraits and the black child, as they pass Stalin standing on the Lenin Mausoleum. Whilst they march, they sing ‘The Song of the Motherland’, a hymn to ethnic equality that was so popular it almost became the unofficial national anthem of the USSR." (ibid.)

    Lmfao.

    In a NUTshell, the typical Stalinist cycle is:
    1. Enable populist "Big Tent" parties to prosper, pushing out orthodox members.
    2. Populate important places in bureaucracy and dissident political parties with people loyal to you.
    3. Force populist parties to adopt a narrow position often with a "it's good for the homeland, bucko" patriotic twist.
    4. Have all the original orthodox members offed in a "if you are not with us, you are against us" tyranny wave and make new orthodox members out of the biggest sycophants in the government.
    5. Ease on the restrictions and go back to the first step.
    6. ????
    7. Prophet.


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