littlegreenpills posted:i dont know how you ppl can correctly diagnose all media products made with a higher level of sophistication than my little pony fan art as products of the CIA's pervasive infection of global discourse and cultural sensibilities and then go and enjoy it anyway
i just imagine that the first 140 minutes of each film is part of a prequel as to why america deserves to be destroyed, then i watch the two soderbergh films about che in sequence when i get home and imagine they are the conclusion.
littlegreenpills posted:i dont know how you ppl can correctly diagnose all media products made with a higher level of sophistication than my little pony fan art as products of the CIA's pervasive infection of global discourse and cultural sensibilities and then go and enjoy it anyway
Very carefully
littlegreenpills posted:i dont know how you ppl can correctly diagnose all media products made with a higher level of sophistication than my little pony fan art as products of the CIA's pervasive infection of global discourse and cultural sensibilities and then go and enjoy it anyway
http://variety.com/2016/film/news/andre-the-giant-biopic-1201769286/
EmanuelaBrolandi posted:Keven should I buy HGH y or n?
Depends... do you want gains? Or are you a chump?
i also picked up Mansfield Park for like $1 but who knows when I'll get around to that
getfiscal posted:Depends... do you want gains? Or are you a chump?
Both probably
EmanuelaBrolandi posted:Keven should I buy HGH y or n?
Hgh is fine but I think just straight up test is the best option. I feel like the weird side effects are weirder for hgh but it for sure works.
http://www.thenation.com/article/michael-ratner-1943-2016/
.
Here: http://www.northstarcompass.org/nsc0004/stal1952.htm
He also owns Molotov for telling his wife state secrets:
Stalin posted:Comrade Molotov has such deep respect for his wife, that no sooner have the CC or the Politburo made very many decisions on this or that question, that this decision immediately is conveyed to Molotov's wife Zhemtchuzhina and all of her friends. Her friends, as is well known to all of you here, are not to be trusted, as former situations have shown. It is of course not the way that a member of the CPSU CC Politburo should behave.
lmao
blinkandwheeze posted:margulis at least seems to owe a lot to vladimir vernadsky and boris mikhaylov kozo-polyansky which is partially what piqued my interest
i am the leprechaun that collects this type of post in a big pot
tears posted:Stalin's short speech to the Penum of the CC, Oct 16 1952, at the 19th Congress, in which he confirms that he wants to be relieved of the post of GenSec of the CC i.e. . No roles inthe party aparatus, his full 90 min speech wasn't published as far as I know (& according to Furr), speculation is that he put forward all sorts of radical stuff about seperating the party from the USSR government, and that was why he was murdered
.
Here: http://www.northstarcompass.org/nsc0004/stal1952.htm
He also owns Molotov for telling his wife state secrets:Stalin posted:Comrade Molotov has such deep respect for his wife, that no sooner have the CC or the Politburo made very many decisions on this or that question, that this decision immediately is conveyed to Molotov's wife Zhemtchuzhina and all of her friends. Her friends, as is well known to all of you here, are not to be trusted, as former situations have shown. It is of course not the way that a member of the CPSU CC Politburo should behave.
lmao
ah comrade stalin, we hardly knew ye
MOLOTOV - coming to the speaker's tribune completely admits his mistakes before the CC, but he stated that he is and will always he a faithful disciple of Stalin.
STALIN - (interrupting Molotov) This is nonsense. I have no students at all. We are all students of the great Lenin.
http://www.migrationpolicy.org/programs/data-hub/state-immigration-data-profiles
tears posted:Is there a Furr equivilant for any popular books about Socialist China? particularly Dikotter's "prize winning" Mao's Great Famine?
i have been looking for exactly this since i got into an argument with someone recently and was doing the usual thing of referencing utsa patnaik etc and they were like HAVE YOU EVEN READ YANG JISHENG's TOMBSTONE?? i found a copy and could immediately see the obvious issues with it, mostly stemming from it being written by an anticommunist journalist rather than an academic, with extremely demographic stuff. but anyway, yeah. need some updated debunking stuff on this subject
Petrol posted:tears posted:Is there a Furr equivilant for any popular books about Socialist China? particularly Dikotter's "prize winning" Mao's Great Famine?
i have been looking for exactly this since i got into an argument with someone recently and was doing the usual thing of referencing utsa patnaik etc and they were like HAVE YOU EVEN READ YANG JISHENG's TOMBSTONE?? i found a copy and could immediately see the obvious issues with it, mostly stemming from it being written by an anticommunist journalist rather than an academic, with extremely demographic stuff. but anyway, yeah. need some updated debunking stuff on this subject
In terms of Grover Furr type debunking, there's Mobo Gao's Battle for China's Past. It debunks a lot of the popular memoirs and of course, Chang and Halliday's bullshit, but nothing about Tombstone. I guess it's useful to point out that there's plenty of other people that went to China and did interviews with peasants about the period with no trace of the apocalyptic accounts that have become popular recently.
"If Chang and Halliday’s 38 million toll is correct that means one in
twenty Chinese died of starvation during the Great Leap Forward,
something that could not be hidden away no matter how hard the
authorities tried. It is also worth noting that in the village case studies
that I know of, no death toll due to famine during the Great Leap
Forward is reported. These studies include Gao 1999a, Seybolt 1996,
Endicott (1989) and Hinton (1983). The two villages studied by Seybolt
and Endicott were in two of the worst-hit provinces, Sichuan and Henan."
Mobo Gao, Battle for China's Past pg 86
"Long after Mao’s death, Professor Han Dongping traveled to Shandong and Henan, where the worst famine conditions appeared in 1959-1961.
Han Dongping found that most of the farmers he questioned favored the first interpretation of events, rather than the second, that is to say they did not think Mao was mainly to blame for the problems they suffered during the Great Leap Forward.31. This is not to say that tragic errors did not occur. Dongping wrote of the introduction of communal eating in the rural communes. To begin with, this was a very popular policy among the peasants. Indeed, in 1958 many farmers report that they had never eaten so well in their lives before. The problem was that this new, seeming abundance led to carelessness in the harvesting and consumption of food. People seemed to have started assuming that the government could guarantee food supplies and that they did not have responsibility themselves for food security.
Given the poverty of China in the late 1950s this was an error that was bound to lead to serious problems and the Communist leadership should have taken quicker steps to rectify it. Three years of awful natural disasters made things much worse. Solidarity between commune members in the worst effected regions broke down as individuals tried to seize crops before they were harvested. Again, this practice made a bad situation worse. However, it must be stressed that the farmers themselves did not tell Han Dongping that errors in the organisation of communal eating were the main cause of the famine they suffered. Han Dongping, himself, severely criticizes Mao for the consequences of his “hasty” policies during the Great Leap Forward. However he also writes “I have interviewed numerous workers and farmers in Shandong, Henan, and I never met one farmer or worker who said that Mao was bad. I also talked to one scholar in Anhui who happened to grow up in rural areas and had been doing research in the Anhui, he never met one farmer that said Mao was bad nor a farmer who said Deng was good.” 32
It may be argued that Han Dongping’s, at least partial, sympathy for Mao might have colored his interpretation of what he heard from the peasants. However, it must also be noted that two of his grandparents died of hunger related diseases during the Great Leap Forward and Han Dongping often sounds more critical of Mao’s policies in this period than the peasants he is interviewing."
monthlyreview.org/commentary/did-mao-really-kill-millions-in-the-great-leap-forward/
just looking at the private life book, even wikipedia says its all made up lmao, one to add to the pile of unread anti stalin and anti mao fiction
roseweird posted:and it wasn't actually easy to find anything debunking it, though i did find a letter in a new-york based english-language chinese newspaper.
the "china study group" actually published a book length text debunking li's memoirs in 1996. manufacturing history: sex lies and random house's memoirs of mao's physician (waybackmachine link because their web hosting seems to have expired)