#161
You have to actually show evidence if you're going to make a claim like that, and you don't have any. That's kind of the point of this whole book, actually. You just seem like you're being willfully ignorant because you have some kind of resentment based on an exaggerated story your grandparent told you.
#162
it follows from the points i made prior to that. if stalin wasn't concerned with individual guilt or innocence, but with destroying the kulaks as a class, then you can't say that ezhov somehow betrayed stalin by destroying the kulaks as a class with no regard for guilt or innocence

Edited by Panopticon ()

#163

Panopticon posted:

stalinists often remind us khrushchev participated in the purges and had blood on his hands. but if stalin was such a wonderful humanitarian, why didn't he punish khrushchev for this anti-soviet crime?


pobody's nerfect

Panopticon posted:

it follows from the points i made prior to that. if stalin wasn't concerned with individual guilt or innocence, but with destroying the kulaks as a class, then you can't say that ezhov somehow betrayed stalin by destroying the kulaks as a class with no regard for guilt or innocence


hypothetically let's say stalin did want to destroy (or at least neutralise) the kulaks as a class. why would that be wrong?

#164

Petrol posted:

pobody's nerfect



only some people are sociopaths, though

Petrol posted:

hypothetically let's say stalin did want to destroy (or at least neutralise) the kulaks as a class. why would that be wrong?



before we talk about why collective punishment is generally regarded as an immoral thing i would like for the stalinists to get their story straight. no hypotheticals. did stalin care about guilt and innocence when he sent the july telegramme,, or did stalin care about destroying the kulaks as a class?

#165
i'll tell u whats sociopathic: joseph "dank meme" stalin never freed the weed

communism is ~just like all the others~
#166
Stalin cared about stopping a militant conspiracy to overthrow the Soviet government, that had been reported as a real threat (and actually was a real threat). This is particularly annoying because I am currently transcribing Furr's anticipation of your line of reasoning. Chapters 5 and 6 discuss this exact issue in great detail. Chapter 5 is the longest in the book and I have 45 pages left. So be patient and sit in your seat \_
#167
[account deactivated]
#168

Panopticon posted:

Petrol posted:

destroy (or at least neutralise) the kulaks as a class

collective punishment


these are very much not the same thing. you will recall that dekulakisation under the first five year plan had nothing to do with mass killings or whatever else might evoke "collective punishment". and if stalin later authorised the execution of former kulaks who continued to violently oppose the soviet state, those killings would basically be the completion of dekulakisation, but still not "collective punishment" since it was directed only at individual criminals. what ezhov then went on to do (mass killings) was not, on the evidence, stalin's intention, let alone part of a plan of "collective punishment" of kulaks (if that term can even be reasonably applied to an economic class?)

#169

Panopticon posted:

why do you believe stalin was concerned with guilt and innocence, and not the suppression of a class?



stalin's other state-capitalist errors include refusing to tell us, despite repeated good-faith questions, when he stopped beating his wife

#170
Stalin

Edited by cars ()

#171
Stalin.
#172

swampman posted:

Stalin cared about stopping a militant conspiracy to overthrow the Soviet government, that had been reported as a real threat (and actually was a real threat). This is particularly annoying because I am currently transcribing Furr's anticipation of your line of reasoning. Chapters 5 and 6 discuss this exact issue in great detail. Chapter 5 is the longest in the book and I have 45 pages left. So be patient and sit in your seat \_



i can see how shooting a hundred thousand ex-kulaks helps hugely with that. wait, no i can't, that's insane. you're insane.

i believe getty's interpretation of events over yours. stalin wanted to centralise power under the 1936 constitution, and to get the regions to go along with it he temporarily devolved judicial authority to them to kill and imprison their enemies

Petrol posted:

Panopticon posted:
Petrol posted:
destroy (or at least neutralise) the kulaks as a class
collective punishment

these are very much not the same thing. you will recall that dekulakisation under the first five year plan had nothing to do with mass killings or whatever else might evoke "collective punishment". and if stalin later authorised the execution of former kulaks who continued to violently oppose the soviet state, those killings would basically be the completion of dekulakisation, but still not "collective punishment" since it was directed only at individual criminals. what ezhov then went on to do (mass killings) was not, on the evidence, stalin's intention, let alone part of a plan of "collective punishment" of kulaks (if that term can even be reasonably applied to an economic class?)



it absolutely is collective punishment to shoot people on the basis of their class rather than for any crimes they committed

#173
and if you disagree that stalin treated the kulaks as a class to be destroyed, you disagree with stalin

https://www.marxists.org/reference/archive/stalin/works/1929/12/27.htm

What does this mean? It means that we have passed from the policy of restricting the exploiting tendencies of the kulaks to the policy of eliminating the kulaks as a class. It means that we have carried out, and are continuing to carry out, one of the decisive turns in our whole policy.



To launch an offensive against the kulaks means that we must smash the kulaks, eliminate them as a class.



Today, we have an adequate material base for us to strike at the kulaks, to break their resistance, to eliminate them as a class, and to replace their output by the output of the collective farms and state farms.



That is why we have recently passed from the policy of restricting the exploiting tendencies of the kulaks to the policy of eliminating the kulaks as a class.


#174
"sure stalin talked about destroying a class of people as if they were a military enemy, and sure he asked in the july telegramme for provisional numbers of arrests, and sure he didn't halt the operation when it was discussed in the october plenary, and sure he participated in changing the limits on executions and imprisonment, but he really had no idea what ezhov was up to" - an insane person, or possibly a CIA troll making all communists look insane
#175
did you purposefully misread what Petrol wrote? It's in English which I thought we were all speaking. eliminating classes is the definition of communism, so unless you think that involves the destruction of all life on earth (or at least all humans) clearly you are capable of understanding the difference between eliminating a class and killing all of them.
#176
i believe it's possible to abolish classes without mass murder, but stalin obviously didn't
#177

Panopticon posted:

i believe getty's interpretation of events over yours. stalin wanted to centralise power under the 1936 constitution, and to get the regions to go along with it he temporarily devolved judicial authority to them to kill and imprison their enemies

What is Getty's evidence? I'd rather look at the sources that actually prove this.

Chapter 5 includes Ezhov's confession among a lot of other great material and I look forward to your lengthy, tear-soaked apology. 30 pages

Edited by swampman ()

#178

swampman posted:

Panopticon posted:
i believe getty's interpretation of events over yours. stalin wanted to centralise power under the 1936 constitution, and to get the regions to go along with it he temporarily devolved judicial authority to them to kill and imprison their enemies
What is Getty's evidence? I'd rather look at the sources that actually prove this.

Chapter 5 includes Ezhov's confession among a lot of other great material and I look forward to your lengthy, tear-soaked apology. 30 pages



http://home.ku.edu.tr/~mbaker/cshs522/GettyMassRepressions.pdf

#179

Panopticon posted:

and if you disagree that stalin treated the kulaks as a class to be destroyed, you disagree with stalin



you might have missed this but literally all of those quotes include the qualifier "as a class." i mean you even say it yourself!

when you read that a company has been liquidated, do you feel the need to run out and rescue its employees from being dissolved in acid? or are you able to make a distinction between what happens to a structure vs. its constituents?

if the latter, then why does that faculty abruptly vanish when the structure in question is an economic class?

#180
i'm glad you are open to the possibility that social relations can be changed without killing hundreds of thousands of "the most hostile" of class enemies, but stalin did not feel that way
#181
i'm reading that getty article, and like two pages in he is already talking about what a bureaucratic clusterfuck the whole thing was (going so far as to call that sort of chaos basically paradigmatic of stalin's era) and even says "there is little reason to think that Stalin sought or expected the mess he created"

this thing is pretty long, though, so maybe you could save some time by pulling what you think are the most significant bits to support your point? i mean i assume you're familiar with the piece, since you linked it and all
#182
[account deactivated]
#183

Constantignoble posted:

i'm reading that getty article, and like two pages in he is already talking about what a bureaucratic clusterfuck the whole thing was (going so far as to call that sort of chaos basically paradigmatic of stalin's era) and even says "there is little reason to think that Stalin sought or expected the mess he created"

this thing is pretty long, though, so maybe you could save some time by pulling what you think are the most significant bits to support your point? i mean i assume you're familiar with the piece, since you linked it and all




he did not expect his tight control to be ignored by the people implementing his plan (local party and NKVD leaders on the troikas). he not not plan for 400,000 people to be executed. but he DID plan for 80,000 people to be executed on the basis of their class affiliation. he did not plan for the guilty and the innocent to be separated as chaff from wheat. when he devolved state power to local authorities (abandoning the precepts of legalism he had been cultivating since 1933) he allowed for the abuses to take place.

this is why swampman's interpretation is complete garbage. ezhov was part of the stalinist centre and was only used as a scapegoat by stalin when he wanted to regain control after the local leaders were placated. ezhov was sending out the exact same kind of admonitions furr says absolve stalin of culpability. for example pages 133-134

In February 1938, Ezhov sent a letter to the NKVD leadership in Ukraine "and elsewhere" congratulating his subordinates on good work in arresting spies and observing that things were going generally well, but noting some "mistakes and serious shortcomings" in local NKVD operations... etc


#184
panopticon every single post you make is extremely dishonest. this entire debate started because swampman posed a detailed and reasonable critique of your position and you responded to one line of it. you then purposefully confused the Marxist concept of liquidating a class and executions and when called out for this you pretended that you had understood the difference the whole time and actually mean that it was Stalin who didn't. now you responded to constantignoble with the same claim that swampman originally criticized (which you ignored).

we are not opposed to debate, considering this thread is pretty quiet otherwise. but you are again being completely dishonest and acting incredulous to hide the inadequacy of your critical thinking ability. if I was still mod I would have banned you but since I'm not please treat people's arguments with respect and actually pretend like everything you write can easily be read again.
#185

Panopticon posted:

In February 1938, Ezhov sent a letter to the NKVD leadership in Ukraine "and elsewhere" congratulating his subordinates on good work in arresting spies and observing that things were going generally well, but noting some "mistakes and serious shortcomings" in local NKVD operations... etc

this letter is discussed at length in the upcoming chapter

#186

Panopticon posted:

he not not plan for 400,000 people to be executed. but he DID plan for 80,000 people to be executed on the basis of their class affiliation.


This is a pretty clear, simple example of how ideology distorts perception. When the word limity was translated as "quota" these Politburo orders and other documents had a more damning flair to them. But now that the numbers are shown to be the opposite - strict maximums on the number of people to be tried - it's still (to you) evidence against the Communists. Now, my reading of the "limit" here is that Stalin saw a need for immediate action but had no desire for overreach. Note that Stalin does not even specify the actual limit but asks for the limits to be provided from each territory. Stalin was asking for an estimate of the number of kulaks who were involved in anti-Soviet crimes in each area, then demanding the local troika stick to those limits instead of zealously rooting out ever more criminals until innocents became swept up. Probably Stalin remembered events from world history like, the Inquisition or whatever, and wanted Soviet agents, acting at a distance in a time before cellphones, not to undermine the goal of executing the anti-Soviet kulaks.

You on the other hand seem to read the "quotas" as proof that Stalin wanted at X thousand murdered, and now you read the "limit" as proof that Stalin already had the first X thousand executions lined up.


please actually respond to this this time instead of ignoring it.

#187

babyhueypnewton posted:

panopticon every single post you make is extremely dishonest. this entire debate started because swampman posed a detailed and reasonable critique of your position and you responded to one line of it. you then purposefully confused the Marxist concept of liquidating a class and executions and when called out for this you pretended that you had understood the difference the whole time and actually mean that it was Stalin who didn't. now you responded to constantignoble with the same claim that swampman originally criticized (which you ignored).

we are not opposed to debate, considering this thread is pretty quiet otherwise. but you are again being completely dishonest and acting incredulous to hide the inadequacy of your critical thinking ability. if I was still mod I would have banned you but since I'm not please treat people's arguments with respect and actually pretend like everything you write can easily be read again.



i only needed that line. the entire argument that ezhov fell from grace for killing innocents is absurd given that stalin's intent had nothing to do with guilt and innocence, but with destroying a class (we can agree now that this is possible without mass murder, but stalin planned for those mass murders)

#188

Panopticon posted:

he did not expect his tight control to be ignored by the people implementing his plan (local party and NKVD leaders on the troikas). he not not plan for 400,000 people to be executed. but he DID plan for 80,000 people to be executed on the basis of their class affiliation. he did not plan for the guilty and the innocent to be separated as chaff from wheat. when he devolved state power to local authorities (abandoning the precepts of legalism he had been cultivating since 1933) he allowed for the abuses to take place.


You draw a long fucking bow, mate. Getty is helping you do it so let's examine the obvious flaw with his take on these events. He assumes there was no genuine counterrevolutionary activity taking place - that regional party leaders were basically just being paranoid about the threat of former kulaks and other reactionaries gaining power in the forthcoming open elections, and Stalin gave his blessing for those local leaders to exterminate potential enemies simply to ensure the elections went smoothly. That makes far less sense than the alternative scenario, in which a reactionary terror campaign was actually being waged by former kulaks, Whites, etc in the leadup to the elections, and that in spite of the risks and potential for abuse, an urgent mass repression was actually required.

An important point I want to drive home now is that in such a scenario - heck, even if that WAS a paranoid fantasy Stalin was credulous enough to believe - when he authorised the repression/execution of kulaks by local authorities, he was actually authorising the repression specifically of counterrevolutionary terrorists.

Now, you can make the argument that he must have anticipated local authorities would abuse this power, and I agree, but (a) it doesn't follow that he would or could have anticipated how far the troikas would go, because his superhero power was not clairvoyancy; (b) in the context of an urgent response to a serious counterrevolutionary threat, it's a reasonable and quite probably necessary risk to take.

#189

babyhueypnewton posted:

Panopticon posted:
he not not plan for 400,000 people to be executed. but he DID plan for 80,000 people to be executed on the basis of their class affiliation.

This is a pretty clear, simple example of how ideology distorts perception. When the word limity was translated as "quota" these Politburo orders and other documents had a more damning flair to them. But now that the numbers are shown to be the opposite - strict maximums on the number of people to be tried - it's still (to you) evidence against the Communists. Now, my reading of the "limit" here is that Stalin saw a need for immediate action but had no desire for overreach. Note that Stalin does not even specify the actual limit but asks for the limits to be provided from each territory. Stalin was asking for an estimate of the number of kulaks who were involved in anti-Soviet crimes in each area, then demanding the local troika stick to those limits instead of zealously rooting out ever more criminals until innocents became swept up. Probably Stalin remembered events from world history like, the Inquisition or whatever, and wanted Soviet agents, acting at a distance in a time before cellphones, not to undermine the goal of executing the anti-Soviet kulaks.

You on the other hand seem to read the "quotas" as proof that Stalin wanted at X thousand murdered, and now you read the "limit" as proof that Stalin already had the first X thousand executions lined up.

please actually respond to this this time instead of ignoring it.



see, again he hems and haws about innocents and crimes when those things weren't relevant

#190

Panopticon posted:

babyhueypnewton posted:

panopticon every single post you make is extremely dishonest. this entire debate started because swampman posed a detailed and reasonable critique of your position and you responded to one line of it. you then purposefully confused the Marxist concept of liquidating a class and executions and when called out for this you pretended that you had understood the difference the whole time and actually mean that it was Stalin who didn't. now you responded to constantignoble with the same claim that swampman originally criticized (which you ignored).

we are not opposed to debate, considering this thread is pretty quiet otherwise. but you are again being completely dishonest and acting incredulous to hide the inadequacy of your critical thinking ability. if I was still mod I would have banned you but since I'm not please treat people's arguments with respect and actually pretend like everything you write can easily be read again.

i only needed that line. the entire argument that ezhov fell from grace for killing innocents is absurd given that stalin's intent had nothing to do with guilt and innocence, but with destroying a class (we can agree now that this is possible without mass murder, but stalin planned for those mass murders)



even if this were true you used stalin quotes to justify it when it's clear what stalin means by class and 'eliminate'. so we dont even have to get into the facts since your argument is already based on a trick

#191

Petrol posted:

Panopticon posted:
he did not expect his tight control to be ignored by the people implementing his plan (local party and NKVD leaders on the troikas). he not not plan for 400,000 people to be executed. but he DID plan for 80,000 people to be executed on the basis of their class affiliation. he did not plan for the guilty and the innocent to be separated as chaff from wheat. when he devolved state power to local authorities (abandoning the precepts of legalism he had been cultivating since 1933) he allowed for the abuses to take place.

You draw a long fucking bow, mate. Getty is helping you do it so let's examine the obvious flaw with his take on these events. He assumes there was no genuine counterrevolutionary activity taking place - that regional party leaders were basically just being paranoid about the threat of former kulaks and other reactionaries gaining power in the forthcoming open elections, and Stalin gave his blessing for those local leaders to exterminate potential enemies simply to ensure the elections went smoothly. That makes far less sense than the alternative scenario, in which a reactionary terror campaign was actually being waged by former kulaks, Whites, etc in the leadup to the elections, and that in spite of the risks and potential for abuse, an urgent mass repression was actually required.

An important point I want to drive home now is that in such a scenario - heck, even if that WAS a paranoid fantasy Stalin was credulous enough to believe - when he authorised the repression/execution of kulaks by local authorities, he was actually authorising the repression specifically of counterrevolutionary terrorists.

Now, you can make the argument that he must have anticipated local authorities would abuse this power, and I agree, but (a) it doesn't follow that he would or could have anticipated how far the troikas would go, because his superhero power was not clairvoyancy; (b) in the context of an urgent response to a serious counterrevolutionary threat, it's a reasonable and quite probably necessary risk to take.



okay, if your position is 400,000 dead are an acceptable price for liquidating the kulak class, then fine, but please stick with that position and don't pretend stalin meant something else.

#192

babyhueypnewton posted:

even if this were true you used stalin quotes to justify it when it's clear what stalin means by class and 'eliminate'. so we dont even have to get into the facts since your argument is already based on a trick



i will let you and petrol hammer out the rhizzone position on this.

#193

Panopticon posted:

okay, if your position is 400,000 dead are an acceptable price for liquidating the kulak class, then fine, but please stick with that position and don't pretend stalin meant something else.


Has anyone ever noticed you can't spell panopticon without cop

#194

Panopticon posted:

he did not expect his tight control to be ignored by the people implementing his plan (local party and NKVD leaders on the troikas). he not not plan for 400,000 people to be executed. but he DID plan for 80,000 people to be executed on the basis of their class affiliation.



taking a quick look at a (bad, machine) translation of the actual order itself (one of the few sources getty cites that you can read, it seems)

it says there are estimates of 73,000 people engaged "most serious" activities such as

"much in the past repressed churchmen and sectarians who were active participants in the anti-Soviet armed actions."

"As well as footage of former active members of bandit revolts, white, punitive, immigrants, etc."

"In addition, in the countryside and the city is still a significant nest frames criminals - skotokonokradov, habitual thieves, robbers, and others serving sentences who escaped from prison and fleeing from repression"

it says these numbers are approximate but could be less.

for what to do with them:
"They are subject to immediate arrest and, in consideration of their cases on threes - execution."

the wiki article itself says (uncited):

"The implementation was swift. By August 15, 1937, 101,000 were arrested and 14,000 convicted."


i have just picked that out quickly (and am misinterpreting parts obv) but it is very clear that getty (and you) casually stating "73,000 to be shot" is a lie.
Which casts doubt on all his other statements based on things we cant read

Edited by xipe ()

#195
your argument before was more interesting: that the lack of 'rule of law' meant that the excesses of the purges were inevitable and were the result of specific historical realities of the USSR that we can avoid in the future. we then tried to show this is wrong based on a marxist understanding of the law and the state but this is something which is not immediately obvious to someone who believes themselves to be a socialist and there is a possibility for debate.

you're now instead fixating on Stalin himself and claiming he personally wanted to murder as many Kulaks as he could get away with (hence the need for quotas?), created a system on purpose that would exceed his quotas because he wanted to murder as many people as possible and then blame the fall guy. this position is not only obviously wrong as has been pointed out by Petrol, it's not particularly interesting.

Panopticon posted:

see, again he hems and haws about innocents and crimes when those things weren't relevant


this is in no way a response to what he said, particularly since it is you who is fixated on the concept of legality and rule of law.

#196

babyhueypnewton posted:

Panopticon posted:
see, again he hems and haws about innocents and crimes when those things weren't relevant

this is in no way a response to what he said, particularly since it is you who is fixated on the concept of legality and rule of law.



swampman used the terms. he said, essentially, ezhov was killing innocents, in contravention to stalin's orders, as part of a plot to discredit stalin. he was the one that referred to innocence and criminality.

#197

xipe posted:

Panopticon posted:
he did not expect his tight control to be ignored by the people implementing his plan (local party and NKVD leaders on the troikas). he not not plan for 400,000 people to be executed. but he DID plan for 80,000 people to be executed on the basis of their class affiliation.


taking a quick look at a (bad, machine) translation of the actual order itself (one of the few sources getty cites that you can read, it seems)

it says there are estimates of 73,000 people engaged "most serious" activities such as

"much in the past repressed churchmen and sectarians who were active participants in the anti-Soviet armed actions."

"As well as footage of former active members of bandit revolts, white, punitive, immigrants, etc."

"In addition, in the countryside and the city is still a significant nest frames criminals - skotokonokradov, habitual thieves, robbers, and others serving sentences who escaped from prison and fleeing from repression"

it says these numbers are approximate but could be less.

for what to do with them:
"They are subject to immediate arrest and, in consideration of their cases on threes - execution."

the wiki article itself says (uncited):

"The implementation was swift. By August 15, 1937, 101,000 were arrested and 14,000 convicted."


i have just picked that out quickly (and am misinterpreting parts obv) but it is very clear that getty (and you) casually stating "73,000 to be shot" is a lie.
Which casts doubt on all his other statements based on things we cant read



no

#198
i think this thread is fine to have someone setting up the normal bad arguments so they can be knocked over, thats my current position as mod. but theres always head colds going around my work this time of year so *extreme thunder peal*
#199
although i will say that last posted page is pretty hilariously bad in every single sentence its like a five alarm chili of shitty old propaganda
#200

cars posted:

although i will say that last posted page is pretty hilariously bad in every single sentence its like a five alarm chili of shitty old propaganda


could you give an example