• Joe@discuss.tchncs.de
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    3 days ago

    It has knobs, twiddle them or use the raw data.

    Yes - societal collapses tend to do that.

    • KimBongUn420@lemmy.ml
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      2 days ago

      It has knobs, twiddle them or use the raw data.

      @ShimmeringKoi@hexbear.net provided a graph that did that. It shows how fast life expectancy increased. And it’s only one metric of many in which the UDSSR dominated. Literacy rates, industrialization, GDP growth, scientific achievements, etc. are other areas that come to mind.

      Yes - societal collapses tend to do that

      Neoliberal shock doctrine aka capitalism does that dipshit naziboy

      • Joe@discuss.tchncs.de
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        2 days ago

        The original poster was terribly one sided, clearly meaning to shock people into thinking that the USSR’s socialism was solely responsible for it.

        That the USSR achieved what it did is not in dispute… that socialism alone could have achieved this is my point… russia was a blank slate, primed for rapid improvement. It also didn’t improve uniformly (not surprising given its size and geography).

        Neoliberal shock doctrine aka capitalism does that (followed by a rule 1 violating insult)

        Russia’s internal collapse and slide was quite special, and most other former USSR states did better (even pre-1991), including Belarus & Ukraine. That speaks very much to russia, not the USSR of course


        I expect people here to be capable of basic research and forming their own opinions. If your opinion is “ussr was perfect, does no wrong” then OK, good for you.

        • KimBongUn420@lemmy.ml
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          2 days ago

          socialism alone could have achieved this is my point

          I’m not saying non socialist countries did not achive improvements in life expectancy, a cost effective part of the appropriated surplus value is allocated by the oppressing classes to their labor pool.

          In socialist states a larger part of the surplus is used to improve the labor pool, which explains the rapid growth. Your provided graph obscures it. You’d have to fiddle with the time slider and notice how quickly socialist states pop dark blue in comparison to others.

          Russia’s internal collapse and slide was quite special, and most other former USSR states did better (even pre-1991), including Belarus & Ukraine. That speaks very much to russia, not the USSR of cou

          I agree that the UDSSR needed to be reformed and it was also the result of the only referendum they had. But to see the stark contrast from before and after the dissolution, and to say that capitalism improved living standards is just assassine

          followed by a rule 1 violating insult

          Sorry about that. Your dismissive response triggered it

          • Joe@discuss.tchncs.de
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            2 days ago

            In socialist states a larger part of the surplus is used to improve the labor pool, which explains the rapid growth.

            Sure. If the right policies are prioritized and investments made, it should be much more efficient. Investments in primary healthcare and education in particular tend to be clear winners.

            stark contrast from before and after the dissolution

            Russia’s sudden shift to oligargchic capitalism was deeply corrupt and destabilising, harming russia itself and much of the neighbourhood.

            to say that capitalism improved living standards is just assassine

            It’s not capitalism that improves living standards. It’s sustained (and sustainable) growth, stable institutions and investment over time. Both capitalism and socialism can (and have) supported that, each with risks and caveats.

            Sorry about that

            Thanks

    • SevenSkalls [he/him]@hexbear.net
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      3 days ago

      If you twiddle them, you’ll see exactly what the previous commenter is talking about. For example, try comparing socialist countries like Russia and Cuba to other countries of a similar level of development, like any random country in the Third World, or Africa, Asia, or South America that didn’t use imperialism in the 1800’s, to boost its development.

      You’ll see a 15-25 year difference in life expectancy during that time. And that’s without causing the awful conditions in the rest of the world that Europe and the US did by boosting their development through slavery, war, imperialism, and colonialism.

      • Joe@discuss.tchncs.de
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        3 days ago

        Russia started out in a terrible position (with no small thanks to the late abolishment of serfdom). But it isn’t particularly surprising that it improved when or as much as it did with the arrival of new technology, urbanisation trends, better sanitation and health care (especially pre-natal care), and of course its location. The world was changing fast, and russia was well primed to change with it.

        • FunkyStuff [he/him]@hexbear.net
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          2 days ago

          I think that the fact that the capitalist world achieved the rapid 20th century development from the plundering of the global south, while the USSR managed comparable growth as they lost 27 million people in the fight against fascism (and were later forced to spend ridiculous amounts of resources developing weapons to maintain MAD against the US) should also count for something. Capitalist development isn’t very impressive in the Dominican Republic, Haiti, Honduras, Panama, Colombia, Ecuador, Brazil, Bolivia, Paraguay, Chile (despite the Allende admin), Argentina, Egypt, Nigeria, Ivory Coast, etc. Even with some jumps in life expectancy and literacy rates, uneven capitalist development is undeniable and a much graver problem than its analogue in the former second world.

          • Joe@discuss.tchncs.de
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            2 days ago

            Recovering from WW2 losses was indeed a challenge for many soviet bloc countries. My suspicion is that without the cold war, W.Europe would also have recovered much slower as US investment and interest could have taken quite a different form.

            Latin America is a different beast, worthy of its own discussion separate to this one.