Similar to the soviet experience, Chinese workers are holding their heads high in new stages in socialist construction, with simiarly rapid levels of development.
Comrade, that line only worked in the USSR of the 1930s—when work was a source of pride, and nothing more! In the 1960s, however, people in the USSR derived genuine physical enjoyment from the fruits of their labor—a time when store shelves were overflowing with goods. A kilogram of black caviar cost $10 back then; today in Russia, it costs $500 per kilo.
Imagine: you work as a fitter at a factory, come home, and eat black caviar by the spoonful. Of course, nobody actually did that—but a working man could easily afford to buy himself some black caviar to go with his sandwiches for breakfast.
Had it not been for the war, this reality would have arrived as early as the 1950s. The task of rebuilding the country took an immense amount of time.
Comrade, if not for the war—and if Stalin had lived longer—China would be nervously smoking on the sidelines right now… )))
You could be correct, but we would never know. History did not take that course, what we have is what we have. I do not believe Stalin’s economy to have been bad, and wished it continued and the USSR was here today. Sadly, it is not, and the world is paying the price.
Comrade, that line only worked in the USSR of the 1930s—when work was a source of pride, and nothing more! In the 1960s, however, people in the USSR derived genuine physical enjoyment from the fruits of their labor—a time when store shelves were overflowing with goods. A kilogram of black caviar cost $10 back then; today in Russia, it costs $500 per kilo.
Imagine: you work as a fitter at a factory, come home, and eat black caviar by the spoonful. Of course, nobody actually did that—but a working man could easily afford to buy himself some black caviar to go with his sandwiches for breakfast.
Had it not been for the war, this reality would have arrived as early as the 1950s. The task of rebuilding the country took an immense amount of time.
Comrade, if not for the war—and if Stalin had lived longer—China would be nervously smoking on the sidelines right now… )))
You could be correct, but we would never know. History did not take that course, what we have is what we have. I do not believe Stalin’s economy to have been bad, and wished it continued and the USSR was here today. Sadly, it is not, and the world is paying the price.
If only people in the USSR back then had known what they stood to lose…
Agreed.