• Sedan@lemmy.ml
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    1 hour ago

    Khrushchev’s venom was correctly called out by Mao.

    Like you, I also detest Khrushchev; however, as far as China is concerned, Khrushchev did nothing detrimental—in fact, he continued Stalin’s foreign policy course regarding that country.

    And here is something that might surprise you: Stalin and Mao never actually shared a warm relationship. Stalin used to refer to Mao as a “radish”—red on the outside (a communist), but white on the inside (a capitalist).

    but there’s good reason why Khrushchev’s actions enabled Gorbachev’s, which enabled Yeltsin’s.

    Yes, I completely agree with you here. Stalin’s death was the beginning of the end for the USSR.

    Regarding technology transfer, certainly you can see that Chinese manufacturing is now more advanced than soviet manufacturing. In becoming the world’s factory, they not only copied western tech, but totally owned the entire production process, and now are using it to advance and develop further.

    Once again, Comrade: The factories where this “copying” took place were built using Western capital. The Western owners were undoubtedly keen to ensure those factories generated a profit, so they dispatched their own specialists to help their Chinese comrades master the technologies more quickly; equipment and machinery were provided as well.

    There is no miracle here, Comrade. I played football as a child, and back then, the Germans built an Adidas factory in Moscow. I used to buy Moscow-made Adidas boots; they were indistinguishable from the originals—except that they cost several times less.

    Just imagine: if there had been thousands of such factories—as there are in China—what would have happened then? Moscow-made Adidas would have completely displaced German Adidas. Does that not remind you of anything?

    The only catch is that, in the USSR, you could count the number of Western-built factories on the fingers of one hand…

    As for the idea of ​​simply copying something without developing it further… Have you heard about the Korean War, where American pilots suffered a crushing defeat at the hands of Soviet airmen? The ratio was something like one to ten—I don’t recall the exact figures.

    The whole secret lies in the fact that the aircraft flown by the Soviet pilots were copies of American designs—except that, in their version, the Russians altered the wing angle. And the Russians won.

    All in all, I understand that I am not Russian. I am indeed a westerner, damned as I may be.

    Comrade, I feel a certain sense of embarrassment before you. This is the first time I have ever heard an American speak like this.

    I am pleased to hear that. When I detect a certain note of regret… I truly hope it is sincere!

    What we are witnessing is a cornered beast that has already lost, and is throwing a fit in the aftermath.

    You can see that a cornered beast will fight to the bitter end! A cornered beast is capable of anything!

    Comrade, it is one thing to merely observe, but quite another to be right in the epicenter. I am watching Russia—quite literally—through a pair of naval binoculars.

    If I were to set up a drum, grab a spyglass, put on a tricorn hat, and perch myself on that drum—well, I could easily pass for Napoleon… )))

    For those of us here, all these death throes… they reverberate back to us later with excruciating pain. Just now, Ukraine struck a dormitory; many teenagers were killed. And the retaliation will come flying back—right down onto our heads…