I find it hard to believe that your family could starve to death just from some mistakes but I might be in the “too positively biased against AES” stage of my radicalization journey

  • Lemvi@lemmy.sdf.org
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    1 year ago

    No, I don’t think Arstotzka is modeled after any particular country.

    However, under Stalin, workers were paid for their work based on a piece-rate system, meaning that if they didn’t hit the quota, they were paid less.

    This, coupled with famines caused by the mismanaged production and distribution of food, like the one in 1933, could certainly lead to a working man not being able to provide for his entire family.

      • Lemvi@lemmy.sdf.org
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        1 year ago

        Ah, didn’t realize this was lemmygrad 😅

        Just out of curiosity though, which part of my comment do you consider to be propaganda?

        Btw, by my understanding a “reactionary” is a person who seeks to restore an earlier political state of society. Wouldn’t that make people who want to return to the “good old days” under Stalin the true reactionaries?

        • knfrmity@lemmygrad.ml
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          1 year ago

          The last paragraph referencing the Holodomor, which is a hoax, and as is refuted in the breakdown I linked. I haven’t looked into the various wage systems the Soviet Union experimented with so I can’t speak to that.

          To be a reactionary is to seek to conserve the current structures of power, ie. to defend capital, and in so doing to oppose revolutionary and even non-radical progressive liberal movements. It is not reactionary at all to look back on revolutionary movements in a positive light.

          https://en.prolewiki.org/wiki/Reactionary