Message from @Deleted User

Discord ID: 391668068251729920


2017-12-16 19:03:01 UTC  

Yes, they tried to exchange him for Field Marchal Paulus

2017-12-16 19:03:06 UTC  

And?

2017-12-16 19:03:15 UTC  

Instead of denying it; he said he didn't even have a son although everyone knew he did.

2017-12-16 19:03:22 UTC  

He's just a fucking psychopath.

2017-12-16 19:03:23 UTC  

Anyways,

2017-12-16 19:03:32 UTC  

You're just proving our point. Convince us why Communism sucks? @Deleted User

2017-12-16 19:04:15 UTC  

I think fascism succeeds where Communism takes the shit. Instead of taking everything they oversee it.

2017-12-16 19:04:26 UTC  

And they're very good at engineering to!

2017-12-16 19:04:31 UTC  

Both of you are writing too much, I have no time to say what I think

2017-12-16 19:04:46 UTC  

Alright, @b0b Silence let the man speak

2017-12-16 19:04:49 UTC  

Carry on.

2017-12-16 19:04:57 UTC  

Thank you

2017-12-16 19:05:31 UTC  

First, Stalin loved his son. Yakov was his son from the first marriage

2017-12-16 19:05:50 UTC  

But he was sure that people wouldn't understand it

2017-12-16 19:06:03 UTC  

Their children are POWs as well as Stalin's

2017-12-16 19:06:16 UTC  

Why is he liberated and they are not?

2017-12-16 19:06:46 UTC  

In addition Paulus was a live symbol of victory in Stalingrad

2017-12-16 19:07:05 UTC  

They couldn't release him in such an easy way

2017-12-16 19:08:03 UTC  

In one Soviet film Stalin even says 'I won't exchange a private for a Field Marshal.'

2017-12-16 19:08:30 UTC  

lol makes his son a private.

2017-12-16 19:09:04 UTC  

well fuck films, in reality he said

2017-12-16 19:09:08 UTC  

"I do not have a son named Yakov."

2017-12-16 19:09:11 UTC  

And Yakov killed himself.

2017-12-16 19:09:16 UTC  

He didn't refuse or negotiate oof.

2017-12-16 19:09:23 UTC  

@b0b Finish up I want to play some IGRP

2017-12-16 19:10:34 UTC  

You say it like Yakov killed himself because of Stalin's words

2017-12-16 19:11:09 UTC  

It's unclear if he was taken prisoner at all

2017-12-16 19:11:24 UTC  

Some say he was killed in action

2017-12-16 19:12:30 UTC  

And there is also evidence that he was shot by German guards for disobeying their orders

2017-12-16 19:12:33 UTC  

what the fuck

2017-12-16 19:12:34 UTC  

does yakovs death

2017-12-16 19:12:36 UTC  

have to do with

2017-12-16 19:12:50 UTC  

James_Solence - Today at 12:51 PM
Communism doesn't work, change my mind.

2017-12-16 19:13:02 UTC  

anyways i gtg for now i'll be back later pls gather some facts

2017-12-16 19:13:54 UTC  

I'll just leave them here, OK?

2017-12-16 19:14:03 UTC  

ok

2017-12-16 19:14:03 UTC  

You can read them later

2017-12-16 19:20:11 UTC  

Robert Davies and Stefen Wheatcroft published a monograph in 2004, in which they enumerate 35 party-government resolutions regarding giving food-aid to the starving regions of the USSR. The first one is dated February 7 and the last one July 20, 1933. Total aid was 320 thousand tonnes of grain of which 264.7 thousand tonnes were directed to Ukrainian SSR and to Kuban, and 55.3 thousand tonnes to all other regions together.

2017-12-16 19:24:28 UTC  

Droughts and famines in Russia and the Soviet Union tended to occur fairly regularly, with famine occurring every 10–13 years and droughts every five to seven years. The last ones were in 1932-1933 and 1946-1947. Obviously collectivization was what put that tendency to an end (with an exception of 1946 famine, which happened due to war destruction)

2017-12-16 19:27:51 UTC  

After the Soviet Union dissolved, evidence from the Soviet archives became available, containing official records of the execution of approximately 800,000 prisoners under Stalin for either political or criminal offenses, around 1.7 million deaths in the Gulags and some 390,000 deaths during kulak forced resettlement – for a total of about 3 million officially recorded victims in these categories.

2017-12-16 19:29:37 UTC  

By the request of N.S. Khruschev in February 1954 a report about the number of repressed people was prepared and signed by General Prosecutor (Attorney General) of the USSR R. Rudenko, Interior Minister of the USSR S. Kruglov, Justice Minister of the USSR K. Gorshenin. The report listed the total number of people prosecuted for counter-revolutionary crimes during the period from 1921 to February 1, 1954. During that period the Collegia of OGPU, NKVD Troikas, Special Council of the NKVD, Courts and Military Courts indicted 3,777,380 individuals, including 642,980 who received the death penalty, 2,369,220 with sentences of up to 25 years, and 765,180 exiled or deported.