Message from @Borzo
Discord ID: 519186427246804993
kulaks went;
>guys there is a big famine going on so you know what I'll do? Ill horde all the grain so the rest of the country starves!
"Destroy all food stooooores!"
>but when I get caught, I'll burn it all!
>things that didnt happen
you only think it didn't happen because you are too brainwashed
Kulaks deserved the same punishment they inflicted on others
>sucks kgb dick
>calls me brainwashed
You are literally denying the novel-length crimes the Americans have done
>holodomor
>war crimes
Is this guy fucking retarded or something?
i think
pugslugger just uploaded
a uhh
strawman meme
@💖Koikat💖 remember when stalin did that evil rain dance, and personally chased away all the rain from Ukraine and killed 10 billion with his bear hands
uhuh, was really scary
Professor Steven Rosefielde argues in his 2009 book Red Holocaust that "Grain supplies were sufficient enough to sustain everyone if properly distributed. People died mostly from terror-starvation (excess grain exports, seizure of edibles from the starving, state refusal to provide emergency relief, bans on outmigration, and forced deportation to food-deficit locales), not poor harvests and routine administrative bungling."[
It's not just Americans though.
Yale historian Timothy Snyder asserts that the starvation was "deliberate"[70] as several of the most lethal policies applied only, or mostly, to Ukraine.[71] He argues the Soviets themselves "made sure that the term genocide, contrary to Lemkin's intentions, excluded political and economic groups." Thus the Ukrainian famine can be presented as "somehow less genocidal because it targeted a class, kulaks, as well as a nation, Ukraine."[72]
>guys grain wasn't distributed evenly
>defends kulaks
Professor Michael Ellman of the University of Amsterdam concludes that "Team-Stalin's behaviour in 1930–34 clearly constitutes a crime against humanity (or a series of crimes against humanity) as that is defined in the 1998 Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court".[note 1]:681 These include not only policies that exacerbated the starvation (exporting 1.8 million tonnes of grain during the height of the famine, banning migration from famine-stricken areas and refusing to secure humanitarian aid from abroad), but also mass shootings and deportations of alleged "kulaks", "counter-revolutionaries" and other "Anti-Soviet elements" around the same time.[73]:684, 681, 689
Now he's just spamming out propaganda
uhuh
Nicolas Werth, historian accepted a line of interpretation developed by Andrea Graziosi, and now believes that the Ukrainian famine of 1932–33 can be defined as a genocide according to the 1948 United Nations Convention:
This specifically anti-Ukrainian assault makes it possible to define the totality of intentional political actions taken from late summer 1932 by the Stalinist regime against the Ukrainian peasantry as genocide. With hunger as its deadly arm, the regime sought to punish and terrorize the peasants, resulting in fatalities exceeding four million people in Ukraine and the northern Caucasus.[74]
can you
shut
the fuck up
>its propaganda because i dont like it
In the Laconia massacre, U.S. aircraft attacked Germans rescuing survivors from the sinking British troopship in the Atlantic Ocean. Pilots of a United States Army Air Forces (USAAF) B-24 Liberator bomber, despite knowing the U-boat's location, intentions, and the presence of British seamen, killed dozens of Laconia's survivors with bombs and strafing attacks, forcing U-156 to cast its remaining survivors into the sea and crash dive to avoid being destroyed.
Mad as fuck
The "Canicattì massacre" involved the killing of Italian civilians by Lieutenant Colonel George Herbert McCaffrey. A confidential inquiry was made, but McCaffrey was never charged with any offense relating to the massacre. He died in 1954. This fact remained virtually unknown in the U.S. until 2005, when Joseph S. Salemi of New York University, whose father witnessed it, reported it
Oh no they killed a dozen during a war?
😠😠ðŸ˜
Oh nooo
In the "Biscari massacre", which consisted of two instances of mass murder, U.S. troops of the 45th Infantry Division killed roughly 75 prisoners of war, mostly Italian.
75