Another View Of Stalin

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FOREWORD. 5INTRODUCTION: THE IMPORTANCE OF STALIN. 6STALIN IS OF VITAL IMPORTANCE IN THE FORMER SOCIALIST COUNTRIES. 9STALIN IS AT THE CENTER OF POLITICAL DEBATES IN SOCIALIST COUNTRIES.9STALIN'S WORK IS OF CRUCIAL IMPORTANCE IN THE THIRD WORLD. 9STALIN'S WORK TAKES ON NEW MEANING GIVEN THE SITUATION CREATED SINCE CAPITALIST RESTORATION IN CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE. 11IN COMMUNIST PARTIES AROUND THE WORLD, THE IDEOLOGICAL STRUGGLE AROUND THE STALIN QUESTION PRESENTS MANY COMMONCHARACTERISTICS. 11THE YOUNG STALIN FORGES HIS ARMS. 13STALIN'S ACTIVITIES IN 1900—1917.15THE SOCIALISTS' AND REVOLUTION. 20STALIN DURING THE CIVIL WAR.22LENIN'S WILL'. 25BUILDING SOCIALISM IN ONE COUNTRY.32SOCIALIST INDUSTRIALIZATION. 39HEROISM AND ENTHUSIASM.40CLASS WAR. 43AN ECONOMIC MIRACLE. 46COLLECTIVIZATION. 48FROM REBUILDING PRODUCTION TO SOCIAL CONFRONTATION.48Weakness of the party in the countryside.49The character of the Russian peasant. 50New class differentiation. 51Who controlled the market wheat?.52Towards confrontation. 52Bukharin's position.53Betting on the kolkhoz . 54. or betting on the individual peasant?.55THE FIRST WAVE OF COLLECTIVIZATION. 56The kulak. 56The kolkhozy surpass the kulaks.57A fiery mass movement. 58The war against the kulak. 59The essential rôle of the most oppressed masses.60THE ORGANIZATIONAL LINE ON COLLECTIVIZATION. 61The Party apparatus in the countryside. 61Extraordinary organizational measures. 62The 25,000. 63The 25,000 against the bureaucracy. 64The 25,000 against the kulaks. 65The 25,000 and the organization of agricultural production. 65THE POLITICAL DIRECTION OF COLLECTIVIZATION. 66The November 1929 resolution.68Reject Bukharin's opportunism.68New difficulties, new tasks.69The January 5, 1930 resolution.70 DEKULAKIZATION'. 71Kulak rumors and indoctrination. 72What should be done with the kulaks?. 73Struggle to the end.74The resolution on dekulakization.75The kulak offensive picks up strength. 76Kautsky and the kulak revolution'. 77 DIZZY WITH SUCCESS'. 78Stalin corrects.79Rectify and consolidate. 80Right opportunism rears its head. 81The anti-Communists attack. 82Retreats and advances. 83Remarkable results. 83THE RISE OF SOCIALIST AGRICULTURE. 85The second wave of collectivization. 85

Economic and social creativity.86Investments in the countryside. 88The breakthrough of socialist agriculture. 89 Colossal support'.90THE COLLECTIVIZATION GENOCIDE'.92COLLECTIVIZATION AND THE UKRAINIAN HOLOCAUST'.95A BOOK FROM HITLER. 97A BOOK FROM MCCARTHY.99BETWEEN 1 AND 15 MILLION DEAD. 99TWO PROFESSORS TO THE RESCUE OF UKRAINIAN NAZIS. 100 SCIENTIFIC' CALCULATIONS. 101B-MOVIES. 102HARVEST OF SORROW: CONQUEST AND THE RECONVERSION OF UKRAINIAN NAZI COLLABORATORS. 103CONQUEST'S FASCIST SOURCES.107THE CAUSES OF FAMINE IN THE UKRAINE. 108UKRAINE UNDER NAZI OCCUPATION.111THE STRUGGLE AGAINST BUREAUCRACY. 112ANTI-COMMUNISTS AGAINST BUREAUCRACY'.112BOLSHEVIKS AGAINST BUREAUCRATIZATION. 113REINFORCE PUBLIC EDUCATION. 114REGULARLY PURGE THE PARTY.115THE STRUGGLE FOR REVOLUTIONARY DEMOCRACY. 116THE PARTY ELECTIONS IN 1937: A REVOLUTION'.117THE GREAT PURGE. 118HOW DID THE CLASS ENEMY PROBLEM POSE ITSELF?. 121Boris Bazhanov.121George Solomon. 122Frunze.124Alexander Zinoviev.125THE STRUGGLE AGAINST OPPORTUNISM IN THE PARTY. 126THE TRIALS AND STRUGGLE AGAINST REVISIONISM AND ENEMY INFILTRATION. 130The trial of the Trotskyite-Zinovievist Centre.130Trotsky and counter-revolution. 131 Destroy the communist movement'.131Capitalist restoration is impossible. 133In support of terror and insurrection. 135The Zinoviev--Kamenev--Smirnov counter-revolutionary group.136The trial of Pyatakov and the Trotskyists. 137Sabotage in the Urals. 138Sabotage in Kazakhstan. 141Pyatakov in Berlin. 143Sabotage in Magnitogorsk.144The trial of the Bukharinist social-democratic group. 145The February 1937 decision to purge.145The Riutin affair.148Bukharin's revisionism.149Bukharin and the enemies of Bolshevism. 150Bukharin and the military conspiracy.153Bukharin and the question of the coup d'état.154Bukharin's confession. 156From Bukharin to Gorbachev.164The Tukhachevsky trial and the anti-Communist conspiracy within the army.165Plot?.166The militarist and Bonapartist tendency.170Vlasov.

Stalin and Hitler, his incompetency during World War II, etc. We have endeavored to deconstruct many well-known truths' about Stalin, those that are summarized --- over and over --- in a few lines in newspapers, history books and interviews, and which have more or less become part of our unconscious.

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