- China: Worse than you ever imagined by Ian Johnson in the New York Review of Books.
- Totalitarianism, Famine and Us by Samuel Moyn in the Nation.
- Stalin's cannibals by Ron Rosenbaum, on Slate.
- The worst of the madness by Anne Applebaum in the New York Review of Books.
- Stalin and Hitler: Mass murder by starvation by Timothy Snyder in the New York Review of Books.
- Kakfa in Beijing by John Garnaut and Sanghee Liu in Foreign Policy.
- Bloc heads by Louis Menand in the New Yorker magazine.
- Yegor Gaidar's story about the dying days of the USSR is fascinating. This is not going to be the endgame of the PRC.
- Requiem, by Anna Akhmatova.
Sunday, November 11, 2012
I should like to call you all by name
1 comment:
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LaTeX mathematics works. This means that if you want to say $10 you have to say \$10.
This post is a very heavy dose of 'why socialism is evil' :) After reading half of them, I didn't have it in me to read the rest. At least I know where the title of the post comes from.
ReplyDeleteI've always found the stats from world war quite astounding. The number of Russians killed is something like 50 times the number of American/English or even French.
In India, as we try to shift to capitalism and have to take a detour through crony capitalism, it may be useful to take smaller doses of these articles to remind us of the problems of socialism, in the erstwhile USSR, but also here at home. Is there a way we can quantify the loss due to socialism at home? I'd say almost all of the 1 billion+ here in India have been severely affected by socialist policies of the pre-1991 days (and it continues).
And, then it is useful to look at the Chinese article to remind us of the flaws of the one party system there. Although, even in our democracy we have probably have countless such examples.