The western values Ukraine is defending are becoming more apparent by the day.

  • hrosts@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    Fucking hell, the editor did not save my message again.

    TL;DR

    Having a referendum to ratify constitutional changes is a thing in a large number of countries. It’s not out of the ordinary.

    The Congress of Soviets was removed with the 1936 constitution. Supreme Soviet took its place. Supreme Soviet was elected directly, but all ballots had only a single candidate. You can try to look up a picture of a ballot - they all have a single name on them. There is one picture of a ballot template with 3 names, but that’s it.

    The candidates in the ballots would be nominated on meetings of industrial plant and factory staff. Meetings are not elections. Meetings is when you sit and listen to the management read out their decisions.

    There Supreme Soviet would convene a few times per year for a week or less. All other time there would be ~40 guys from the Presidium who would take on its duties.

    There are stenograms of sessions available in Russian.. I can read Russian. What I’m reading is:

    • The single-candidate ballots seem to be a norm, as one of the sessions mentions ~7000 ballots “with crossed out candidate names” out of ~1 million votes. Crossing out is how you vote on those ballots, it’s written above the right column, and you have to cross all but one name. If there are only 0.7% of crossed out ballots, that means all of the ballots had only 1 name on them.
    • All of the decisions I read through have been accepted, ratified, voted on completely unanimously. No “nays”, no abstentions. This whole thing is just a glorified green stamp.
    • A lot of time is spent on speeches. None of those speeches show any dissent. E.g. when Molotov is talking about friendly relationships with Nazi Germany and Italy in 1940, there’s zero dissent.

    Supreme Soviet was officially the highest legislative authority in the country. It was an undemocratic sham.

    No it didn’t [have those other interpretations].

    It did, but I don’t want to argue about that. It’s all semantics and sophistry and we’re past that anyway.

    • Sodium_nitride@lemmygrad.ml
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      8 months ago

      Having a referendum to ratify constitutional changes is a thing in a large number of countries. It’s not out of the ordinary.

      Does a mechanism need to be out of the ordinary to be democratic?

      The Congress of Soviets was removed with the 1936 constitution. Supreme Soviet took its place. Supreme Soviet was elected directly

      Apologies, I had gotten confused since that period of soviet history saw many restructurings in the government. But this only means that all along, you knew a little about how the soviet government worked, and yet you still have many comments wasting everyone’s and your own time with nonsense and tangents.

      but all ballots had only a single candidate. You can try to look up a picture of a ballot - they all have a single name on them.

      I know this

      The candidates in the ballots would be nominated on meetings of industrial plant and factory staff. Meetings are not elections.

      Yes, that is the point. The bolsheviks explicitly abandoned liberal parliamentarianism. Despite calling other people liberals and saying that I had liberal ideas about democracy, are you now going to turn around and say that elections, the most liberal of liberal ideas about democracy are the way to go? Anyone who is not a liberal can easily recognize that electoral systems are undemocratic. Even the best of electoral “democracies” have elected representatives that are deeply unrepresentative of their constituents. I would not say that the system of meetings was the best choice exactly, but it was both the result of the democratic centralist philosophy (evolved partly as a result of the needs of the civil war) and of seeing electoral systems utterly fail both in liberalised Russia and the other parliamentary countries.

      Meetings is when you sit and listen to the management read out their decisions.

      Yeah … totally. All of the gains in the worker’s rights and living standards happened despite the workers having no input. By some miracle, the democratic mechanism which was just for show produced one of the most equal and highly industrialized societies of all time. By arguing that the USSR wasn’t democratic, the only thing you are arguing for is the idea that democracy is not necessary to achieve equality and standards of living. No matter how much you deride welfare as an indicator of democracy, your whole narrative doesn’t make sense. It also doesn’t make sense how the Russian working class, which had very recently launched a revolution could be disarmed so easily, or at all.

      There Supreme Soviet would convene a few times per year for a week or less. All other time there would be ~40 guys from the Presidium who would take on its duties.

      As opposed to doing what? Representatives cannot manage the day to day affairs of the government. No government on earth does that.

      There are stenograms of sessions available in Russian… I can read Russian. What I’m reading is:

      And I cannot comment on whether or not you are cherry picking or misrepresenting anything from the reports.

      All of the decisions I read through have been accepted, ratified, voted on completely unanimously. No “nays”, no abstentions. This whole thing is just a glorified green stamp.

      Can’t comment on this, even though I smell bs.

      A lot of time is spent on speeches

      This is a problem because?

      None of those speeches show any dissent.

      I neither trust that you have actually read and remember the contents of that many speeches, or that you understand the all of the contexts or nuances of those speeches. Furthermore, during conditions of wartime or near wartime (as your only example is in), there naturally tends to be less disagreement. You can see how quickly factions unite under external threats.

      E.g. when Molotov is talking about friendly relationships with Nazi Germany and Italy in 1940, there’s zero dissent.

      What is this supposed to mean? I assume you bring this particular point up specifically to play on the “USSR collaborated with nazis” trope (straining your credibility), but what does “talking about” mean exactly? For example, if he mentions that the government has stabilized the situation (stating facts), why would that generate dissent (unless he was factually incorrect)?

      • hrosts@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        Have you been to meetings with management? I used to work at a government-run place in Belarus. The meetings were precisely as what I described them. I had a longer explanation typed out, but then lost it; I might redo it at a later date.

        you still have many comments wasting… …time

        I wanted to know the reason behind you thinking it was democratic. The first reason you gave was the welfare. I’ve provided several reasons which were true for USSR at the time for why they would want to keep the proletariat pacified and disarmed. Speaking of which, the proletariat was literally disarmed in 1924.

        The second reason you gave is the electoral system. So now we’re talking about the electoral system.

        As opposed to doing what? Representatives cannot manage the day to day affairs of the government. No government on earth does that.

        US House and Senate are in session approximately 150(+/-20) days a year, for most weeks there’s at least one day they’re in session. There’s also not a separate group which makes decisions for the rest of the parliament in the meantime.

        And I cannot comment on whether or not you are cherry picking or misrepresenting anything from the reports.

        You have the link now. You can always ask someone else to look through them for you to verify if I’m right or wrong. You can also ask me - pick out any session of any convocation out there and I will get you a translation of at least the key points, the votes, stuff like that.

        This is a problem because?

        Ok, I think I was vague here. There are reports, there are congratulations, there are suggestions. I don’t see any discussions, nor appeals, nor debates. I don’t see disagreement. What I see is a lot of self-congratulation. Even if I can’t prove it by giving you an authoritative translation here and now, you will remember this characterization and it will sit there in your head when you’ll hear similar things in the future.

        I [don’t] trust that you have actually read and remember the contents of that many speeches

        You would be right to do so, as what I meant and keep meaning when I talk here was only the speeches I looked through, which is only like 5 or 6, picked randomly from random sessions of the 1st convocation (I think we’re both would be mostly interested in the 1st convocation, as that is the one which lasted from 1937 to 1945). One of the sessions I clicked was the 7th session, which had the Molotov’s speech - I stumbled upon it mostly by chance. Being friendly with the Nazi state would be an obviously contentious topic among leftists, so it piqued my interest to see the Soviet’s reaction to the report. Which is also why I mentioned it to you - it’s much easier to disregard absence of dissent on a matter of industrial or agricultural administration than on this topic.

        but what does “talking about [friendly relationships with Nazi Germany and Italy]” mean exactly?

        I will try to summarize the part of the speech which pertains to the Nazis here. You’re free to disregard it as me bs-ing you.

        • Italy has joined the war
        • France was quickly defeated and capitulated
          • France signed a ceasefire and is under occupation
          • Reasons for France’s defeat
            • Poor military readiness
            • French leadership, unlike Germany, underestimated USSR’s role in Europe
            • French leadership was afraid of its people, known for its revolutionary potential
          • France now has to lick its wounds and rebuild
        • England is still at war with USA’s support
        • Germany achieved great successes, but it wants to end the war on the terms it desires.
        • German reichschancellor offered peace to England on July 19th
        • Despite that, England decided to continue the war.
          • It even cut ties with France
          • That is because England doesn’t want to lose its colonies and lose this war for war domination.
          • It does this even though the Italy’s participation and France’s defeat make it harder for England
        • The war is far from the end
        • USSR holds to peace and neutrality
          • The agreement has prevented any potential tensions with Germany, and gave it confidence about its eastern borders.
          • Voices from England want to scare USSR with potential disagreements with Germany, with Germany becoming too powerful
        • The relationships between USSR and Germany are neighborly and friendly.
          • That is not due to situation-specific factors, but because of the core interests of both states.

        This is only a part of the larger report on foreign policy, but I would still expect there to be some voices of concern regarding the shit Nazis were doing, or the fact that the report puts the blame for the war and its continuation on primarily UK and USA and their “imperialist ambitions”. The “peace or destruction” threat from Hitler’s July 19th speech is framed as a humble peace offer, which the greedy Britain has unreasonable refused. The cutting ties with the Nazi puppet Vichy is framed as Britain abandoning its former ally. No mention of persecution of Jews by the Nazis. Also neither terms “Nazi”, “National Socialist”, nor Hitler’s name appear in the report - he’s referred to as “the reichschancellor”.

        Not all of these things I would expect from Molotov’s report itself - but I would be appalled if there was no other delegates to point at least one of the things I’ve outlined.

        Instead, the report was accepted unanimously and without any debate.

        The stenogram link for that place precisely

        Those who are in favor of accepting this proposal, please raise your hands… Please lower them. Who’s against it? No. Who abstains? No. The proposal is accepted.

        This phrase is everywhere in those stenograms. No against, no abstentions, accepted.