• theonlytruescotsman
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    5 days ago

    Except you know, no homelessness, by Stalin’s time no starvation, free healthcare, guaranteed days off, guaranteed vacation time, wages significantly higher than the majority of the population has ever seen, oh and free education.

    Yeah, you couldn’t be a Nazi or other enemy of the state, how oppressive.

    • finitebanjo@lemmy.world
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      5 days ago

      There was mass starvation under Stalin. His rule started in 1929, directly before the 1930-1933 famine resulting in somewhere between 5 to 9 million deaths which occured as a direct result of policy changes.

    • uis@lemm.ee
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      5 days ago

      No, homelessness existed until Khruschev. Could been solved earlier, but WW2 reduced amount of homes.

      • theonlytruescotsman
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        5 days ago

        They haven’t yet, and there’s no profit motive for it so it really can’t happen.

        • GrammarPolice@lemmy.world
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          5 days ago

          While I can’t speak to the veracity of your claims about the quality of life of the Soviet Union under Stalin, there are in fact many capitalist countries that have been able to achieve these feats that you mentioned.

          The housing first policy in Finland has practically eradicated homelessness where only 3,429 were homeless in 2023.

          Similarly in the Nordics, the majority of the population Sweden (72.2%), Norway (71.8%), and Denmark (71.8%) is food secure. The US to an extent has also been able to mitigate against food insecurity with the existence of food stamps and free/reduced school meals essentially meaning starvation is rare in some parts of he country.

          Also, the NHS provides all individuals residing in the UK with free healthcare, so… yeah.

          Furthermore, all employees in France are guaranteed up to 5 weeks of annual paid leave.

          In Switzerland, for a full-time job, the median monthly pre-tax salary was a tidy CHF6,788 which is approximately 7500USD. I guess you can tell that this isn’t a small amount of money compared to the low wages received by workers in the Soviet Union under Stalin (which if i might remind you, the piece-rate system was later revised under Khrushchev).

          And finally free education. While most nations in Europe (Germany and the Nordics) offer free to low-cost education, you need not really look further than the US to see that while not entirely free, public schooling and community colleges provide accessible enough education to many that need it.

          You can see it’s not really about the capitalism, but the governments that run it