Once again, this is an actual question; and I’m hoping to broaden my horizons and have a good conversation or two. I’m relatively new to commie subs, still trying to read political theory to figure out which one I like the most, so this might come off as uneducated. But why am I seeing so many positive posts about Stalin, followed by some comments that boil down to “Stalin was good, if you think he wasn’t, that’s just western propaganda” I’m thinking of the post that mentioned the 1921 Soviet Famine as a specific example. I know that Stalin didn’t create the famine, it was a byproduct of almost a decade of war, unrest, and a ton of other factors. But Stalin did do some bad shit. Things like sending 14 million people to gulags to work as slave labor, and killing millions more in his purges. I would argue that he used communism to become an authoritarian. Similar to how Putin is ruling now, stuffing ballot boxes, starting wars, and pushing propaganda. (I realize that we get pushed propaganda, too in the form of faux news, MSNBC, and most media outlets. I don’t wish to have a discussion that boils down to “we do it too, you just don’t see it”)
Here, from the BBC, hardly a communist source: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-26089450, and the transcribed phone call: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-europe-26079957
Guess who became prime minister of Ukraine? Precisely “Yats”, who was Nuland’s pick. The fact that such a phone call has not even been disavowed by the US government tells enough by itself. The US was clearly involved, and a phone call like this is just scratching the surface. If you want to learn more about US meddling around the world, I recommend the youtube channel The New Atlas, whose host, Brian Berlectic, dives deeply on the question.