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View Full Version : The Perspective Of A Russian Immigrant


Dukes
11-20-2009, 11:45 AM
Posted 09/10/2009 05:06 PM ET
http://www.investors.com/NewsAndAnalysis/Article.aspx?id=505730

In the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, I was taught to believe individual pursuits are selfish and sacrificing for the collective good is noble.

In kindergarten we sang songs about Lenin, the leader of the Socialist Revolution. In school we learned about the beautiful socialist system, where everybody is equal and everything is fair; about ugly capitalism, where people are exploited and treat each other like wolves in the wilderness.

Life in the USSR modeled the socialist ideal. God-based religion was suppressed and replaced with cultlike adoration for political figures.

The government-assigned salary of the proletariat (blue-collar worker) was 30%-50% higher than any professional. Without incentive to improve their life, professionals drank themselves to oblivion. They — engineers, lawyers, doctors, teachers — earned a government-determined salary that barely covered the necessities, mainly food.

Raising children was a hardship. It took four to six adults (parents and grandparents) to support a child. The usual size of the postwar family was one or two children. Every woman had the right to have an abortion and most of them did, often without anesthesia.

There is a comparative historical reality that plays out the consequences of two competing ideologies: life in the USSR and in America.

When the march to the worker's paradise — the Socialist Revolution — began in 1917, many people emigrated from Russia to the U.S.

In the USSR, economic equality was achieved by redistributing wealth, ensuring that everyone remained poor, with the exception of those doing the redistributing. Only the ruling class of communist leaders had access to special stores, medicine and accommodations that could compare to those in the West.

The rest of the citizenry had to deal with permanent shortages of food and other necessities, and had access to free but inferior, unsanitary and low-tech medical care. The egalitarian utopia of equality, achieved by the sacrifice of individual self-interest for the collective good, led to corruption, black markets, anger and envy.

Government-controlled health care destroyed human dignity.

Chairman Nikita Khrushchev released facts about Stalin and his purges. People learned of the horrific purge of more than 20 million citizens, murdered as enemies of the state.

Those who left Russia found a different set of values in America: freedom of religion, speech, individual pursuits, the right to private property and free enterprise. The majority of those immigrants achieved a better life for themselves and their children in this capitalist land.


These opportunities let the average immigrant live a better life than many elites in the Soviet Communist Party. The freedom to pursue personal self-interest led to prosperity. Prosperity generated charity, benefiting the collective good.

The descendants of those immigrants are now supporting policies that move America away from the values that gave so many immigrants the chance of a better life. Policies such as nationalized medicine, high tax rates and government intrusion into free enterprise are being sold to us under the socialistic motto of collective salvation.

Socialism has bankrupted and failed every society, while capitalism has lifted more people out of poverty than any other system.

There is no perfect society. There are no perfect people. Critics say that greed is the driving force of capitalism. My answer is that envy is the driving force of socialism. Change to socialism is not an improvement on the imperfections of the current system.

The slogans of "fairness and equality" sound better than the slogans of capitalism. But unlike at the beginning of the 20th century, when these slogans and ideas were yet to be tested, we have accumulated history and reality.

Today we can define the better system not by slogans, but by looking at the accumulated facts. We can compare which ideology leads to the most oppression and which brings the most opportunity.

When I came to America in 1980 and experienced life in this country, I thought it was fortunate that those living in the USSR did not know how unfortunate they were.

Now in 2009, I realize how unfortunate it is that many Americans do not understand how fortunate they are. They vote to give government more and more power without understanding the consequences.

Svetlana Kunin, Stamford, Conn.

Editor's note: Mrs. Kunin, an IBD subscriber, is a retired software developer. In the Soviet Union, she was a civil engineer.


Bottom line, the left's playbook is nothing new. Just rehashing failed ideas of the past in new, shiney packaging.

gyldenlove
11-20-2009, 11:59 AM
while capitalism has lifted more people out of poverty than any other system.


Capitalism has also sunk more people into poverty and destitude than any other system.

Rohirrim
11-20-2009, 12:02 PM
I agree with the OP. The Soviet experiment was an abomination.

Of course, it wan't communism either. It was Marxist-Leninism followed by Stalinism.

Dukes
11-20-2009, 12:07 PM
Capitalism has also sunk more people into poverty and destitude than any other system.

I'd be willing to bet drugs had more to do with that than the capitalist system. But whatever.

Garcia Bronco
11-20-2009, 12:15 PM
This is exactly what is going on in Venezuela today except Chavez just takes the money and doesn't invest back in the country at all.

"....ensuring that everyone remained poor, with the exception of those doing the redistributing. Only the ruling class of communist leaders had access to special stores, medicine and accommodations that could compare to those in the West.

The rest of the citizenry had to deal with permanent shortages of food and other necessities, and had access to free but inferior, unsanitary and low-tech medical care. The egalitarian utopia of equality, achieved by the sacrifice of individual self-interest for the collective good, led to corruption, black markets, anger and envy."

gyldenlove
11-20-2009, 12:39 PM
I'd be willing to bet drugs had more to do with that than the capitalist system. But whatever.

So drugs is the reason why approximately 1 billion Africans live in poverty, I bet they might disagree and say it had something to do with capitalitic driven colonization...

Garcia Bronco
11-20-2009, 12:51 PM
So drugs is the reason why approximately 1 billion Africans live in poverty, I bet they might disagree and say it had something to do with capitalitic driven colonization...

I think a good deal of the problem is that they live in a desert.

Dukes
11-20-2009, 12:51 PM
So drugs is the reason why approximately 1 billion Africans live in poverty, I bet they might disagree and say it had something to do with capitalitic driven colonization...

Sorry, thought you were referring to the US.

TexanBob
11-20-2009, 01:05 PM
Without incentive to improve their life, professionals drank themselves to oblivion.

In a nutshell, this is why socialism always fails. They destroy incentive because if you try to better your life, the government will come and steal it from you and hand it to somebody else who didn't work for it.

Ultimately, you wind up with a populace who doesn't give a crap about themselves led by a totally corrupt and morality-devoid government.

I really feel sorry for folks like in Poland who had to free themselves from the shackles of Nazism only to be taken over by the shackles of communism. And then when they finally broke free from communism, they took sides with the United States - - which is now lurching into communism.

You talk to anyone who used to live under the communist bloc countries and they will tell you "this is how it started" when they see the Democrat Party of today. Consolidating government control over every part of human life and slowly forcing everyone to be dependent upon them for sustenance. That's exactly what the Democrat Party is doing to us.

JJJ
11-20-2009, 02:27 PM
Capitalism has also sunk more people into poverty and destitude than any other system.

Wrong, just wrong. Simply the most wrong thing I have seen in a 14 word sentence in my life.

Rohirrim
11-20-2009, 04:20 PM
There are many different forms of capitalism. China is experimenting with a form of centrally directed capitalism. What we have in America is a corporate oligarchy which employs a form of capitalism where the investor class uses their wealth to control the government which then uses its taxation and regulation powers to funnel wealth toward the slimmest top percentile while shifting more and more of the burden of society onto the backs of the working class. It's a form of capitalist suicide.

JJJ
11-21-2009, 01:09 AM
There are many different forms of capitalism. China is experimenting with a form of centrally directed capitalism. What we have in America is a corporate oligarchy which employs a form of capitalism where the investor class uses their wealth to control the government which then uses its taxation and regulation powers to funnel wealth toward the slimmest top percentile while shifting more and more of the burden of society onto the backs of the working class. It's a form of capitalist suicide.

Nice theory not supported by the numbers. The median income level is over $50,000 in the US. Half the households in this country earn over $50k.

This shows there is not much of an erosion of middle class.

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/6/6c/Historical_median_personal_income_by_education_att ainment_in_the_US.png

Play2win
11-21-2009, 02:11 AM
As things go, I am willing to try (a form of) Government-run healthcare...

Because CORPERATE-run healthcare sure doesn't work.