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Thursday, May 4, 2017

Detailed analysis of J.V. Stalin's non-existent mass murder policy and its anti-communist premise

-Article is supported by the PCUSA-

The only source for population statistics I could find in a three-week search was in a book called "The Economic Transformation of the Soviet Union, 1913-1945."
All statistics provided are from the above source unless mentioned otherwise.

With any detailed analysis of a nation and the population, especially with how they increase or decrease and the causes behind it, population statistics are the first most important source of information to obtain. So, let’s detail the early years of the USSR when Stalin was head of state (1924 - 1940).

The yearly death toll during this period was between 3 to 5 million. Most of these deaths were caused by disease and famine. This was because of the USSR's lack of agricultural development and poor farming methods left over from the Czarist period. The same situation existed in other agrarian nations in Africa, South America, and Asia. From 1924 to 1940 the birth rate in the USSR was between 4 to 6 million. Following these official vital statistics shows that the population of the Soviet Union grew yearly by 1 to 3 million, due to the death rate.

A study done in 1929, which is mentioned in the book Red Medicine (Chap. 16) found that 3,941,021 people had life threatening diseases, the worst of which was malaria. A little under 3 million people were infected with malaria. This doesn’t even count deaths caused by assaults and other crimes, which was ruthless in agrarian societies at the time. Death by accidents, death by terrorism, etc. are also not considered here.

Due to the lack of economic development in the USSR, there was a shortage of proper medicines to treat epidemics, which produced higher mortality rates. Evidence shows that these numbers downward during the years between 1924 and 1940. Mostly in late 1930's to early 1940's.

It wasn't until the 1930's when the USSR carried out its five-year plans to industrialize the country, that the death rate steadily decreased from 20.3 in 1926 to 17.5 in 1938 and to 9.7 in 1950. The birth rate also decreased in the USSR from 44.0 in 1926 to 37.5 in 1938 and to 26.7 in 1950. The decrease of birth rate was due to the industralization and development in the USSR.

As I reported previously, the USSR's population increased by 1 to 3 million yearly, keep in mind the USSR's population was under 200 million people. There were only two points in Soviet history did the population decrease. The first time was during the 1933 famine, which claimed, at most, up to 5 million lives. There were a few causes for this famine. One of the main causes was that the Kulaks (rich peasants) who had ownership of nine tenths of the farmland in Russia. They turned them into plantations and housed farm peasants on the land, whose only job was to work the land or face homelessness and starvation. Kulaks were a class among the peasants that made themselves wealthy via slavery. The Kulaks hated the Soviets because the Bolshevik program called for collectivization of agriculture. Lenin himself called the Kulaks a bunch of exploiters who must be destroyed. However. since they just overthrew the Czar, Lenin and the Soviets was busy building the new government. And it was not until the 1930's collectivization, which was implemented to destroy the Kulaks as a class, and to turn over the farmland to the peasants who actually worked the land, that the Kulaks revolted by burning their food supply, killing their livestock, and burning their crops, which contributed to the naturally occurring famine of 1933. The sabotage and wrecking activity of the Kulaks contributed to the USSR's inability to produce enough food for the general population.

The second time the population of the Soviet Union decreased was after 1941, when Nazi Germany invaded the USSR. After WWII a total of 27 million Soviet troops were killed in the war, and 13 million Soviet civilians died under Nazi occupation.
Information on the WWII USSR causalities of Red Army personal provided by the interdepartmental commission of the Russian Federation; which is mentioned by both Russia Daily and sputniknews.com.
Information of USSR civilian deaths by Nazi occupation provided by necrometrics.com

Keeping in mind the fact that the population increased by 1 to 3 million yearly, and that rampant disease claimed as many as 3 or 4 million lives during the early years of the USSR, keeping in mind the fact of the famine of 1933, leading up to WWII, which claimed 27 million lives, there is no way Stalin could have mass murdered 60, 50 or even 30 million people, without the population showing a clear and unavoidable decrease. Even if this was the case, given all of the USSR's history, if the myths about Stalin’s role in mass terror were true, the Soviets would never be able to fight off Nazi Germany because of a lack of available soldiers and morale. Under the scenario of professional anti-communists like Robert Conquest and Timothy Snyder of Yale University, there is no possible way that the USSR would have enough workers to become a superpower in such short time to rival the U.S. in production output. There is no scientific way to apply the claims of these professional liars! One would have to ignore all of Soviet history to make the claim that Stalin’s leadership killed millions of innocent people. Even during the USSR's involvement in WWII, from 1941 to 1945; the fact that 27 millions soldiers and 13 million civilians died, shows a clear unavoidable decrease in the USSR's population. 

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