Hygro
soundcloud.com/hygro/
mm all the juicy bits highlighted in one post. 

Takhisis said:Yes, the fact that things went down after Communism fell is pathetically hilarious at times.
I can't really provide an accurate insight of how reunification is going, since I don't live in Germany, but back in 2000 when I was there, there was a strong contrast between say, a small Western village and an Eastern one. It was like they were in totally different countries, mainly in terms of infraestructure, such as buildings, maintainance, etc. Only cities like Dresden and Leipzig looked modern and somewhat resembled their western counterparts. Went back in 2006 and things weren't all that different, probably a bit better.
And yes, communism is to blame. Name a single successful communist country. It doesn't exist.
East Germany (like North Korea) was not as successful at developing and creating prosperity as West Germany (or South Korea) was. This is pretty simple; I don't see why it's so hard to understand. East and West Germany started off at relatively similar income levels. In a few decades, West Germany's income level was far ahead of East Germany's. Why do I even have to explain this?
the Soviets subsidized East Germany living standards for propaganda reason
Point is, it's not that simple.
No, I'm pretty sure it is; central planning blows chunks and the whole system collapsed because they couldn't figure out how to make it so people didn't have to wait in line for 3 hours to get a roll of toilet paper.
In the 25 years since the collapse of communism, people have been pointing to the Eastern European countries and saying it proves that capitalism failed. Well, what about the 40 years (70 for the Russians) before that? The Poles, Czechs, etc. all got screwed and then when the system collapsed, capitalism should take the blame? No siree.
In the 25 years since the collapse of communism, people have been pointing to the Eastern European countries and saying it proves that capitalism failed
"Capitalism" failed only in these countries, where it has not really been implemented, and where post-Communists continued to be in power.
For example Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania, etc.
No, I'm pretty sure it is; central planning blows chunks and the whole system collapsed because they couldn't figure out how to make it so people didn't have to wait in line for 3 hours to get a roll of toilet paper.
In the 25 years since the collapse of communism, people have been pointing to the Eastern European countries and saying it proves that capitalism failed. Well, what about the 40 years (70 for the Russians) before that? The Poles, Czechs, etc. all got screwed and then when the system collapsed, capitalism should take the blame? No siree.
I'm not saying it failed. But you're right that the ex-commies mostly ruined what could have been a good thing."Capitalism" failed only in these countries, where it has not really been implemented, and where post-Communists continued to be in power.
For example Ukraine, Bulgaria, Romania, etc.
Start with the Greek government, then the Greek public for going along with it, and then the foreign banks who lent them money.So, what are we going to blame Greece on?
I can most certainly say it collapsed; almost every Marxist-Leninist regime fell along with it. Those that didn't suffered 20 additional years of worsened poverty (Cuba, North Korea)A handful of data points doesn't prove anything, much less that the demise of the Soviet Union has anything at all to do with communism.
You can't even claim that socialism "collapsed" because it was really just a single instance of a quasi-socialist regime, along with its satellites, which failed. That they clearly started with baggage from centuries of brutal repression by dictators who were anything but socialists. That it was really more a failure of authoritarianism than anything else, and which remains their biggest problem.
What would you be saying if you thought they were "communist"?Start with the Greek government, then the Greek public for going along with it, and then the foreign banks who lent them money.
You can certainly say it. But it hardly makes it true.I can most certainly say it collapsed; almost every Marxist-Leninist regime fell along with it. Those that didn't suffered 20 additional years of worsened poverty (Cuba, North Korea)
Exploiting others has always been a quite easy way for a handful of individuals to get rich at the expense of the multitudes. They should be so proud of their heritage of exploitation due to sheer greed. In that sense, they had the very same roots as Russia did.There have been plenty of authoritarian regimes that didn't lead to widespread additional misery: Spain, Portugal, Korea, Taiwan, South Africa, Chile, Brazil, Indonesia... some of those countries started poorer than Russia. What's the explanation for that?