I never said it was a perfect idea that was perfectly implemented. Merely that they believed they were doing what was necessary.
I'd like to point out that it's a weak defence of anything. Every government believes that it does what it necessary. The British governments during their famines also believed that their policies are the best ones.
Your harvests are sucking badly. People are hungry.
Forced collectivization combined with forced grain confiscation didn't help these two points one bit (see also the less catastrophic famine of 1936). It did help with grain exports, though - which was its main reason.
Yes, the harvests in 1926 and 1927 put serious pressure on the Soviet government to do something different.
The crisis of 1927, which indeed raised issues in the government, pushing some functionaries, Stalin included, to collectivization, was not a harvest failure, but a failure to collect enough grain due to the village's refusal to sell it to the state according to the state prices. A wholly different issue then peasants not having enough food. There were food difficulties (though not on the famine level) in the
industrializing cities, since grain was worth much more on the private markets.
At any rate, let's say that the top two tiers of your chart, which is 16% of farmers, slaughtered their cattle. That would be pretty close to 1/4 of total cattle head lost! Also, your percentages are average, obviously lower strata did not own .7 cows; proportionally, the upper strata did own the majority of cattle.
Keep in mind, however, that the second strata (13%) has only 0.6 more cows then average 1.1. Hardly a major difference that justifies placing it in the "Exploiter" category. That's one of my reasons to doubt the actual content of the "Kulak" label.
Anyway, it's quite possible that they did slaughter other cattle than their own,
That sounds implausible to me. Kulak bands going around secretly killing the Kolkhoz cattle belongs to the same category as bands of saboteurs and wreckers secretly sabotaging Soviet factories.
You have no way of knowing. But I don't think leaders or their subalterns engage in policies they know are, or will, cause great pain to their people without some level of regret or remorse, knowing that such measures are necessary.
If Stalin had any regrets, he did not acknowledge them. Everything he wrote was
bombastic and triumphalist. He seems to have been a very self-righteous person.
Oh, and this Stalin quote :
All the objections raised by “science” against the possibility and expediency of organising large grain factories of 40,000 to 50,000 hectares each have collapsed and crumbled to dust. Practice has refuted the objections of “science,” and has once again shown that not only has practice to learn from “science” but that “science” also would do well to learn from practice.
That nasty science
This is your best argument - I am not denying that there were objective reasons that caused the government to act like it did. Still I'd advocate less bureaucratic voluntarism and use of force (which Stalin himself encouraged before backtracking for a bit with
Dizzy) and more efforts to provide voluntary incentives for the peasants to join the Kolkhozy, less desire to squeeze them "for the good of the state". The whole thing was bureaucratic and undemocratic, apologies for sounding like a purveyor of That Ultraleftist Idealistic Garbage.
I'm still trying to understand the criticism of free markets when it was not to blame, but social programs or lack of would be, in the context you are speaking.
Social programs would distort the precious free market