Brickbats: Soviet Edition

Soviet culture officials in the late 1940s attempted to downplay the accomplishments of Europe and America by renaming imported foods to make them seem Russian and by claiming credit for various innovations. Camembert was renamed zakusochnyi ("snack cheese") to disguise its French origins. A newspaper declared that the Palace of Versailles was a knockoff of palaces built by Peter the Great. Soviet encyclopedias incorrectly attributed the first successful airplane flight not to the Wright brothers but to Russian inventor Alexander Mozhaysky.

Following World War II, Josef Stalin approved the expansion of car production for individual purchase. But with only 6,000 produced in 1946 and 10,000 produced in 1947, there weren't enough to go around. Trade unions organized waiting lists that stretched as long as 6 years.
In 1970, a Soviet criminologist determined that—due to widespread scarcity of housing, consumer goods, and materials needed for manufacturing—corrupt economic practices like bribery and embezzlement accounted for one-quarter of all crimes in the Soviet Union.
To deal with agricultural shortcomings, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev promoted the expansion of corn as a crop well-suited to feeding both people and livestock. From 1954 to 1955, the amount of corn the country grew boomed from 4.3 million to 18 million hectares. It reached 37 million hectares by 1962. But while the country focused on increasing the amount of corn it grew, it did not emphasize efficient or sustainable farming or give much consideration to appropriate growing conditions. In 1962, a cool, rainy spring and summer killed off 70–80 percent of the plantings.

In 1966, the Soviet Union mandated that all companies begin spending 1 percent of their revenue on advertising, despite the absence of market competition or even goods to promote. From 1967 to 1991, the country's only advertising agency produced ads for minced chicken, hot air showers, cars, and more than 6,000 other products, many of which did not actually exist, would never be produced, and Russian citizens could not buy.
Humorous game show KVN, which featured teams of competing college students, launched on Soviet television in 1961. Part quiz show, part improvisational comedy, it quickly became a national craze. But as the Soviet political climate grew more repressive in the late 1960s and early 1970s, censors grew hostile to the show's humor. It was canceled in 1972 despite its popularity. It returned to the airwaves in 1986 and is still on today.

Under Khrushchev, a "thaw" allowed state-funded Soviet artists to experiment in styles other than the utopian propaganda of Socialist Realism. But at an art exhibition in Moscow in 1962, Khrushchev condemned and insulted the experimental and abstract artwork that his policies had led to. He suggested that several of the artists were "pederasts" and "parasites" and threatened them with imprisonment. Though he didn't follow through on his threats, the thaw faded and adherence to Socialist Realism was once again enforced.
In 1985, not long after taking charge of the Soviet Union, Mikhail Gorbachev began a campaign to try to reduce alcoholism. He prohibited alcohol sales before 2 p.m. and shut down distilleries and vineyards in republics such as Moldavia (now Moldova) and Georgia. Like America's attempts at prohibition, the efforts resulted in spikes in organized crime and black markets. The state also lost revenue, enough to cause budget deficits, and Gorbachev abandoned the campaign in 1987.
Sources: "Seventeen Moments in Soviet History" archive, Michigan State University; "Soviet Spiel: Why the U.S.S.R. Produced Ads for Non-existing Products," Rakesh Krishnan Simha, Russia Beyond; "Political Corruption in the U.S.S.R," J.M. Cramer, Western Political Quarterly, Volume 30, Issue 2
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Wine from Moldova is excellent.
Is it the bottle with mold all ova it?
Some may be. Ostensibly the largest wine collection on the planet is in Moldova:
https://www.nationalgeographic.com/travel/article/worlds-largest-wine-cellar
"He suggested that several of the artists were "pederasts""
8-year-olds, Dude.
Yeah. Very cogent to point out that the person Khrushchev called a pederast was a minor and not Roman Polanski.
Not exactly Soviet, but still seemingly in the 'Russian Revisionist History' vein, in Sochi in 2014, the Russians claimed that Zworykin invented the TV when everyone between Zworykin himself and Bradley Cooper recognized that Zworykin was, at best, 3rd or 4th in line to claim the invention.
On the other hand, the critical part of the video recorder was invented in (1918?) by a Russian, (it was not manufactured because there was no magnetic tape available). On the other, other hand, he was living in the USA. I am surprised the Soviets didn't hijack that invention, too. 🙂
You're going to have to be more clear. Zworykin, himself a Russian immigrant to the US, was working for Sarnoff, also a Russian immigrant to the US, at RCA when he did his work. Arguably, all of it before Farnsworth is immaterial as, prior, all recording and broadcast was done electromechanically as opposed to our concept of electronic television and the invention of film, even to capture (pre-exiting) stop-motion, is difficult to distinguish as non-derivative from Eastman.
Ensign Chekov: "Ah, yes. That was inwented by the Rawsshin scientist Ivan Jackinov!"
Dr. "Bones" McCoy: "Spock said that too. Is he out of his Vulcan mnd?"
Amazing to see how far ahead of us the Soviets were in the propaganda department. I guess this is a testimony to how well central planning works. Hell, "inflation is good for you" is pretty lame compared to 1960's ads for microwave ovens, cell phones, and extended car warranties.
This article reads like Joe Biden fixing the supply chain.
Nah. No pudding splotches on the text.
Have heard of yellow journalism but brown journalism? Maybe as part of a smear campaign.
By next week, I suspect Biden will defend his immigration policy (i.e. allowing everyone who crosses the Mexican border to stay) as the most effective long term policy to reduce inflation.
https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2021/12/01/d-c-lobbies-cut-inflation-by-cutting-americans-wages/
Charles Koch will be pleased, and a lot wealthier.
To deal with agricultural shortcomings, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev promoted the expansion of corn as a crop well-suited to feeding both people and livestock.&/i>
Never mind that Corn didn't grow in the Eastern Hemisphere until brought over from the Western Hemisphere by Christopher Columbus. Hence, the Soviets couldn't claim that either.
Whoops! Forgot to clost the HTML
To deal with agricultural shortcomings, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev promoted the expansion of corn as a crop well-suited to feeding both people and livestock.
Never mind that Corn didn't grow in the Eastern Hemisphere until brought over from the Western Hemisphere by Christopher Columbus. Hence, the Soviets couldn't claim that either.
Oh yeah? At least the Soviets can claim a larger genocide than Columbus.
That depends on whether you count only the Indians directly slaughtered by Columbus's crews and by the Spanish conquest and enslavement, or include the European diseases that raced ahead and probably killed over 90% of the native population of two continents before they ever saw a white man. The conquistadores could never find more than a few tens of millions of natives to rob, enslave, torture, and kill because the rest were already dead, while the Soviets were working with a larger population, better technology, and an ideology that made the Spanish Inquisition look like humanitarians. OTOH, I think it likely that the pre-columbian population of the New World was larger than all those ever brought under Soviet rule.
So the USSR inwented Build Back Better First.
At least nobody can argue that the book "Bloody Red Stump" was written by the famous Russian author Whobitchadickov.
wasn't - wah, wah.
All Comrade Bagge is needing to become Hero of Antisocialism is revisionist caption writer :
https://vvattsupwiththat.blogspot.com/2021/12/100-years-of-solidarity-and-climate.html
As with Fredo, they will probably just suspend or dump her and say they've taken care of the problem.
And keep doing what they do [fronting for preferred Democrats] and try to be a bit more careful going forward.
According to the reporting though, the video of the Tur has her reporting "more skeptically". "
I don't think there is anything wrong with an Anchor getting a statement from a surrogate of the politician and reporting that...In this case, she referred to the Campaign Official as "friend of the Cuomo family" which is a bit sketchy. Though they say she kind of rolled her eyes (dismissively?) at the end of the statement.
To me, this is borderline- not anywhere near the same thing as Cuomo feeding intel to his brother.