Joseph Vissarionovich Stalin, was born in Gori, Georgia on 21st December, 1879. was a Soviet revolutionary and politician who was the leader of the Soviet Union from 1924 until his death in 1953. He held power as General Secretary of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (1922–1952) and Chairman of the Council of Ministers of the Soviet Union (1941–1953).

The son of a humble Georgian shoemaker, at the age of fifteen Stalin entered the Orthodox seminary in Tbilisi on a scholarship, where he proved to be a brilliant student, although he was expelled when he was caught distributing propaganda for the Georgian Socialist Party, which he had joined in 1898.

While studying at the seminary he joined a secret organization called Messame Dassy (the Third Group). Members were supporters of Georgian independence from Russia. Some were also socialist revolutionaries and it was through the people he met in this organization that Stalin first came into contact with the ideas of Karl Marx.

Soon after leaving the seminary he began reading Iskra (the Spark), the newspaper of the Social Democratic Labour Party (SDLP). It was the first underground Marxist paper to be distributed in Russia. It was printed in several European cities and then smuggled into Russia by a network of SDLP agents. The editorial board included Lenin and Trotsky

In 1901 Stalin joined the Social Democratic Labour Party and whereas most of the leaders were living in exile, he stayed in Russia where he helped to organize industrial resistance to Tsarism. he would end up being arrested and exiled to Siberia for coordinating a Strike at the large Rothschild plant at Batum.

At the Second Congress of the Social Democratic Labour Party held in London in 1903, there was a dispute between Lenin and Julius Martov over the future of the SDLP. Lenin argued for a small party of professional revolutionaries with a large fringe of non-party sympathizers and supporters. Martov disagreed believing it was better to have a large party of activists.

As Lenin and Plekhanov won most of the votes, their group became known as the Bolsheviks (after bolshinstvo, the Russian word for majority), whereas Martov's group were dubbed Mensheviks (after menshinstvo, meaning minority). Stalin who was still in prison in Siberia, decided he favoured the Bolsheviks in this dispute. He escaped on 5th January 1904. Lenin was impressed with Stalin's achievements in the Caucasus and in December 1905, he was invited to meet him in Finland.

Stalin would Settled in Baku to expand the influence of bolsheviks in the Caucasus, Joseph Stalin worked closely with his friends in developing the political consciousness of the workers in the region. The workers in the oil fields belonged to a union under the influence of the Bolsheviks, and Stalin was one of the Union's delegates

He returned to St. Petersburg in February 1912, he became editor of Pravda. Lenin, who described him as my "wonderful Georgian" arranged for him to join the Party's Central Committee, he was Exiled to Siberia on 1913. he would return to St Petersburg in 1917 with the overthrow of the Tzar and the pardon to all political prisoners by Prince Lvov. He would join the then Petrograd Soviet

At this time, Stalin, like most Bolsheviks, took the view that the Russian people were not ready for a socialist revolution. He therefore called for conditional support of the Provisional Government. He also urged policies that would tempt the Mensheviks into forming an alliance. However, he disagreed with Molotov, who was calling for the immediate overthrow of Prince Lvov.

When Lenin returned to Russia on 3rd April, 1917, he announced what became known as the April Theses. Lenin attacked Bolsheviks for supporting the Provisional Government. Instead, he argued, revolutionaries should be telling the people of Russia that they should take over the control of the country. Lenin ended his speech by telling the assembled crowd that they must "fight for the social revolution, fight to the end, till the complete victory of the proletariat".

On 26th October, 1917, the All-Russian Congress of Soviets met and handed over power to the Soviet Council of People's Commissars. Lenin was elected chairman and Joseph Stalin (Nationalities), As a Georgian and a member of a minority group who had written about the problems of non-Russian peoples living under the Tsar, Stalin was seen as the obvious choice for the post as Minister of Nationalities. Nearly half of the population of the Empire was made up of non-russians. To show his good faith, Stalin appointed several assistants from the various nationalities within Russia.

At the Tenth Party Congress in April 1922, Lenin proposed a resolution that would ban all factions within the party. Stalin was appointed as General Secretary and was now given the task of dealing with the "factions and cliques" in the Communist Party

Following Lenin's death in 1924, There was a big power struggle in the party between 3 main factions. The Left opposition (trotsky), the Centre (Stalin) and the Right opposition (Bukharin).

Trotsky had argued in 1917 that the Bolshevik Revolution was doomed to failure unless successful revolutions also took place in other countries such as Germany and France. In 1924 Stalin began talking about the possibility of completing the "building of socialism in a single country". Nikolay Bukharin joined the attacks on Trotsky asserted that Trotsky's theory of "permanent revolution" was anti-Leninist. in 1925 Trotsky was removed from the goverment and 2 years later from the Party and exiled for Factionalism.

During the Collectivation of Land Stalin Blame the policies of Bukharin for the failure of the 1927 harvest. By this time kulaks made up 40% of the peasants in some regions, He also advocated the setting up of collective farms. By 1935, 94 per cent of crops were being produced by peasants working on collective farms.

With no start-up capital, little international trade and virtually no modern infrastructure, Stalin's government financed industrialization from the profits made by state-owned factories and enterprises, trade, banks and transportation.

In 1926-1927, about one billion rubles were invested in industry; three years later, about 5 billion rubles could already be invested in it. The 1930s saw the production, for the first time in the history of the Soviet Union, of a wide range of new products, including motorcycles, watches and cameras, as well as the machines and tools needed to produce these and other goods.

To avoid the isolation of the Soviet Republic, the USSR entered the League of Nations (1934), and had a rapprochement with Great Britain and France.

Stalin had always opposed fascism and Hitler, on August 15, 1939 he tried to make a pact with Britain and France to attack Nazi Germany. Stalin proposed to send 1 million soldiers to fight Hitler, but the capitalist countries refused. On August 23, 1939, the Soviet Union and Germany signed a non-aggression pact in Moscow.

After the outbreak of World War II, however, and considering that the fall of England was imminent, Hitler ordered an attack on the Soviet Union. The Red Army could not contain the main German attacks at the beginning of the Barbarossa Plan, since more than 70% of the German military industry was concentrated on the eastern front for the invasion of the USSR.

When Germany reached Moscow, Stalin did not flee and even made in November a speech commemorating the victory of Soviet power, soon began to take control of the situation and Stalin was appointed Supreme Commander in Chief of the Red Army. Unlike the German forces and Hitler's hierarchy, the Soviet military autonomy took its generals into democratic decision-making and had some of its best generals, such as Zhukov and Vatutin, brought in from the frontier, also allowing the dispatch from the eastern fronts of thousands of Siberian troops already trained in combat with the Japanese.

On the night of Sunday, March 1, he was found lying on the floor, dressed in the clothes he had worn the night before and barely able to speak. Some doctors ruled that Stalin had suffered a stroke and had collapsed. His death just like Lenin's would end up in a 3-way Power struggle between Lavrentiy Beria, Georgy Malenkov and Nikita Khrushchev

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  • allthetimesivedied [they/them, she/her]
    ·
    10 months ago

    Kinda freaking out right now because I’m thinking about them, and how I’ll never sit in their car with them; I’ll never again learn about some cool thing they like/that they’re interested in (they once fell asleep showing me YouTube videos). And they’re not dead. They won’t talk to me because I fucked up. It feels like losing a loved one though. And I’ve never experienced what it’s like to lose a loved one, just like I have no idea what it feels like, to be in love (as in, loving someone who also loves you). And everyone tells me I’m fucking obsessed. I’ve been told this so many times I question whether or not I really love them or if it’s just blah blah blah like they all say. They have no idea what it’s like to be me. These fucking people who say I should “make other friends” or “find someone else” are the most wrong, but again, maybe I am crazy? Maybe all the shit about how they’re the first person to ever make me feel genuinely happy, how I felt a connection to somebody for the first time in my life, how they’re broken the same way I’m broken, maybe that’s all just the oxytocin talking because they’re cute or whatever, and eventually I’ll just get bored and fall in love with someone else.

    I hate this fucking shit. If they’re really gone forever I’m just done. Whenever I’ve tried to find love and a connection to this world I’ve only been hurt. I never even had a fucking chance. Everyone else who’s a misanthropic loner at least got to have something at some point. I get to die without even one moment like that.

    The one last hope I have: I’m friends with someone who used to park next to them (they were living in a van at the time) and was pretty good friends with them. I’ve been trying to get her to call them for a year now but life gets in the way a lot when you’re homeless. She seems like she might be sympathetic.

    It pisses me off when people say to just move on and get over them because first of all, I’m not entirely sure I’m going to live that much longer, and second, it feels like a fucking slap in the face. This pain is real. I am in pain. And you just look at me with your little knowing smile like I’m a child. I fucking hate it.

    I can’t just “find someone else.” I haven’t found someone else in my entire life.

    • TheDialectic [none/use name]
      ·
      10 months ago

      This too shall pass. I am leaving a relationship also. It hurts, but it will pass. Thr best thing you can do is to honor the happy happy times you had together is to learn why it went poorly and do better next time

    • voight [he/him, any]
      ·
      10 months ago

      Two things which are good for stuff like grief are electrolytes & novels

    • WhatDoYouMeanPodcast [comrade/them]
      ·
      10 months ago

      I remember this clarifying moment of not even bothering with contingency because if it doesn't work out then who cares about that timeline? There was still a lot of life to live. I can't say it's been better since and mourning isn't linear or a short process. But the internal conflict and sadness that you have to type out implies the belief, no matter how small, that you could find some kind of solace and you have some capacity to cope somewhere inside you. Maybe even believe, despite yourself, that you could be happy in a different way one day

    • Commiejones [comrade/them, he/him]
      ·
      10 months ago

      That is a shitty place to be.

      Real talk?

      Love is one of the most unoriginal things in the world. Almost all humans fall in romantic love one or more times in their lives. It is totally unremarkable and yet it manages to make people feel like it is the most important thing in the universe and not just love in abstract but each individual time a person falls in love it convinces them the most important thing ever in the entirety of all time before and after this moment is to be with their loved one. Broken love is even more common.

      Its gonna sound unhelpful and patronizing but everyone saying "move on" and "better luck next time" are right. Almost every adult has been broken hearted and for most of them it was just as crushing as it is for you.

      • allthetimesivedied [they/them, she/her]
        ·
        10 months ago

        Except they really are different from everyone else I’ve crushed on in the past. I like to think that’s real and not just me being lovesick anyways.

        I’ve always felt disconnected. I never even loved my parents. I’ve always had a difficult time making friends; I always get bored or irritated with them. They’re different. And it seems like they’re a lot like me.

        I don’t even care if we’re ever “together.” I just can’t fucking deal with them being gone. They’re always going to be a mystery to me.