• Big Miku@lemm.ee
    ·
    1 year ago

    Let's take a look what started that "fascist" uprising. Years of economic mismanagement, opression, and being forced to pay a big chunk of their gdp to the Soviets for war reperations were all factors that lead to the Hungarian Revolution.

    And who did these "fascist" pick as their leader? Imre Nagy, the man who was ousted from power by the soviets for having the audacity to be a more moderate communist than hardline stallinists.

    The US doing something bad doesn't justify someone else doing bad. Think about a nazi who uses that reasoning, they would sound like a nazi apologist.

    Yes, the US did some bad stuff, but I still view them as the lesser evil when compared to the USSR or China.

    Also Hungary doing something 65 years later doesn't justify the actions of the Soviets.

    • alcoholicorn [comrade/them, doe/deer]
      ·
      1 year ago

      Whether the initial protesters had good reason or not, fascists quickly co-opted the movement in the same way they co-opted the liberal protests in Ukraine.

      Hungary doing something 65 years later doesn't justify the actions of the Soviets.

      Their actions 65 years later prove there were significant numbers of nazis waiting in the wings, and that the soviets were insufficiently oppressive.

      • Big Miku@lemm.ee
        ·
        1 year ago

        I couldn't find a single mention of a fascist movement in the uprising. So either it was neglible in size, or you are just lying.

        "Insufficiently oppressive". What? Hungary was a really oppressive nation during that time, and you wanted it to be more oppressive?

        And opressive to who? Fascist? They can just lie about not being a fascist. That leaves out to just guess who is a fascist and that sounds like a wonderful time for the citizens.

        Patton really was correct about the Soviet Union.