ATL Bear said:The guy that wrote the Cato article was fired by them for being a Russian shill. True story.Redbrickbear said:ATL Bear said:
Kirill was a state asset under the USSR and the church an instrument of the state. He remains one for the state today and the church an instrument as well.
The state owned the major industrial and energy assets under the USSR, doling out special positions to political powerbrokers and political allies. The state still owns the major industrial and energy assets, doling out wealth to political powerbrokers and political allies.
Party heads approved who could and couldn't run for positions in the government under the USSR. Party heads approve who can and can't run for positions in the government today.
The state owned the major media outlets under the USSR. The state owns the major media outlets in Russia today.
The list goes on, but as they say, the more things change, the more they stay the same.
When even the most aggressively anti-Putin and anti-Russian newspapers and commentators are not making the argument that the USSR and Russ. Federation are the same you should probably drop the losing argument.
1. No would could run for office in the USSR and not be a member of the Communist party. It was a totalitarian system
In the modern Russ Federation there are other parties in the State Duma even if United Russia has the lions share. Its autocratic not totalitarian
[The political system of the Soviet Union took place in a federal single-party soviet socialist republic framework which was characterized by the superior role of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU), the only party permitted by the Constitution.]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/State_Duma
2. Despite the similarity in corruption the economic system was drastically different under the USSR and Russ. Fed
[As a socialist state, the Soviet Union did not include open markets. The Soviet Union was a command economy, in which economic decisions were made by the state and not left to the market to decide. During the Soviet era, for example, industrial production was planned by the central government. The government would decide what would be produced, where it would be produced, the quantity produced, the number of workers who would produce it, where the raw materials would come from, and how the final product would be distributed. By mobilizing the entire country to work toward common goals, the USSR was able to achieve the rapid industrialization that it so desired. However, the Soviets underestimated the power and efficiency of free-enterprise capitalism, and their socialist system was undermined by waste, fraud, and corruption.
Another main economic feature of the Soviet Union was collectivized agriculture. The Soviet leaders did not want individual, capitalist farmers to become rich and threaten their economic system. Nor did they want thousands of small, inefficient farms when the country was perpetually unable to feed itself. Instead, they decided to streamline agricultural production into large farm factories. All the farmland in each area was consolidated into a government-owned collective operation....Collectivized agriculture remained the norm in the Soviet Union until the country's dissolution in 1991...
A Russian style of capitalism replaced the social, political, and economic system of the Communist era with a growing market economy. The export of Russia's vast quantities of natural resources, such as oil, natural gas, and timber, to Europe and the rest of the world helped the country rebound from the economic collapse of the 1990s. Russia has benefited from the recent increase in energy prices, and oil, natural gas, metals, and timber account for more than 80 percent of exports and 30 percent of government revenues..]
[Wealth, once controlled by the political/party elite, was now being shifted to the business elite, a pattern found in most capitalist countries]
https://open.lib.umn.edu/worldgeography/chapter/3-2-the-ussr-and-the-russian-federation/
[One obvious difference between the Soviet Union and Russia is that the Soviet governing elite embraced Marxism-Leninism and its objective of world revolution. Today's Russia is not a messianic power. Its economic system is a rather mundane variety of corrupt crony capitalism, not rigid state socialism. The political system is a conservative autocracy with aspects of a rigged democracy, not a one party dictatorship that brooks no dissent whatsoever.
Russia is hardly a Western style democracy, but neither is it a continuation of the Soviet Union's horrifically brutal totalitarianism. Indeed, the country's political and social philosophy is quite different from that of its predecessor. For example, the Orthodox Church had no meaningful influence during the Soviet era something that was unsurprising, given communism's official policy of atheism. But today, the Orthodox Church has a considerable influence in Putin's Russia, especially on social issues.
The bottom line is that Russia is a conventional, somewhat conservative, power, whereas the Soviet Union was a messianic, totalitarian power. That's a rather large and significant difference, and U.S. policy needs to reflect that realization.]
https://www.cato.org/commentary/russia-not-soviet-union
Link to that story?
The guardian (not a conservative paper) was describing him as being with CATO recently and using him for expertise
PS
Looks they did part ways.
Do you have proof he was a "Russian shill"?
Or just opposed the war?
And now Ted Galen Carpenter has been fired from Cato, after 27 years there, because he doesn't support US involvement in the Russia-Ukraine war. https://t.co/wuG5LIk7Y0
— Stephan Kinsella (@NSKinsella) April 20, 2023
nb @scotthortonshow https://t.co/xOm3Qf3srq pic.twitter.com/fezdkpT9Qj