I am quite rigid in regards to dis/trusting Britannica and other free and accessible online sources ( e.g. Wikipedia).
In my opinion, if your data, theory, or story cannot survive public scrutiny on the open internet, then the quality of your material probably doesn’t meet my standards.
Only trusting western, mainstream sources that are generally friendly to the Capitalist order is pretty low in terms of standards. Purely trusting biased sources isn’t a good thing.
Moreover, the basic facts weren’t wrong, I pointed out how Britannica intentionally leaves out key details, and emotionally charges the facts it does represent. You’re only getting a small portion of the overall history and are deliberately refusing to look into actual sources, just summaries from biased individuals.
Why don’t you want to read October, by China Mieville? As far as I know it’s seen as very in-depth and well-sourced, the worst you would be doing is getting a better understanding of events.
All of that still doesn’t address that Socialism was by far better for Russia than Tsarism or Capitalism, life expectancies doubled, democratic control was dramatically expanded, literacy rates went from low 30s to 99.9%, famine was ended, and disparity was lowered while GDP raised dramatically and consistently. Even if we ignored the events of the Revolution, the working class won out dramatically.
I am quite rigid in regards to dis/trusting Britannica and other free and accessible online sources ( e.g. Wikipedia).
In my opinion, if your data, theory, or story cannot survive public scrutiny on the open internet, then the quality of your material probably doesn’t meet my standards.
Only trusting western, mainstream sources that are generally friendly to the Capitalist order is pretty low in terms of standards. Purely trusting biased sources isn’t a good thing.
Moreover, the basic facts weren’t wrong, I pointed out how Britannica intentionally leaves out key details, and emotionally charges the facts it does represent. You’re only getting a small portion of the overall history and are deliberately refusing to look into actual sources, just summaries from biased individuals.
Why don’t you want to read October, by China Mieville? As far as I know it’s seen as very in-depth and well-sourced, the worst you would be doing is getting a better understanding of events.
All of that still doesn’t address that Socialism was by far better for Russia than Tsarism or Capitalism, life expectancies doubled, democratic control was dramatically expanded, literacy rates went from low 30s to 99.9%, famine was ended, and disparity was lowered while GDP raised dramatically and consistently. Even if we ignored the events of the Revolution, the working class won out dramatically.