The Soviet Polity in the Modern Era (Google eブックス)

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Erik P. Hoffmann, Robbin Frederick Laird
Transaction Publishers - 942 ページ
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564 ページ - When in the course of development class distinctions have disappeared and all production has been concentrated in the hands of a vast association of the whole nation, then public power will lose its political character.
365 ページ - 1931, Stalin, now the dominant leader who had set his own brutal stamp on the industrialization drive, justified the intensity of the policy by referring to the need to overcome Russia's backwardness and thus prevent other powers from beating her. Do you want our Socialist fatherland to be beaten and to lose its independence?
568 ページ - The consequence of wage equalization is that the unskilled worker lacks the incentive to become a skilled worker and is thus deprived of the prospect of advancement; as a result he feels himself a "visitor" in the factory, working only temporarily so as to "earn a little" and then go off to "seek his fortune
568 ページ - order to put an end to this evil we must draw up wage scales that will take into account the difference between skilled and unskilled labor, between heavy and light work. We cannot tolerate a situation where a rolling-mill hand in a steel mill earns no more than a sweeper.
149 ページ - the Department for Liaison with Communist and Workers' Parties of Socialist Countries, responsible for relations between the CPSU and other communist parties in power; and the Department for Cadres Abroad, which supervises foreign travel by Soviet citizens. Housekeeping operations for the CPSU are managed by the Administration of Affairs Department, which, among
140 ページ - He then developed the vision of "a single state bank, the biggest of the big, with branches in every rural district, every factory," accounting for "as much as nine-tenths of the socialist apparatus" and constituting, so to speak, the "skeleton of socialist society."
35 ページ - right not to know." As a rule, they cut the quotation short, omitting: "not to have their divine souls stuffed with gossip, nonsense, vain talk." My answer is already expressed in that omitted passage. They pointed out reproachfully that this is the same Solzhenitsyn who, when in the USSR, struggled for the right to
584 ページ - Well-to-do peasants: consisting of those particularly advantaged by virtue of the location, fertility, or crop raised by their collective farms (ie, those living on the so-called "millionaire" farms) and those whose trade, skill, or productivity pushes them into the higher income brackets even on the less prosperous farms. 2.

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