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-- Genocides, Politicides, and Other Mass Murders
Genocides, Politicides, and Other Mass Murders
Death by the numbers:
Genocides, Politicides, and Other Mass Murder Since 1945
Highlights:
35 million China
15 million USSR
| quote: |
| Not all politicides since 1945 appear on this chart because some countries where politicide has occurred have become democracies (e.g. East Germany, Poland, Romania, Mongolia) and are not now at stage 4 or above. �2002 Gregory H. Stanton, Genocide Watch |
another attempt of holocaust relativation?
it's futile, give it up.
in this case, as cynical as it sounds, it's not only the quantity, it's the "quality" of genocide that makes it "worse".
face it: the holocaust might not have been the biggest genocide in terms of numbers, but it *was* the most horrible crime of human history due to its industrialzed and systematic, totally organized nature. The idea of antismeitsimwas put intopractice in the coldest and most calculating fashion possible. It's this total consequentialism that makes the Holocaust so unique and horrible.
All life is precious.
Like the title states:
Genocides, Politicides, and Other Mass Murders
The author had it all covered with the use of the words "and Other".
Numbers don't lie. Don't expect me to lie as well.
Gulag Archipelago, The,
history and memoir of life in the Soviet Union's prison camp system by Russian novelist Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn, first published in Paris as Arkhipelag GULag in three volumes (1973-75). Gulag is a Russian acronym for the Soviet government agency that supervised the vast network of forced-labour camps. Solzhenitsyn used the word archipelago as a metaphor for the camps, which were scattered through the sea of civil society like a chain of islands extending "from the Bering Strait almost to the Bosporus."
The Gulag Archipelago is an exhaustive and compelling account based on Solzhenitsyn's own eight years in Soviet prison camps, on other prisoners' stories committed to his photographic memory while in detention, and on letters and historical sources. The work represents the author's attempt to compile a literary and historical record of the Soviet regime's comprehensive but deeply irrational use of terror against its own population. A testimonial to Stalinist atrocities, The Gulag Archipelago devastated readers outside the Soviet Union with its descriptions of the brutality of the Soviet regime. The book gave new impetus to critics of the Soviet system and caused many sympathizers to question their position.
The first two volumes describe the arrest, conviction, transport, and imprisonment of the Gulag's victims from 1918 to 1956. Solzhenitsyn alternates dispassionate historical exposition with harrowing personal accounts from prison life. The third volume documents attempted escapes and subversions from within the system.
After the first volume was published in Paris in 1973, the official Soviet press virulently denounced Solzhenitsyn, who was arrested and exiled from the country in February 1974. He dedicated the book "to all those who did not live to tell it" and donated the proceeds from its sale to the Russian Social Fund for Persecuted Persons and Their Families.
Gulag Archipelago, The,
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