KIMMEL...HATES USA...AGREE...YET SOCIALISTS ALLOW HIM ACCESS TO WORLD WIDE MEDIA. HITLER AND KIMMEL REPRESENT SOCISLISM.
SOCIALISM IS THE PEOPLE THAT LEAD. Rayze Dabar PROOF? Several socialist and communist leaders have been criticized for extreme brutality and human rights abuses while in power. The worst are typically identified by the number of deaths for which their policies or purges were responsible.
Joseph Stalin (Soviet Union, 1922–1953)
The Gulag System: A vast network of forced labor camps where millions were imprisoned, tortured, and killed. While the system began under Vladimir Lenin, Stalin greatly expanded its scale and brutality.
The Great Famine (Holodomor): Historians widely blame Stalin's forced collectivization of agriculture for the famine of 1932–1933, which caused an estimated 14.5 million deaths from starvation, including millions in Ukraine.
The Great Purge: Starting in 1936, Stalin systematically eliminated rivals and critics within the Communist Party and beyond. Hundreds of thousands were executed or sent to the Gulags.
Mao Zedong (China, 1943–1976)
The Great Leap Forward: This campaign from 1958 to 1962 aimed to rapidly industrialize China through collective farming. The resulting economic chaos and famine led to an estimated 15 to 55 million deaths, making it one of the deadliest famines in human history.
The Cultural Revolution: Launched in 1966, this socio-political movement led to a decade of violent class struggle and destruction of cultural artifacts. It resulted in widespread persecution, torture, and a significant loss of life.
Pol Pot (Cambodia, 1975–1979)
Cambodian Genocide: Pol Pot and his Khmer Rouge regime sought to create an agrarian socialist utopia by forcing city dwellers into the countryside for farm labor. An estimated 1.5 to 2 million Cambodians, nearly a quarter of the country's population, died from execution, starvation, overwork, and disease.
Purge of "Intellectuals": The regime systematically targeted and executed former government officials, intellectuals, and ethnic and religious minorities. Wearing glasses or speaking a foreign language was sometimes enough to condemn someone.
Kim Il-sung (North Korea, 1948–1994)
Totalitarian Control: The founder of North Korea established an authoritarian state with a pervasive system of surveillance and a cult of personality centered on himself.
Political Prison Camps: His regime relied on a network of remote prison camps, or kwanliso, to terrorize and repress dissent. Hundreds of thousands were sent to these camps, from which few returned.
Collective Punishment: Entire families were punished with imprisonment for a single member's alleged crimes, a practice known as "three generations of punishment".
Fidel Castro (Cuba, 1959–2008)
Repression of Dissent: After seizing power, Castro's regime executed or imprisoned thousands of opponents. It maintained control through a vast network of state security forces and government-organized mobs that harassed dissidents.
Human Rights Abuses: Opponents were often subjected to show trials and sent to abysmal prisons with harsh, life-threatening conditions. The regime also suppressed free expression and independent media.
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