I wonder whats Stalin’s take on how to deal with people with “conservative values”
In the U.S.S.R. anti-semitism is punishable with the utmost severity of the law as a phenomenon deeply hostile to the Soviet system. Under U.S.S.R. law active anti-semites are liable to the death penalty.
look man, i agree with you and all but did stalin not criminalize homophobia in the ussr? a better pick for a quote like that would be Lenin who created the most LGBT friendly nation in the world after the revolution
From what I remember, the loosening of laws about homosexuality were part of a broad repeal of Tsarist laws in general. It was something of an accident or oversight that homosexuality was legalized. But it should be mentioned a there were Bolsheviks into free love, and I think Kollontai wrote something endorsing gay people in the party?
And the one implemented under Stalin was more of an anti-pedophilia law, but in a time where gay people were assumed to also be pedophiles. And yeah that’s unfortunate and the world has been unkind to queer people.
I do remember someone here mentioning that the anti-pedastry law was only ever used one time against an otherwise typical gay person and it was after Stalin was dead. I never looked into it though.
gotcha, thanks for the info
I think you meant homosexuality, which the USSR specifically criminalized male homosexuality after Lenin. Awful but also extremely common among other nations, and the most non-socially-progressive law you can think of with regards to his policies.
It’s good to contextualize this stuff as much as possible, but I would say that the idea that Stalin was universally opposed to “conservative values” as we understand them today is, to describe it in outdated Twitter slang, “not it chief”
I don’t know dude, ending Korenization, beginning the anti cosmopolitan campaign and his patronage of Suslov were all pretty sus(lov).
70% good, 30% bad.