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" ... Even after World War II, there was a very short period when the societies, if not the political elites, believed that amiable relationship between the free world and the Soviet Union was possible, despite the fact that the latter was governed by an extremely ruthless and ambitious totalitarian imperialist called Stalin. It took Churchill’s Iron Curtain speech in Fulton and a number of aggressive Soviet moves in the second half of the 1940s for the sad reality of the Cold War to sink in. ... "
" ... Ever since Lenin, the Bolsheviks had viewed world politics as a class struggle projected onto the global stage. Soviet Russia represented the exploited of the earth. The capitalist, imperialist powers were Moscow’s sworn enemies. Stalin saw the world as divided into two camps with conflict between the inevitable and enduring peace impossible. In Stalin’s time, the imperialist camp seemed more powerful, but the Soviet camp had important advantages. It could play on “contradictions” among imperialist powers, attempting to divide if not conquer them. It could urge on the working class in capitalist countries, if not to seize power, then to resist anti-Soviet aggression by their rulers. After Stalin’s death, his dog-eat-dog view of the world underwent important but limited, modifications. Khrushchev transformed “peaceful coexistence” from a short-term tactic into a long-run strategy. But his attempt to ease the cold war helped to trigger its two most dangerous crises, in Berlin and Cuba. Brezhnev succeeded where Khrushchev had not by negotiating East-West détente in the 1970s. But absent a fundamental rethinking of Soviet goals and a corresponding reduction in Western alarm about “the Soviet threat,” détente soon gave way to the renewed high tension that Gorbachev inherited. ... "
" ... If Maduro wants to sock it to "imperialist yankees", he will default in defiance to both Wall Street and Washington. He is also sanctioned by the U.S.. Maduro doesn't need to throw bones to his base because his base is all he has left. His approval rating is lower than Donald Trump's. Venezuela's central bank is running out of funds and has around $10 billion left. The bank can no longer bail out the country. ... "
" ... OXFORD, UNITED KINGDOM - 2020/06/09: A woman wearing a facemask is seen displaying a placard reading ... [+] "RHODES MUST FALL" during the protest. Many took to the streets outside University of Oxford's Oriel College in a protest called by the Rhodes Must Fall campaign in reference to Oriel College having a statue of British imperialist Cecil Rhodes above one of its entrances. (Photo by Thabo Jaiyesimi/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images) ... "
" ... Preface: A few days ago I began an exchange with Tim Worstall over his article on Forbes regarding the food shortages in Venezuela. I noted that his work did not include an explanation for the shortages, nor did it acknowledge the economic warfare going on in the country. He simply refused to admit there was imperialist tampering in the country. So I’d like to respond to him here in detail. ... "