Hitler and Stalin are names that will be forever remember as evil master minds of killing millions of people in order to create a perfect race. In this paper, there will be a comparison of Hitler and Stalin’s careers. Also, investigating which one had a greater impact on the twentieth century.…
Stalin was a part of the Bolsheviks which was the communist party of the Soviet Union. The Kulaks were the wealthy landowners and they were capitalists and did not approve of Stalin’s beliefs and methods. One of the changes Stalin implemented in order to achieve his one of his many goals, was to collective farms. Collectivization is the act of seizing land from the wealthy (which in this case were the Kulaks) and using it for communal use. This means that the Kulaks’ farms would get broken up to little parts and given to the peasants. In document 4, an excerpt from a speech that Stalin delivered in 1929 he says, “The socialist way, which is to set up collective farms and state farms into large collective farms, technically and scientifically equipped, and to the squeezing out of the capitalist elements from agriculture.” Stalin was determined to remove any and all capitalist that were not in his favor. Another change Stalin implemented was to stop feeding the livestock with the wheat being grown. In document 5, there is a graph showing the declination of the livestock in the first and second five year plan. In a total of 10 years, the amount of livestock was virtually cut in half! In comparison, the wheat production increased significantly in the ten years in which the livestock was cut in half. The wheat being…
Joseph Stalin established a modern totalitarian government in Soviet Russia. He is known as the “Man of Steel”. A totalitarianism is a type of government that takes total, centralized, state control over every aspect of public and private life of their people. His rule had changed the people of his empire in numerous ways. Stalin had total control over economic needs. According to document 6 “By 1940 Russia produced more pig iron than Germany, and far more than Britain or France. Numbers of cattle grew in the 1920s, but fell increasingly during the collectivization of agriculture after 1929, and by 1940 hardly exceeded the figure for 1920. Since 1940 the industrial development of the Soviet Union has been impressive, but agricultural production has continued to be plumiding”. The document illustrates how pig iron had significantly increased as a result of the “Five Year Plan”, however heavy industry led to expense of food supplies. This would cause limited production of consumer goods. It caused a step back because of the severe shortages of housing, food, clothing as well as other necessary goods. The Five Year Plan didn’t help much to excel their economic as Stalin hoped, it impacted by creating famine. Stalin rising to power promised an economic boom for Russia however, in that process many people suffered and died of starvation. According to document 5, “The purge began its last,…
The name Josef Stalin is very often brought up when talking about dictatorship. In George Orwell’s “Animal Farm”, Napoleon is meant to be an allegory for Stalin. He shows the natural desire for power present in people. Firstly, he kicks out Snowball. Right off the bat, Napoleon is going out of his way to make himself a single dictator. Napoleon knows the power a single dictator…
He worked for only more power and used people to his advantage. Napoleon did not like the idea of Animalism but he liked the idea of him being the most powerful so he created lies that would allow him to be boosted up above the other animals, giving himself the most power. Though Napoleon was not a good public speaker he used animals such as Squealer, a convening speaker who could manipulate words to their advantage. Napoleon represents Joseph Stalin who was a not in agreement to the idea of “communism” but liked the idea of him being in the highest power of authority. He was relentless and murdered anyone who opposed him, though he was a leader he also did not do very well with public speaking nor was he educated well, he only craved power. Stalin also used other speakers but in different ways, through propaganda.…
Joseph Stalin was a Russian Hitler, maybe even a little worse. During the time that Stalin was in control of Russia, he turned the Soviet Union into a modern super power. He did this by dramatically improving the Russian economy with his Five Year Plans. Stalin used many methods to break the Russian people. He also changed amount of industrial and agricultural buildup with his policy of collectivization. He organized purges against his own people. To make progress efficient and real he achieved total control of the U.S.S.R. Stalin made some prenominal changes in the Soviet Union.…
In 1917, Russia was crumbling into pieces. The World War I was draining all of Russia’s resources. There was shortage of food throughout the country, which left people starving. At the battlefront, millions of Russian soldiers were dying, they did not possess many of the powerful weapons that their opponents had. The government under Czar Nicholas II was disintegrating, and a provisional government had been set up. In November of 1917, Lenin and his communist followers known as the Bolsheviks overthrew the provisional government and set a communist government in Russia. However, in 1924, Lenin died and Josef Stalin assumed leadership of the Soviet Union, which was the name for the communist Russia. Stalin was a ruthless leader who brought many changes to the Soviet Union. Stalin’s goal was to transform the Soviet Union into a modern superpower and spread communism throughout the world, and he was determined to sabotage anyone who stood in his way. He used many methods such as collectivization, totalitarianism and five year plan’s to achieve his goals. Stalin’s rule brought both harmful and beneficial consequences to the Soviet Union; however, the negative factors were so terrible, that they overwhelm the positive factors.…
Stalinism, the term used to embody the form of government experienced by the Soviet Union under Stalin’s rule, had a significant and lasting impact on the USSR. Stalinism impacted on several aspects of life. Collectivisation was introduced which assisted in the funding of industrialisation, terror was used to create a communist state. Stalin centralised every aspect of life, from the single leadership of Stalin himself to party control of the state and its functions. Free will disappeared and service to the state was expected. Consequently a Stalinist state which had a major impact on the USSR was created.…
This is similar to Animal Farm because only Napoleon had a say on anything on or outside the farm. Like deciding to plow the area where the retired animals were supposed to live after they came of age. Though that area was supposed to be a retirement place Napoleon decided to do what he wanted without letting anyone else state their opinion on this. Then when Napoleon was having some pigs and chickens killed or executed with the nine former puppies that he reeducated they even went after Boxer who has done nothing to oppose or upset Napoleon. This was almost exactly like one of Stalin’s purges. “ An average estimate is that in the Soviet Union as a whole, about 500,000 were executed in 1937-39 and somewhere between 3 and 12 million were sent to labor camps.”(russiapedia) this is just an estimate of the people Stalin had killed or sent to work their life’s away. Some of those people were people of power who could overthrow Stalin however most or the majority were just ordinary people the workers and the peasants. Stalin got rid of all the of churches and religion throughout all of Russia. He did this then used the media to help cover this up and then but statues of himself in the places of former worship. This gave the workers and peasants only one thing to look up to and that was Russia's government and consequently Stalin…
“ the way to handle people is to treat them like chickens. Take away everything they have by plucking all their feathers and then throw them a few bread crumbs. Then they will follow you forever.” -Joseph Stalin. “ All animals are equal, but some are more equal than others” - Napoleon the pig. The two harsh leaders undertook any rigid behavior they had to perform, in order to show others who were disobeying their orders that they were in charge. This made much of the public petrified of them. Joseph Stalin was known to be a very brutal leader and was put at fault for as many as 20 million deaths. Similar to Stalin was Napoleon who was also known for being a ruthless leader to the other animals on Animal Farm. Both Joseph Stalin and Napoleon…
Napoleon and Stalin were similar in roles by both being leaders. First as Napoleon is becoming a leader from Old Major’s death he becomes power hungry and expels anyone who is against him, just like Stalin. This was Napoleon’s role, a leader, who highlights Stalin’s actions from the revolution by demanding sacrifice and loyalty. Even paranoia came through the both of them, Stalin at the end of his reign and Napoleon when he is executing shouting, “Does anyone else want to share their traitorous actions?” (Orwell 52) Orwell compares the both of them accurately and shows their impact on the…
Leaders use many tactics to withhold power and maintain control over the ignorant people. Joseph Stalin, the leader of the USSR from 1922-1952, used many clever and sometimes gory techniques to keep his power over the Soviet people. These strategies are shown in George Orwell's allegory of the Russian revolution, Animal Farm. Napoleon, the self-proclaimed leader of Animal Farm and allegorical representation of Joseph Stalin, has quite a few crafty and cunning ways to retain his authority over the animals. For example, by only educating the piglets and dogs, Napoleon keeps the majority of the animals uneducated and ignorant and therefore easier to manipulate. By blaming mistakes and wrongdoings on Snowball, an exiled pig who is an allegorical…
Joseph Stalin became a dictator for Russia in 1936. After the death of Vladimir Lenin, Stalin gained control of power. Lenin was the leader of the communist experiment in the USSR, he gave Stalin the leadership just before his death. Stalin’s goals were to exercise power, and control over parties, and their countries. Stalin terrorized the population so that Russia could be rendered obedient. He wanted everyone to obey him, and his laws. The civilians that did not tragically lost their lives.…
Revered by few, despised by many, and known by all, two of the most arguably world-renowned authoritarians consisted of a paranoid Russian tyrant and a ruthless German dictator who both led their countries with iron fists. Joseph Stalin and Adolf Hitler have written themselves into the world's history through their actions in the gruesome, looming beast that was World War II, of the treatment of their nations, and of the governments they represented. In theory, these two leaders piloted their nations quite similarly, but although both Stalin and Hitler have become known as famous and powerful dictators with analogous aspirations, their individual policies of ruling were actually strikingly different.…
What is it that brings all dictators together in comparison? Is it their ruthless actions towards others? Could it be their thirst for power? Or maybe it's the fact that all dictators use others to gain for themselves. "He [Napoleon] would only be too happy to let you make your decisions by yourselves. But sometimes you might make the wrong decisions, comrades, and then where would we be?" (Orwell page 50). These examples prove Napoleon, ruler of Animal Farm, and Pol Pot, ruler of Cambodia, are indeed similar.…