Talk:Masturbation (Map Game)/@comment-26810333-20170811152606

Union of Soviet Socialist Republics:


 * Government:


 * The Menshevik Trial: The Menshevik Trial was one of the early purges carried out by Stalin in which 14 economists, who were former members of the Menshevik party, were put on trial and convicted for trying to re-establish their party. It was held 1–8 March 1931 in the House of Unions. The presiding judge was Nikolay Shvernik. The defendants were: Boris Berlatsky, Aleksandr Finn-Enotaevsky, Abram Ginzburg, Vladimir Groman, Mikhail Yakubovich, Vladimir Ikov, Kiril Petunina, Isaak Illich Rubin, Vasili Sher, Aron Sokolovsky, Nikolai Sukhanov, Moisei Teitelbaum, Ivan Volkov, and Lazar Zalkind. Six out of the fourteen defendants were Jews. It was suggested in Bundist circles that this large proportion of Jews among the accused had been specially arranged to organize feeling against the Jewish Socialists. This was denied by Stalin. The defendants were accused of setting up the "All-Union Bureau of Mensheviks." Vladimir Groman gave a public testimony that he and Vladimir Bazarov (who was not on trial) headed a counterrevolutionary group in Gosplan, purportedly organized in 1923, which attempted at "influencing the economic policy of the Soviet authorities so as to hold the position of 1923–25." Groman, being a member of the Presidium of the Gosplan the star figure among the accused, damned himself and his colleagues with testimony that at Gosplan they had spent their time. Putting into the control figures and into the surveys of current business planning ideas and deliberately distorted appraisals antagonistic to the general Party line (lowering the rates of expansion of socialist construction, distorting the class approach, exaggerating the difficulties), stressing the signs of an impending catastrophe (Groman) or, what is close to this, assigning a negligible chance of success to the Party line directed toward the socialist attack (Bazarov, Gukhman). On the final day, the prisoners made confessions of their "crimes". "In the last minutes before my death", one of them was quoted saying, "I will think with disgust of the evil I have wrought; evil for which not we, but foreign Menshevists and the Second International must share responsibility." Nikolai Krylenko, the Public Prosecutor, declared that Groman, Sher, Yakubovitch, Ginzburg, and Sukhanov were the principal leaders of the counter-revolutionary organization, and therefore, must suffer the death penalty. For the others he asked that they should be isolated "for long periods". At 9 March 1931, after deliberating for twenty-five hours, the court sentenced seven defendants to ten years' imprisonment. The seven other defendants were sentenced to different terms of imprisonment, ranging from five to eight years. Those who received the ten years' sentence were Groman, Sher, Sukhanov, Ginzburg, Jakobovich, Petunina, and Finn-Enotaevsky.
 * Preparation for Famine: Joseph Stalin, seeing that a Great Famine is clearly incoming, begins production on "artificial food" or food that isn't really food, but rather just food that looks like paste/mush/whatever and tastes like the food it's meant to imitate, but isn't that food in its composition or whatever, meaning that the real food will still be in "reserves".


 * Analytics:
 * Economy: COMMUNISM.
 * Infrastructure/Public Services: We use our *ahem* "workers" to improve factories and infrastructure in Russia Prime.
 * Development/Standards of Living: We're communist. We don't need standards of living. Do we?
 * Population & Demographics: The population of the Soviet Union is  people.


 * Military:
 * Wars and Conflicts:
 * Soviet Armed Forces:
 * Red Army:
 * Soviet Air Forces:
 * Soviet Navy:


 * Diplomacy:
 * Germany: We should totally form an alliance. We'll call it the Berlin-Moscow Axis. That is, if you accept, of course.
 * Romania: If you know what's good for your independence, cede us Bessarabia.