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To: PhilDragoo

From the National Guardian
March 16, 1953

On Stalin
By W.E.B. DuBois

Joseph Stalin was a great man; few other men of the 20th century approach his stature. He was simple, calm and courageous. He seldom lost his poise; pondered his problems slowly, made his decisions clearly and firmly; never yielded to ostentation nor coyly refrained from holding his rightful place with dignity. He was the son of a serf but stood calmly before the great without hesitation or nerves. But also - and this was the highest proof of his greatness - he knew the common man, felt his problems, followed his fate.

Stalin was not a man of conventional learning; he was much more than that: he was a man who thought deeply, read understandingly and listened to wisdom, no matter whence it came. He was attacked and slandered as few men of power have been; yet he seldom lost his courtesy and balance; nor did he let attack drive him from his convictions nor induce him to surrender positions which he knew were correct. As one of the despised minorities of man, he first set Russia on the road to conquer race prejudice and make one nation out of its 140 groups without destroying their individuality.

His judgment of men was profound. He early saw through the flamboyance and exhibitionism of Trotsky, who fooled the world, and especially America. The whole ill-bred and insulting attitude of Liberals in the U.S. today began with our naive acceptance of Trotsky’s magnificent lying propaganda, which he carried around the world. Against it, Stalin stood like a rock and moved neither right nor left, as he continued to advance toward a real socialism instead of the sham Trotsky offered.

Three great decisions faced Stalin in power and he met them magnificently: first, the problem of the peasants, then the West European attack, and last the Second World War. The poor Russian peasant was the lowest victim of tsarism, capitalism and the Orthodox Church. He surrendered the Little White Father easily; he turned less readily but perceptibly from his ikons; but his kulaks clung tenaciously to capitalism and were near wrecking the revolution when Stalin risked a second revolution and drove out the rural bloodsuckers...

http://www.mltranslations.org/Miscellaneous/DuBoisJVS.htm


37 posted on 06/08/2012 8:52:12 PM PDT by Fred Nerks (')
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To: Fred Nerks
Now comes the boy-king whistling his esses, whispering to Medvedev of flexibility before fascism.

Anita Dunne swooned over Mao, and Frank Marshall Davis extolled the glorious Red Army.

Ayers not only did not repent of his little bomb episode, hiding behind women.

He also forecast eliminating twenty-five million who would resist the revolution.

Which we'll suffer if boy-king gets the greenlight.

The new trilateral: Putinburg, Beijing, the Red House.

Hurry, November.

Khrushchev denounced Stalin but was replaced by Brezhnev for pursuing detente with Kennedy.

Clinton broke with the Technicolor Catastrophe but is back--perhaps The Beard was looking at unemployment.


PRESIDENT GAGA HAS CASHED HER CHEQUE

41 posted on 06/08/2012 11:33:10 PM PDT by PhilDragoo (Hussein: Islamo-Commie from Kenya)
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