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  • *[https://www.eastview.com/cdpsp/ '''''Current Digest of the Post-Soviet Press'''''] ...al policy, domestic affairs and social issues from previously out of reach Soviet/Russian news of 1949 to 1980.
    2 KB (222 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020

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  • *[https://www.eastview.com/cdpsp/ '''''Current Digest of the Post-Soviet Press'''''] ...al policy, domestic affairs and social issues from previously out of reach Soviet/Russian news of 1949 to 1980.
    2 KB (222 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...limited damage from Allied air raids during the war. Erfurt fell in the [[Soviet Zone]] of occupation, which would later become [[German Democratic Republic
    3 KB (411 words) - 21:42, 30 November 2008
  • ...on to the rise and fall of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_Union Soviet Union].
    867 bytes (119 words) - 00:11, 13 December 2020
  • ...celestial]] [[body]] on which humans have made a manned landing. While the Soviet Union's [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luna_programme Luna programme] was t ...in 1972, the Moon has been visited only by unmanned spacecraft, notably by Soviet [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lunokhod Lunokhod] rovers. Since 2004, Japan
    3 KB (494 words) - 01:27, 13 December 2020
  • ...ould be the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_collapse collapse of the Soviet Union]. The abrupt disappearance of a global super-power in the [[course]] ...Czars] and the society of the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_Union Soviet Union], for example). Frequently the [[phenomenon]] is also a [[process]] o
    4 KB (579 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...a proxy battle in the [[Cold War]] between the [[United States]] and the [[Soviet Union]]. The term has also been used to describe both the events preceding
    2 KB (257 words) - 01:22, 13 December 2020
  • ...(the largest resistance movement in WWII),[1][2] the Polish Home Army, the Soviet partisans, the French Forces of the Interior, the Italian CLN, the Norwegia ...o indicate that they were pro-Nazi. During or after the war, similar "anti-Soviet" resistance rose up in places like Romania, Poland, and western Ukraine. Wh
    7 KB (1,041 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...e latter two ceasing to exist as autonomous countries.The revolutionized [[Soviet Union]] emerged from the Russian Empire, while the map of central Europe wa
    2 KB (286 words) - 02:41, 13 December 2020
  • ...rica. There remain a large number of state funded orphanages in the former Soviet Bloc but many of them are slowly being phased out in favour of direct suppo
    2 KB (338 words) - 01:24, 13 December 2020
  • ..., [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sputnik_1 Sputnik 1], was launched by the Soviet Union in 1957. By 2010 thousands of satellites have been launched into orbi
    3 KB (370 words) - 02:03, 13 December 2020
  • ...of Bailey's [[statements]] on [[nationalism]], [[American]] isolationism, Soviet [[totalitarianism]], [[Fascism]], [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zionism Zi
    3 KB (418 words) - 23:44, 12 December 2020
  • ...planes during the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_War Cold War] by the Soviet Union had been unsuccessful. Designers turned to develop a particular shape
    3 KB (451 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...lists. Internationalism is not [[necessarily]] anti-nationalism, as in the Soviet Union and the People's Republic of China.
    3 KB (460 words) - 01:20, 13 December 2020
  • The Soviet Union and the United States emerged from the war as the world's 'superpower
    3 KB (417 words) - 02:41, 13 December 2020
  • ...rs, peace officers or civic/civil guards. Russian police and police of the Soviet-era Eastern Europe are (or were) called [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mili
    3 KB (439 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...3), used the term in connection with the [[collectivist]] societies of the Soviet Union and National Socialist Germany. ...ninism] was much the most successful type of totalitarianism, as proved by Soviet industrial [[growth]] and the Red Army's role in defeating Germany. Only th
    21 KB (3,000 words) - 02:41, 13 December 2020
  • ...weapons—are (chronologically by date of first test) the United States, the Soviet Union (succeeded as a nuclear power by Russia), the United Kingdom, France,
    3 KB (494 words) - 23:41, 12 December 2020
  • ...and [[doctrine]] of the former [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soviet_Union Soviet Union].
    3 KB (491 words) - 00:09, 13 December 2020
  • ...tuality]]" has gained some acceptance, with this position at variance with Soviet film-maker [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dziga_Vertov Dziga Vertov]'s prov
    3 KB (499 words) - 01:06, 13 December 2020
  • ...s that of Independent States, founded in 1991 and including all the former Soviet republics except the Baltic states. It remains to be seen how [[dominated]]
    3 KB (478 words) - 23:40, 12 December 2020
  • ...the entrance of America in the war on the side of England, France and the Soviet Union, we saw our first hope of salvation against Himmler and his monsters.
    3 KB (489 words) - 18:47, 5 May 2014
  • ...icine, 1939), from accepting their Nobel Prizes, and the government of the Soviet Union pressured [[Boris Pasternak]] (Literature, 1958) to decline his award
    5 KB (682 words) - 01:24, 13 December 2020
  • ...ld War II]]. American soldiers and supplies had been assisting British and Soviet operations for almost a year by this point, and the United States had thus
    4 KB (650 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...political usage was temporarily informed by [[mutual]] antagonism with the Soviet bloc during the [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_War Cold War] in the mi
    5 KB (787 words) - 01:28, 13 December 2020
  • ...ASIN B000E4QXIK.) as well as more orthodox espionage efforts within early Soviet Russia headed by Captain George Hill. ...spionage Section, R5, was headed for two years by an agent working for the Soviet Union, Kim Philby. Although Philby's damage was mitigated for several years
    21 KB (3,201 words) - 23:43, 12 December 2020
  • ...re. Every call for productivity in the conditions chosen by capitalist and Soviet economy is a call to slavery. ...ness which is sold today on the installment plan, the bourgeoisie (and its Soviet equivalent) pursue man’s destruction outside the workshop. Tomorrow they
    10 KB (1,659 words) - 22:39, 12 December 2020
  • ...lutions of 1989, a total collapse of European communist regimes outside of Soviet Union, which dissolved itself two years later, in 1991. Some communist regi ===Lenin and the birth of the Soviet Union===
    36 KB (5,353 words) - 23:45, 12 December 2020
  • ...party did in the service of their respective ideologies--for example, the Soviet intervention into the Hungarian revolution, or the United States interventi ...European cultural area took over in the twentieth century (United States, Soviet Union).
    11 KB (1,746 words) - 00:15, 13 December 2020
  • ...anti-globalist." This is simply [[vulgar]] propaganda, like the term "anti-Soviet" used by the most disgusting commissars to refer to [[dissidents]]. It is n
    7 KB (935 words) - 00:03, 13 December 2020
  • ...1962 by [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yuri_Denisyuk Yuri Denisyuk] in the Soviet Union[2] and by Emmett Leith and Juris Upatnieks at University of Michigan,
    6 KB (933 words) - 23:56, 12 December 2020
  • ...unding includes efforts to promote non-violent democratization in the post-Soviet states. These efforts, mostly in Central and Eastern Europe, occur primaril Opening the Soviet System (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 1990) ISBN 0-297-82155-9 (paperback: Perseus
    14 KB (2,116 words) - 23:56, 12 December 2020
  • ...nce true hell on Earth and be destroyed mostly by England, America and the Soviet Union.
    6 KB (998 words) - 23:38, 12 December 2020
  • ...moved to England, where he became a translator for the [[BBC]] monitoring Soviet broadcasts during the Cold War. He retired early, to Reading near the [[Riv
    5 KB (839 words) - 16:36, 18 October 2009
  • ...pital within the framework of a market economy. Socialists inspired by the Soviet model of economic development have advocated the creation of centrally plan ...ously led the [[October Revolution]]. On 25 October 1917, at the Petrograd Soviet, Lenin declared "Long live the world socialist revolution!"
    43 KB (6,246 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...e actress Ellen Burstyn; the Vorpal Gallery, San Francisco; the Center for Soviet American Dialogue, Seattle, and Banana Republic Clothing Stores. He was a s
    6 KB (970 words) - 00:53, 13 December 2020
  • ...ttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_War Cold War] and the dissolution of the Soviet Union left the United States as the sole superpower.
    11 KB (1,691 words) - 02:44, 13 December 2020
  • ...mith 2005, McMoneagle 2002) and Rosemary Smith's [14] location of a downed Soviet bomber in Africa (which former President Carter later referred to in speech
    21 KB (3,163 words) - 02:32, 13 December 2020
  • ...the failure of revolutionary sentiment in [[1968]], the collapse of the [[Soviet Union]] and its client states, continuing inequities in global development
    9 KB (1,278 words) - 23:41, 12 December 2020
  • ...r was still in place. Likewise there are those who [[sympathize]] with the soviet way of governing. Yet these countries have stepped forward toward the furth
    20 KB (3,183 words) - 23:19, 12 December 2020
  • ...holarship.org/editions/view?docId=ft7b69p12h&brand=eschol Afghanistan: The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan Response, 1979–1982]''. Berkeley: University of C
    11 KB (1,598 words) - 23:56, 12 December 2020
  • ....net/users/Paul.Treanor/golden.rule.html] How would you feel, if a million Soviet troops stormed your Reich Capital? It could also be used by a seducer to su #How would you feel, if a million Soviet troops stormed your Reich Capital?
    21 KB (3,385 words) - 10:08, 2 October 2022
  • ...the early 1930s in, respectively, Mao Tse Tung’s China and Joseph Stalin’s Soviet Union, as a few examples.
    14 KB (2,564 words) - 14:25, 23 January 2021
  • ...]], and [[self-deception]]. Due to the co-option of intellectuals by the [[Soviet Union]], the [[Third Reich]] and by other regimes and ideologies, the quest
    13 KB (1,831 words) - 00:14, 13 December 2020
  • ...rpretation of Marx; [[Cornelius Castoriadis]], for instance, described the Soviet Union's system as a form of "bureaucratic capitalism" rather than true comm
    31 KB (4,578 words) - 02:37, 13 December 2020
  • ...Wall fell within a relative few years—in pretty short time—communism, the Soviet Union dissipated, so it seems to me that this is an example of how this uni
    17 KB (2,969 words) - 16:59, 27 December 2010
  • ...e coercive. Abortion by "fit" women was illegal in Nazi Germany and in the Soviet Union during [[Stalin]]'s reign.
    15 KB (2,125 words) - 00:34, 13 December 2020
  • ...a-Kyrgyz Autonomous Oblast|Kara-Kirghiz]] in what would later become the [[Soviet Union]].
    15 KB (2,082 words) - 01:21, 13 December 2020
  • ...tm Cybernetics and Information Theory in the United States, France and the Soviet Union]
    17 KB (2,527 words) - 23:43, 12 December 2020
  • ...an buys ideology and gets as a free gift a bottle of vodka. Paradoxically, Soviet and capitalist regimes are taking a common path, the first thanks to their
    17 KB (2,930 words) - 22:40, 12 December 2020
  • ...''Times Literary Supplement'' 5 June 329/4: 'The "theological" approach to Soviet Marxism...proves in the long run unsatisfactory.'</ref>
    23 KB (3,401 words) - 02:44, 13 December 2020

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