Talk:Soviet Union/Archive 7
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Pending changes
This article is one of a small number (about 100) selected for the first week of the trial of the Wikipedia:Pending Changes system on the English language Wikipedia. All the articles listed at Wikipedia:Pending changes/Queue are being considered for level 1 pending changes protection.
The following request appears on that page:
| Many of the articles were selected semi-automatically from a list of indefinitely semi-protected articles. Please confirm that the protection level appears to be still warranted, and consider unprotecting instead, before applying pending changes protection to the article. |
However with only a few hours to go, comments have only been made on two of the pages.
Please update the Queue page as appropriate.
Note that I am not involved in this project any more than any other editor, just posting these notes since it is quite a big change, potentially.
Regards, Rich Farmbrough, 20:32, 15 June 2010 (UTC).
Ethnic groups II
Below is my proposal for the "Ethnic groups" section. Since in actuality the section deals with both ethnic groups and national policy in the USSR, I propose to rename it accordingly. I took the Colchicum's text (which is generally good) as a start point and did the following changes:
- Since the first para is devoted to the ethnic composition of the USSR, I moved all relevant material there. I added the mention of the Holocaust and removed all commentary on the causes of population transfers (which are more relevant to daughter articles).
- I removed the mention of Russification because switching from Roman to Cyrillic is hardly a Russification (especially for the nations that had no alphabet at all)
- I added more on the history of anti-Semitism in the USSR, because it was officially condemned in early USSR, almost officially promoted under late Stalin and de jure (although not de facto) abandoned later.
Ethnic groups and national policy
- "Ethnic Russians were the largest ethnic group overall, consistently making up just over half the population. They comprised 52.9% according to the 1926 census and 50,8% according to the 1989 census. The second largest ethnic group were Ukrainians (15.5% in 1989), followed by Uzbeks (5.8%), Belorussians (3.5%), Kazakhs (2.8%) and Tatars (2.3%). Large variation in ethnic composition existed across the constituent republics. The titular ethnicity the republic was named after almost always formed a majority there, the only exception after 1956 being the Kazakh SSR, where no single ethnicity did, as Russians and Kazakhs were two largest groups. Ethnic composition of some regions of the USSR was significantly affected by wars (e.g. extermination of Jews during World War II), famine of 1932-1933 (that hit Kazakh and Ukrainian peoples disproportionally hard) and WWII forced population transfer.
- Although Russian language was a lingua franca during whole Soviet history, no single official language existed there. Both Russian and local languages were official in all Soviet and autonomous republics (except Georgia and Armenia, where only local language was official). In contrast to the Russification policies of the late Russian Empire, the Soviet Union in the 1920s and early 1930s promoted the national self-consciousness of all the officially recognized non-Russian ethnic groups. Most of them were assigned their territories, provided with native-language education and press, and their own local Communist Party elites were promoted. Roman alphabet writing systems for their languages were developed wherever there had been none or where it had been previously based on Perso-Arabic script. In the 1930s these alphabets were switched to Cyrillic.
- Throughout the history of the Soviet Union, the government maintained information about the citizens' ethnicity on many administrative records and recorded it in their internal passports. Although anti-Semitism was officially suppressed in early USSR, after the World War II, the authorities switched to promoting anti-Semitism and discriminated the Jews; the policy was officially abandoned after Stalin's death, although undeclared state anti-Semitism persisted in late USSR. The Soviet Jews, heading for Israel and in many cases eventually for the United States, became the single largest emigration wave from the post-WWII Soviet Union after mass emigration of certain ethnic groups had been permitted in the 1970s. During the collapse of the Soviet Union ethnic nationalism gained popularity in the constituent republics. Ethnic tensions reawakened, in particular the conflict over Nagorno-Karabakh between Armenians and Azerbaijanis and the tensions between Georgians and Abkhazians. It was, among other things, the adoption of nationalism by the constituent republics' ethnic political elites to preserve and bolster their own positions that accelerated the disintegration of the Soviet Union in the early 1990s."
In connection to "Throughout the history of the Soviet Union, the government maintained information about the citizens' ethnicity on many administrative records and recorded it in their internal passports. " I propose to we-write the sentence to reflect a rather odd situation that, whereas the official Soviet policy was to convert all nations of the USSR into a single national-international entity, the information about ethnicity continued to be recorded at many levels. The present sentence does not disclose this contradiction, although it seems to deserve mentioning.--Paul Siebert (talk) 20:24, 20 June 2010 (UTC)
- Well, that seems to avoid some old controversial wordings, while still giving the important related links from the Colchicum's version. Sorry for being boring, but I still propose to specify about Russification in the _late_ Russian Empire. You know that strong Russification started only around the reign of Alexander II, and before that the ethnic policy towards at least certain parts of the Empire, like Finland, was fairly liberal. This is of very minor importance in this context, though, and I likely won't advance this position further, if there are objections. Regarding the problematic sentence in the end of your statement, I believe some link to Sovietization or better to the New Soviet man or Soviet nation may be valuable. Greyhood (talk) 21:03, 20 June 2010 (UTC)
- Ok, this is much more constructive now. Not bad in general, but the Russification paragraph (Although Russians weren't granted their own branch of the Communist Party and didn't enjoyed nominal devolution of power in their namesake republic unlike other major ethnic groups, the 1930s saw some limited Russification within the Russian RSFSR. The ethnic minorities' institutions (national districts and selsoviets, schools, newspapers) were confined to larger autonomies and abolished elsewhere. In order to protect border regions against foreign influence, diaspora ethnicities with strong cross-border ties were transferred to remote inner parts of the country) absolutely has to stay, as it is a major turning point in the Soviet ethnic policy, notable and supported by reliable sources. It is not about alphabets at all, it is very curious how you managed to misconstrue my text this way.
- There are inaccuracies in your version regarding the official languages, but it is a minor issue to be corrected. And some grammar issues (mostly articles). And probably it is better to replace the only exception after 1956 with the only exception after the abolition of the Karelo-Finnish SSR, otherwise it creates the wrong impression that in 1956 something relevant happened in the Kazakh SSR itself (I realize this is from my version). Strictly speaking, the famine took place from 1931 to 1934 rather than between 1932-1933, despite the title of the Wikipedia article. There are several other important instances of ethnic tensions to list here (Jeltoqsan, Osh).
- My sources will cover most of it, except for the significant impact of wars and the Holocaust on the ethnic composition of some regions (which is not entirely obvious, and IMO the wars are better left for the general demography subsection) and the suppression of anti-Semitism in the early Soviet Union. It is up to you to provide references for these.
- Regarding the last point, no, it is explicitely prohibited by policies to stress contradictions unless there is a consensus of reliable sources on that. And it is unlikely that it exists here. Colchicum (talk) 21:47, 20 June 2010 (UTC)
- Sorry, I probably took a wrong text. In the text I used there were no para starting from Although Russians weren't granted ... (or I deleted it by accident). Could you please insert this text into the proposed version (an fix inaccuracies) and post it below?--Paul Siebert (talk) 02:35, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
Preceded/succeeded
As I understand it, these two infobox sections are intended to show from (the territories of) which countries the state in question was founded, and into (territories of) which countries it was dissolved. If this is so, the Baltic states should be excluded from "preceding" as their territories did not participate in the creation of the Soviet Union. --Illythr (talk) 16:44, 24 May 2010 (UTC)
- Neither did the Baltic republics take part in its dissolution. By the time the Soviet Union officially disintegrated in December, it had already recognized their secession (on September 6). Are there any sources to justify the content of this infobox section at all? Do we really need it in this rather complex case? Colchicum (talk) 01:49, 22 June 2010 (UTC)
Main articles and sections
Colchicum has asked me to contribute to the discussions about this article. Currently I do not have much time to spend onwiki, but I will try my best I promise ...
One of the things that strikes me in this discussions so far as that we discuss new sources and new ideas for the sections that have main articles. E.g. Economy section has the article Economy of the Soviet Union, Demographics section has the article Demographics of the Soviet Union as the main. The sections that have main articles are suppose to be non-controversial summations of the material presented in the main articles. It is simply wrong to introduce new ideas and sources to the summary sections without putting them to the main articles first. I think it will be better to improve the main articles first then put the brief summary (up to the point of copying the ledes) to the summary sections. In the main articles we have much more space to include all relevant point of views and refer all necessary sources and we do not be as aphoristic as in the summary sections.
We also have to check that we cover the most of the relevant points of views. E.g. I do not think that we can state as a fact that the Soviet Union was the second largest economy. AFAIK it is very difficult to calculate GDP of a closed fixed-price economy where statistics is routinely kept confidential or even falsified. Many economists agree that Soviet GDP was greatly overestimated during the Cold War period. Alex Bakharev (talk) 01:41, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- Re: "I do not think that we can state as a fact that the Soviet Union was the second largest economy" Frankly, this statement looks really odd, because there is no way to adequately compare market economies with the state controlled economy that was based on state regulated prices and used non-convertible currency. However, since this statement is attributed to the concrete reliable source I see no problem with that (provided that some alternative mainstream estimates are provided).--Paul Siebert (talk) 02:42, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- Demographics of the Soviet Union doesn't contain information on the ethnic policies, so we have to agree on some version of the Ethnic groups and national policy section, that we discuss above, and add that version both into the Soviet Union and Demographics of the Soviet Union articles. Economy of the Soviet Union doesn't contain the detailed information on the sectors of economy, so we have to write the subsections I've proposed, and add them both into the Soviet Union and Economy of the Soviet Union. But when it comes to summary of the Soviet economy, I'd like the lede in the Economy of the Soviet Union better than the text proposed by Colchicum, though it also has a number of faults, and mostly lacks sources (supposedly, the related sources are in the main body of the economy article). Perhaps we can take that lede as a basis, add some sources from the article and some material and sources from the Colchicum's version. Greyhood (talk) 12:33, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- This is not about what anybody here likes or dislikes. This is about what sources agree on. Moreover, the lead of the Economy of the Soviet Union doesn't even try to explain how the ecomomy was operated. The stagnation which would consume the last years of the Soviet Union was caused by poor governance under Leonid Brezhnev... – it is hard to see what this is meant to say, but if this is meant to say that Brezhnev is to blame, it is POV, and a fairly fringe one. ...and inefficiencies within the planned economy – sure, but this is an extremely watered down phrasing, which doesn't explain anything substantial. From 1928 to 1991 the entire course of the economy was guided by a series of Five-Year Plans -- such were the official claims, of course, and as such they are notable, but they were incorrect and shouldn't be presented in this manner. Corruption and data fiddling became common practice among bureaucracy to report fulfilled targets and quotas thus entrenching the crisis – corruption had very little to do with that. At its peak, from Stalin to early Brezhnev, the Soviet economy grew at the same phase as – not sure what "phase" means, should it be "pace"? This is by far not a consensus position. ...and that of the Russian Empire, its predecessor state –the Russian Empire is not the predecessor state of the USSR in most senses and for many reasons that need not concern us here, and its growth was very uneven to serve as a basis for comparison (even more so as AFAIK there is no consensus on its estimates). The USSR's small service industry accounted for 0.82% of the country's GDP in 1990 while the industrial and agricultural sector contributed 21.9% and 20% respectively in 1991. – first and foremost, this is yet another controversial estimate, and neither 1990 nor 1991 or any other specific year is characteristic of the entire history of the Soviet Union or particularly important in this respect. The labor force totaled 152.3 million people – [when?], and it is not characteristic of the entire period again. Major industrial products include petroleum, steel, motor vehicles, aerospace, telecommunications, chemicals, electronics, food processing, lumber, mining, defense industry – [when?][citation needed], again, this doesn't make much sense. The USSR is not a currently existing country, so why the present tense? If this sentence belongs there at all (not sure if it does), it should be specified when this was the case. How major were the share of the listed products and how do we know that? Anyway, it is worded very awkwardly. Finally, the sources are few, mostly written by historians and politologists rather than by economists. The ubiquitous CIA factbook has been much criticized. The only major sources that are relatively recent and written by economists are Davies 1998 and Gregory 2004 (surprise!), but little information is actually referenced from them. Colchicum (talk) 16:13, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- Regarding likes or dislikes, I've already clarified my position. Your variant of the economy summary is far from encompassing the topic in the entirety of its aspects - sectors, main periods etc. With all of its faults, the lede in the Economy of the Soviet Union is a bit closer to fulfilling that goal. My suggestion is to remove or to clarify the problematic places that you have pointed out in that lede, restructure it so as to follow the historic chronology more strictly, and add some important sourced lines from your version. Later I'll try to perform this task. Greyhood (talk) 16:50, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- The lead in question is wrong and poorly referenced. Nothing substantial or significantly different from my version will remain if the problematic places are removed. Anyway, it is curious how you are going to perform the task if you haven't read the sources. I see no point in that. What belongs to the topic, and in what proportion, is decided by sources, not by Wikipedians. Oh well, I have already said that I am done with your arguments of that kind. My version is referenced, concise, value-neutral, and nobody has brought a single reliable source contradicting it so far. The essential history has been here from the very beginning just in case you haven't noticed. If you manage to propose a short and sourced paragraph on sectors, avoiding trivia and weasel words, that's ok with me, of course, if it is properly sourced. But it shouldn't be too long. A section seven times longer doesn't fit here, ask Ron2 about this. Any details (provided they are verifiable and NPOV) are welcome in the subarticle. Colchicum (talk) 18:07, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- Be so kind as to leave the question of what sources I've read to me, and stop the guessing. And don't overemphasize your method. No one can read all those endless tons and tons of literature related to the Soviet economy, choose exactly the most reliable sources and pick exactly the facts with the greatest weight from them. Don't be too idealistic - everything is decided not by sources, but by Wikipedians who use the sources. While I don't question so far the credibility of your sourced material and don't necessarily intend to bring anything that contradicts it, I just don't think that we can accept this rather carefully chosen fragment of a picture of the Soviet economy as a good substitute for the wider picture. Regarding the section seven times longer, it really does fit here. The subsections in economy section are needed as much as in the sections on demographics, history and politics. And culture, by the way. But let's focus on the economy summary now, not on the subsections. Greyhood (talk) 18:58, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- The lead in question is wrong and poorly referenced. Nothing substantial or significantly different from my version will remain if the problematic places are removed. Anyway, it is curious how you are going to perform the task if you haven't read the sources. I see no point in that. What belongs to the topic, and in what proportion, is decided by sources, not by Wikipedians. Oh well, I have already said that I am done with your arguments of that kind. My version is referenced, concise, value-neutral, and nobody has brought a single reliable source contradicting it so far. The essential history has been here from the very beginning just in case you haven't noticed. If you manage to propose a short and sourced paragraph on sectors, avoiding trivia and weasel words, that's ok with me, of course, if it is properly sourced. But it shouldn't be too long. A section seven times longer doesn't fit here, ask Ron2 about this. Any details (provided they are verifiable and NPOV) are welcome in the subarticle. Colchicum (talk) 18:07, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- Regarding likes or dislikes, I've already clarified my position. Your variant of the economy summary is far from encompassing the topic in the entirety of its aspects - sectors, main periods etc. With all of its faults, the lede in the Economy of the Soviet Union is a bit closer to fulfilling that goal. My suggestion is to remove or to clarify the problematic places that you have pointed out in that lede, restructure it so as to follow the historic chronology more strictly, and add some important sourced lines from your version. Later I'll try to perform this task. Greyhood (talk) 16:50, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- This is not about what anybody here likes or dislikes. This is about what sources agree on. Moreover, the lead of the Economy of the Soviet Union doesn't even try to explain how the ecomomy was operated. The stagnation which would consume the last years of the Soviet Union was caused by poor governance under Leonid Brezhnev... – it is hard to see what this is meant to say, but if this is meant to say that Brezhnev is to blame, it is POV, and a fairly fringe one. ...and inefficiencies within the planned economy – sure, but this is an extremely watered down phrasing, which doesn't explain anything substantial. From 1928 to 1991 the entire course of the economy was guided by a series of Five-Year Plans -- such were the official claims, of course, and as such they are notable, but they were incorrect and shouldn't be presented in this manner. Corruption and data fiddling became common practice among bureaucracy to report fulfilled targets and quotas thus entrenching the crisis – corruption had very little to do with that. At its peak, from Stalin to early Brezhnev, the Soviet economy grew at the same phase as – not sure what "phase" means, should it be "pace"? This is by far not a consensus position. ...and that of the Russian Empire, its predecessor state –the Russian Empire is not the predecessor state of the USSR in most senses and for many reasons that need not concern us here, and its growth was very uneven to serve as a basis for comparison (even more so as AFAIK there is no consensus on its estimates). The USSR's small service industry accounted for 0.82% of the country's GDP in 1990 while the industrial and agricultural sector contributed 21.9% and 20% respectively in 1991. – first and foremost, this is yet another controversial estimate, and neither 1990 nor 1991 or any other specific year is characteristic of the entire history of the Soviet Union or particularly important in this respect. The labor force totaled 152.3 million people – [when?], and it is not characteristic of the entire period again. Major industrial products include petroleum, steel, motor vehicles, aerospace, telecommunications, chemicals, electronics, food processing, lumber, mining, defense industry – [when?][citation needed], again, this doesn't make much sense. The USSR is not a currently existing country, so why the present tense? If this sentence belongs there at all (not sure if it does), it should be specified when this was the case. How major were the share of the listed products and how do we know that? Anyway, it is worded very awkwardly. Finally, the sources are few, mostly written by historians and politologists rather than by economists. The ubiquitous CIA factbook has been much criticized. The only major sources that are relatively recent and written by economists are Davies 1998 and Gregory 2004 (surprise!), but little information is actually referenced from them. Colchicum (talk) 16:13, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- Sorry, but if you are going to significantly modify others' texts you have to be familiar with their sources, this question is not to be left to your discretion. Other than that, of course you may use any sources as long as they comply with WP:RS, I merely insist that you summarize something rather than engage in original research regarding what the Soviet economy was. I guess it is not difficult to find a source which would discuss the sectoral composition of the Soviet economy and changes therein, that would be a good starting point. Colchicum (talk) 19:21, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- I don't intend to do any original research beyoud the scope of trivial facts. I don't intend to significantly change any lines from the text you so kindly have offered, but just take some lines out while accepting the others. In fact, Paul Siebert has proposed to make a specific subsection that deals with the peculiarities and shortcomings of the Soviet economy. I guess it could be named something like Economy organisation and shortcomings. If we follow this idea than much of your text may go into that subsection intact. Now, let's stop this branch of discussion until I present my version of the general economy summary. Likely I'll do that tomorrow.
- Also I propose that you heed to the last answer of Paul Siebert in the Ethnic groups II section of this talk page, so that we could continue the work on ethnicities section and finally post it into the article.
- And one more thing. I believe that despite our difference in attitudes to certain subjects we could still easily interact in polite and constructive way. If your quite special conduct regarding myself was caused by your suspicions of me being a sockpuppet of some banned user, than let's from now on forget this issue in case my short answer was enough for you (though I don't understand the point of your question - how could you have expected a different answer?). Otherwise, if it is of significance to you, let's further discuss the question on my talkpage or elsewhere, not here. Greyhood (talk) 19:59, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- I don't intend to do any original research beyoud the scope of trivial facts. I don't intend to significantly change any lines from the text you so kindly have offered, but just take some lines out while accepting the others. In fact, Paul Siebert has proposed to make a specific subsection that deals with the peculiarities and shortcomings of the Soviet economy. I guess it could be named something like Economy organisation and shortcomings. If we follow this idea than much of your text may go into that subsection intact. Now, let's stop this branch of discussion until I present my version of the general economy summary. Likely I'll do that tomorrow.
- Sorry, but if you are going to significantly modify others' texts you have to be familiar with their sources, this question is not to be left to your discretion. Other than that, of course you may use any sources as long as they comply with WP:RS, I merely insist that you summarize something rather than engage in original research regarding what the Soviet economy was. I guess it is not difficult to find a source which would discuss the sectoral composition of the Soviet economy and changes therein, that would be a good starting point. Colchicum (talk) 19:21, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- beyoud the scope of trivial facts
- As the topic is very large, it is impossible to decide what belongs here and what doesn't in the absence of sources. "An article should not give undue weight to any aspects of the subject but should strive to treat each aspect with a weight appropriate to its significance to the subject" (WP:UNDUE) Significance for that purpose is determined by sources rather than by Wikipedians. Furthermore, trivial facts aren't really needed here, try to avoid them to make your text more informative.
- a specific subsection that deals with the peculiarities and shortcomings of the Soviet economy.
- Well, no, shortcomings are in the eye of the beholder and are inseparable from successes, content forking would be a POV disaster. My piece is a general description of how the Soviet would-be-planned economy operated and how this changed over time (not only how it collapsed, despite what Paul Siebert seems to think). This is what is so special about the Soviet economy, and happens to be the most important and interesting subject, judging from the attention economic sources pay to it. Now, what the economy managed to produce, as well as the sectoral composition of its output, is just another matter, not a "general economy summary". Other than that, ok, go ahead with it, we'll see. And try to make it as brief as possible. A seven times larger section won't survive long here, and not because of me. Just like my piece doesn't delve into details and examples, yours should be a summary too. Otherwise you should really consider posting it to the Economy of the Soviet Union. It would be great if you start with sources, whatever they will be, and not with a preconceived list of what you think should be here. Colchicum (talk) 21:21, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- Oh, and don't forget that we have a much larger section for history, where indiscriminate stuff (space race, Chernobyl and so on) can be dumped much more easily, if it is notable enough. Colchicum (talk) 23:51, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- As I already pointed out, before explaining why Soviet economy collapsed it is necessary to explain what it was. IMO, the Greyhood's proposal is too wordy, however, it is a generally good description of the economy that existed (and was growing) for 70 years. Obviously, before starting to explain that the economy was state controlled it is necessary to say that (i) it was predominantly agrarian in the early USSR, (ii) then it underwent fast and violent industrialisation, that lead to formation of well developed heavy, chemical, aerospace industry, and (iii) made the USSR essentially a self-sufficient country (and a second large economy according to CIA, although other sources give much more modest estimates, which also should be presented). However, then it is absolutely necessary to tell that this economy was build on very unusual principles, and to briefly describe these principles. Finally, it should be explained that as a result of that the Soviet economy was not optimal, to describe huge disbalances and shortcomings and, finally, the mechanism that lead to its collapse. IMO, the first part can be better done by Greyhood whereas the Colchicum can perfectly write the second part. However, the texts should be short, so both Greyhood's and Colchicum's proposals should be considerably shrunken to leave only the most essential points.--Paul Siebert (talk) 17:17, 21 June 2010 (UTC)
- it is a generally good description of the economy that existed It is up to reliable sources. How many times are we going to argue this over and over again? It's in the policies, not negotiable.
- (i) it was predominantly agrarian in the early USSR Good point. I have no problem with that. And we should describe what happened to it later.
- (ii) then it underwent fast and violent industrialisation It has been here from the beginning.
- (iii) made the USSR essentially a self-sufficient country The USSR (just as well as the vast majority of other countries) was neither self-sufficient, nor even "essentially self-sufficient" (however evasively worded it is) during most of its history, being dependent on American grain, machinery and technology, Guinean bauxite and great many other things from abroad. And there was nothing wrong in that, if it worries you. The industrialization itself was dependent on Western technology, and the impact of industrialization on other sectors was far from contributing to autarky.
- (and a second large economy according to CIA, although other sources give much more modest estimates, which also should be presented). No, per Alex' reasoning. Colchicum (talk) 18:07, 21 June 2010 (UTC)