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  • #16
    Originally posted by notyoueither
    this new research that has been concluded by American and Russian historians



    A Scholar For Stalin
    By Rocco DiPippo
    FrontPageMagazine.com | March 16, 2005


    Although not a historian, Furr frequents the “Historians of American Communism”, a scholarly forum inhabited by experts on Communism like Robert Conquest, John Earl Haynes and Robert W. Cherny. Participants in the forum generally find Furr’s positions to be absurd...


    Of course they find his positions to be absurd; look at the participants, "experts on Communism"!

    People in Russia don't find these folks either entertaining or humorous, much less credible.

    Comment


    • #17
      Originally posted by Colon™
      The only thing that made Stalin better than Hitler is that he beat the crap out of Hitler.
      The only thing that made Stalin better than Hitler is that Hitler declared war on us.

      Both were evil, evil men. The fact that one was our ally and one was our enemy doesn't change that.
      I'm about to get aroused from watching the pokemon and that's awesome. - Pekka

      Comment


      • #18
        Funny thing is, Furr also visits H-Net Russia discussions, and the likes of J. Arch Getty don't find him to be absurd.

        Comment


        • #19
          Maybe he has Furr on ignore.
          DISCLAIMER: the author of the above written texts does not warrant or assume any legal liability or responsibility for any offence and insult; disrespect, arrogance and related forms of demeaning behaviour; discrimination based on race, gender, age, income class, body mass, living area, political voting-record, football fan-ship and musical preference; insensitivity towards material, emotional or spiritual distress; and attempted emotional or financial black-mailing, skirt-chasing or death-threats perceived by the reader of the said written texts.

          Comment


          • #20
            http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Front_Page_Magazine

            Comment


            • #21
              Originally posted by Propaganda
              Funny thing is, Furr also visits H-Net Russia discussions, and the likes of J. Arch Getty don't find him to be absurd.


              From: Mark Kramer
              List Editor: haynes@mail.h-net.msu.edu
              Editor's Subject: Politicizing Soviet Studies (Kramer)
              Author's Subject: Politicizing Soviet Studies (Kramer)
              Date Written: Sun, 12 Oct 2003 19:22:17 -0000
              Date Posted: Sun, 12 Oct 2003 19:22:17 -0000


              Having been out of the country for the past week or so, I returned to
              find, on this list about American Communism, an extended series of
              exchanges about Soviet historiography. It's certainly true that
              interpretations of history are bound to change (or at least to be
              challenged) over time as new evidence becomes available, as perspectives
              change, and as new analytical approaches become fashionable. This is
              generally a healthy process and should be welcomed, despite the occasional
              instances of charlatanism. The release of new evidence from the former
              Soviet archives can help us narrow the parameters of debate about key
              aspects of Soviet history, but it will never prevent new interpretations
              from arising.

              This doesn't mean, however, that "anything goes" and that there are no
              useful parameters for a scholarly discussion. There will, for example, be
              endless debates about the American Civil War, but someone (e.g., Lyndon
              LaRouche) who claimed that the Civil War did not occur at all would be in
              the realm of fantasy and would have nothing useful to contribute to the
              historiography. Similarly, Grover Furr's claims about specific aspects of
              Soviet history too often move into the realm of absurdity and reflect a
              lack of familiarity with the documentation that has emerged over the past
              10-12 years. For example, Furr asserts:

              Books arguing that, e.g., the USSR was not guilty of the
              "Katyn" massacres of Polish officials . . . simply
              are not, and CAN not be published [in the United States],
              because such conclusions are "beyond the pale." I suspect
              that a scholar who even seriously entertained such ideas
              could not get a job in the field of Soviet history in the
              US or UK.

              Furr is right that a "scholar" espousing this thesis would very likely not
              get a job in Soviet history and that books promoting this argument would
              face a hard time of getting published (at least by any respectable press),
              but that has nothing to do with a conspiracy to maintain "Cold War
              orthodoxy," as Furr implies. It has to do with the documentary evidence
              that has become available -- evidence that overwhelmingly bears out the
              circumstantial evidence that has long been available to show that the
              Polish officers were shot in March 1940 under Soviet occupation. In
              October 1992, many crucial documents about the Katyn Forest massacres were
              released from the Russian Presidential Archive. These include the March
              1940 memorandum from Lavrentii Beria outlining the groups of senior Polish
              officers who had been captured, with the recommendation that they all be
              shot. Across the front of the memorandum are four large, handwritten
              signatures approving Beria's recommendation -- those of Stalin,
              Voroshilov, Molotov, and Mikoyan. A notation in the margin indicates that
              Kalinin and Kaganovich also endorsed the executions. Among the other
              documents now available are memoranda indicating that subsequent leaders
              of the USSR, from Khrushchev through Gorbachev, were made aware of Soviet
              responsibility for the Katyn Forest massacre (and of Stalin's explicit
              approbation of the shootings) but decided to keep all the documentation
              under tight seal. It was not until after the Soviet Union collapsed that
              the documents finally were released.

              In light of the evidence that has emerged, no serious scholar can argue
              any longer that the Soviet occupying forces were not responsible for the
              mass executions in Katyn Forest. Nor can any serious scholar argue that
              this was done without Stalin's direct approval.

              Wacky arguments certainly can be published in this country (that's what
              fringe publications are for), but few people are going to pay them much
              heed.

              Mark Kramer
              Harvard University
              (\__/)
              (='.'=)
              (")_(") This is Bunny. Copy and paste bunny into your signature to help him gain world domination.

              Comment


              • #22

                Sent: Thursday, October 16, 2003 1:09 PM
                Subject: Re: Politicizing of Soviet Studies (Furr)


                Could Grover Furr supply us with any of the evidence that Mukhin has
                "unearthed" to demonstrate that the Soviets were not responsible for the
                Katyn Forest executions? And would Prof. Furr accord the same level of
                deference to the "evidence" that David Irving unearthed to demonstrate
                that there were no crematoria at Auschwitz or that most of the Jewish
                victims of the Holocaust actually died of disease? While historians
                always have to be open to new evidence, they are not required to abandon
                their moral values or common sense at the gates of graduate school.

                Any academic discipline has gatekeepers and standards- that, after all,
                is part of the meaning of the word discipline. No one is arguing that
                David Irving or Mukhin should be prevented from writing whatever they
                want. Only that they are cranks and frauds (in Irving's case, asserted
                by a British judge after a lengthy trial demonstrated his misuse of
                documents and violation of standards of historical methods). In a
                similar spirit, it would be very instructive to learn from Prof. Furr the
                details of how Stalin was "very determined to institute more democratic
                rule in the USSR, in the 30s and afterwards." By killing several
                million people? By developiong a multi-party system? Or freedom of the
                press? I understand the reaction of some members of this list that
                ideological debates should not intrude onto matters of scholarship. But
                it seems to me that these assertions raise very serious moral and
                ideological issues not terribly different from those raised by the David
                Irving case.

                Harvey Klehr
                (\__/)
                (='.'=)
                (")_(") This is Bunny. Copy and paste bunny into your signature to help him gain world domination.

                Comment


                • #23
                  notyoueither, everyone "knows" Stalin was a bad guy. It's not cool and it's not fun to take that side in a debate. Try defending Stalin, it's a better challenge. In any case, please don't clutter the thread with mindless copy pasting.

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Try defending Stalin


                    Why? Why don't you start a thread arguing that thalidimide was a useful drug for pregnant women if you enjoy crashing into parked cars so much.

                    And sorry that reality does not meet the needs of propoganda, but apparently not everybody 'knows'. There are still nuts like Furr and Prop running around.
                    (\__/)
                    (='.'=)
                    (")_(") This is Bunny. Copy and paste bunny into your signature to help him gain world domination.

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      This thread is great.
                      12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
                      Stadtluft Macht Frei
                      Killing it is the new killing it
                      Ultima Ratio Regum

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        I don't think anyone is stupid enough to believe Stalin was anything other then a butcher and totalitarian dictator. They don't call it Stalinism for nothing.
                        Try http://wordforge.net/index.php for discussion and debate.

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Originally posted by Oerdin
                          I don't think anyone is stupid enough to believe Stalin was anything other then a butcher and totalitarian dictator. They don't call it Stalinism for nothing.
                          Oerdin, meet Propaganda.
                          12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
                          Stadtluft Macht Frei
                          Killing it is the new killing it
                          Ultima Ratio Regum

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            This is Apolyton at its best. Sans Serb. Serb would make this complete.
                            Originally posted by Serb:Please, remind me, how exactly and when exactly, Russia bullied its neighbors?
                            Originally posted by Ted Striker:Go Serb !
                            Originally posted by Pekka:If it was possible to capture the essentials of Sepultura in a dildo, I'd attach it to a bicycle and ride it up your azzes.

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Originally posted by notyoueither




                              From: Mark Kramer
                              List Editor: haynes@mail.h-net.msu.edu
                              Editor's Subject: Politicizing Soviet Studies (Kramer)
                              Author's Subject: Politicizing Soviet Studies (Kramer)
                              Date Written: Sun, 12 Oct 2003 19:22:17 -0000
                              Date Posted: Sun, 12 Oct 2003 19:22:17 -0000


                              Having been out of the country for the past week or so, I returned to
                              find, on this list about American Communism, an extended series of
                              exchanges about Soviet historiography. It's certainly true that
                              interpretations of history are bound to change (or at least to be
                              challenged) over time as new evidence becomes available, as perspectives
                              change, and as new analytical approaches become fashionable. This is
                              generally a healthy process and should be welcomed, despite the occasional
                              instances of charlatanism. The release of new evidence from the former
                              Soviet archives can help us narrow the parameters of debate about key
                              aspects of Soviet history, but it will never prevent new interpretations
                              from arising.

                              This doesn't mean, however, that "anything goes" and that there are no
                              useful parameters for a scholarly discussion. There will, for example, be
                              endless debates about the American Civil War, but someone (e.g., Lyndon
                              LaRouche) who claimed that the Civil War did not occur at all would be in
                              the realm of fantasy and would have nothing useful to contribute to the
                              historiography. Similarly, Grover Furr's claims about specific aspects of
                              Soviet history too often move into the realm of absurdity and reflect a
                              lack of familiarity with the documentation that has emerged over the past
                              10-12 years. For example, Furr asserts:

                              Books arguing that, e.g., the USSR was not guilty of the
                              "Katyn" massacres of Polish officials . . . simply
                              are not, and CAN not be published [in the United States],
                              because such conclusions are "beyond the pale." I suspect
                              that a scholar who even seriously entertained such ideas
                              could not get a job in the field of Soviet history in the
                              US or UK.

                              Furr is right that a "scholar" espousing this thesis would very likely not
                              get a job in Soviet history and that books promoting this argument would
                              face a hard time of getting published (at least by any respectable press),
                              but that has nothing to do with a conspiracy to maintain "Cold War
                              orthodoxy," as Furr implies. It has to do with the documentary evidence
                              that has become available -- evidence that overwhelmingly bears out the
                              circumstantial evidence that has long been available to show that the
                              Polish officers were shot in March 1940 under Soviet occupation. In
                              October 1992, many crucial documents about the Katyn Forest massacres were
                              released from the Russian Presidential Archive. These include the March
                              1940 memorandum from Lavrentii Beria outlining the groups of senior Polish
                              officers who had been captured, with the recommendation that they all be
                              shot. Across the front of the memorandum are four large, handwritten
                              signatures approving Beria's recommendation -- those of Stalin,
                              Voroshilov, Molotov, and Mikoyan. A notation in the margin indicates that
                              Kalinin and Kaganovich also endorsed the executions. Among the other
                              documents now available are memoranda indicating that subsequent leaders
                              of the USSR, from Khrushchev through Gorbachev, were made aware of Soviet
                              responsibility for the Katyn Forest massacre (and of Stalin's explicit
                              approbation of the shootings) but decided to keep all the documentation
                              under tight seal. It was not until after the Soviet Union collapsed that
                              the documents finally were released.

                              In light of the evidence that has emerged, no serious scholar can argue
                              any longer that the Soviet occupying forces were not responsible for the
                              mass executions in Katyn Forest. Nor can any serious scholar argue that
                              this was done without Stalin's direct approval.

                              Wacky arguments certainly can be published in this country (that's what
                              fringe publications are for), but few people are going to pay them much
                              heed.

                              Mark Kramer
                              Harvard University
                              His reply:

                              From: "Grover Furr,Fastmail"
                              List Editor: Haynes@mail.h-net.msu.edu
                              Editor's Subject: Politicizing of Soviet Studies (Furr)
                              Author's Subject: Politicizing of Soviet Studies (Furr)
                              Date Written: Mon, 13 Oct 2003 20:55:40 -0000
                              Date Posted: Mon, 13 Oct 2003 20:55:40 -0000

                              In the light of Prof. Kramer's remarks about my posts -- "absurdity" is
                              a strong word -- I hope I may be permitted to reply.

                              > Similarly, Grover Furr's claims about specific aspects of
                              > Soviet history too often move into the realm of absurdity and reflect a
                              > lack of familiarity with the documentation that has emerged over the
                              past
                              > 10-12 years.

                              I would like to assure Kramer -- he refers to me by my last name alone,
                              so I hope I may be permitted to do likewise -- that his statements are
                              unfounded.

                              I wrote (in part):

                              > Books arguing that, e.g., the USSR was not guilty of the
                              > "Katyn" massacres of Polish officials . . . simply
                              > are not, and CAN not be published [in the United States],
                              > because such conclusions are "beyond the pale." I suspect
                              > that a scholar who even seriously entertained such ideas
                              > could not get a job in the field of Soviet history in the
                              > US or UK.

                              Kramer's reply refers to documents published in 1992, with which I'm
                              quite familiar.

                              Kramer then states:

                              > In light of the evidence that has emerged, no serious scholar can argue
                              > any longer that the Soviet occupying forces were not responsible for the
                              > mass executions in Katyn Forest. Nor can any serious scholar argue that
                              > this was done without Stalin's direct approval.

                              These statements of Kramer's illustrate my point, which was that a
                              Cold-War orthodoxy constrains -- I would say, cripples -- the study of
                              Soviet history in the West. Another example of this is Prof. Horowitz's
                              jibe at the work of Arch Getty the other day on this list.

                              It is simply not the case that anyone who disagrees with Kramer is not a
                              "serious scholar." This is precisely the language used by those who
                              continue to put ideological -- that is, politically-motivated --
                              limitations on the study of Soviet history, as I contended.

                              Serious questions have been raised as to the genuineness of a number of
                              documents suddenly discovered -- or, "discovered" -- during the last
                              years of the USSR, including those purporting to "document" the Katyn
                              executions.

                              Known forgeries, such as the Eremin letter, were published during the
                              Gorbachev period by Soviet journals as though they were not only new,
                              but genuine. It is not "wacky" -- to use a word inserted into this
                              discussion by Kramer -- to wonder whether others may have also been forged.

                              Kramer stated that my post "reflect(s) a lack of familiarity with the
                              documentation that has emerged over the past 10-12 years." I will not
                              insult him in a similar way by claiming that he is ignorant of the
                              arguments that, for example, the Katyn documents in question are forgeries.

                              But here, again, is my point. No possible argument is going to convince
                              Cold Warriors that their basic premises are false. Prof. Conquest, for
                              example, has proved impervious to twenty years of criticism of his
                              claims by professional historians in the mainstream journals, and to
                              outright rejection of his "research" on the Ukrainian famine.

                              The study of Soviet history remains highly politicized, and the
                              "consensus" that exists in the West is an enforced one, reflecting the
                              Cold-War, anti-communist origins and history of the field of Soviet
                              studies in the West.

                              It is neither "wacky" nor irresponsible to question this enforced,
                              politicized, Cold-War consensus. On the contrary: it is healthy to do
                              so. And it is _excellent_ that this consensus IS being questioned in
                              Russia -- where, after all, the stakes are much higher, since the
                              history of their own country is of far greater importance to Russians,
                              and the former Soviet peoples generally, than it is to others.

                              I myself do not care, one way or the other. If the Soviets shot all the
                              Polish officers at Katyn and the other two camps, I'd like to know it.
                              It would not change the way I look at the world, or challenge my values
                              -- scholarly, political, or otherwise. The problem is that those
                              scholars who expound the reigning orthodoxy, the "Cold-War consensus",
                              cannot honestly make this same claim.

                              Finally, I would like to make a plea for the language of mutual respect
                              on this list. Terms such as "absurd", "wacky", "fringe", etc., -- those
                              used by Kramer -- serve no useful analytical purpose. They are terms of
                              abuse only. Their continued use threatens to turn discussions on this
                              list into exchanges of insults and recrimination. I suggest that they be
                              banned.

                              Sincerely,

                              Grover Furr
                              Montclair SU
                              There are two schools of thought to the Stalin question. To question the prevalent paradigm, is it wrong? Twenty years ago, Robert Conquest was considered the source for history on "Communism" and today, he has been disproven, in both statistical analysis and theory (see: Steven Wheatcroft on Ukrainian famine, J Arch Getty on Soviet penal statistics), yet his outdated theories(just look how he calculated "excess deaths" using flawed population growth statistics) are still taken as fact. Why is that?

                              Fact is, new information has and is being researched all the time, and old information reexamined. Unfortunately, not all of the information is ever published, because it's too "scholarly". Makes for a boring read, doesn't it?

                              Comment


                              • #30
                                Originally posted by KrazyHorse
                                This thread is great.
                                Stick that thumb back in your mouth, Ebert.

                                Comment

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