AnarchoBolshevik

joined 5 years ago
[–] AnarchoBolshevik@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 1 day ago (1 children)

Yeah, when you make easily falsifiable claims like ‘memorials or to draw attention to the deeds, not to honor it’, it is pretty clear that you did not read a damn thing that I linked to you, proving that you don’t care about Fascism after all. Thanks for the confirmation.

Feel free to keep goofing around here but I’m done with you.

Do you not even understand how time works?

Most anticommunists don’t. There were anticommunists who thought that the G.P.U. still existed after 1934.

[–] AnarchoBolshevik@lemmygrad.ml 6 points 1 day ago (3 children)

I am giving you a very simple and very easy test so that you can demonstrate to everybody your reading comprehension and your ability to engage in conversation. You are neither required to divulge any personally identifiable information nor depart with any possessions. Now I am going to ask you for the third and final time: tell me what I wrote at the bottom of this comment.

Máo was particularly annoyed by the Eurasian Tree Sparrow (Passer montanus, 树麻雀) part of the diet of which was grain. Chinese scientists had calculated that each sparrow consumed 4.5kg of grain each year — and that for every million sparrows killed, there would be food for 60,000 people. Armed with these statistics, Máo launched the Great Sparrow Campaign to address the problem.

[…]

The campaign against the sparrows was finally terminated in late 1959 when the Academy of Sciences leaders highlighted the findings of scientists such as Zhu Xi and Zheng Zuoxin. Zhu and Zheng had autopsied the digestive systems of sparrows and found that three-quarters of the contents were harmful insects and only one-quarter was human food. This showed that sparrows were beneficial for humans.

On this advice from the Chinese Academy of Sciences, Máo declared a complete halt to the Great Sparrow Campaign, replacing sparrows with “bed bugs” in the “Four Pests” campaign. Suddenly sparrows were not just protected but the domestic population was supplemented by imports of sparrows from [Soviet] Russia!

Eventually, after several years of poor crop yields, the situation began to improve. The number of people who starved in the 1958–1961 famine is disputed — and it’s impossible to say how much of the disaster was caused by the extermination of sparrows — but there can be no doubt that this episode is a stark lesson about the unintended consequences of human interference into natural ecosystems.

(Source.)

[–] AnarchoBolshevik@lemmygrad.ml 8 points 1 day ago (5 children)

No, I’m giving you a very simple request: tell me what I wrote at the bottom of my comment. Copy the text and paste it in your next reply to me. You know how to copy and paste text, right?

[–] AnarchoBolshevik@lemmygrad.ml 8 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago) (7 children)

Okay, here’s something easy for you: what did I write at the bottom of my comment? Can you tell me what I wrote? Tell me what I wrote.

[–] AnarchoBolshevik@lemmygrad.ml 4 points 2 days ago (2 children)

do you think NK is a good country?

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