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So did Stalin. He tried to "defend" the "great" communism.I would agree with Marcel but also agree with Chris. Both regimes were awful and given time the Nazi's perhaps would of equalled Stalin's 'record'. I would give Stalin the nod because he did it knowingly whilst the Nazi's did it clinically for what they thought was the greater good.
You also I think have to mention the Japanese during the war as well, particularly their efforts in China between 1931 and 1945.
This is not totally true. Many non-Jewish and non-gipsy civilians died by Nazi terror. But the Nazi's were smart enough to focus the public on a few groups to get their support.IIRC Stalin and Hitler seemed to target specific groups
I knew a little about Pol Pot, but not the Khmer Rouge. When going on Wiki, I found this. It says their genocide victims. I mean, some are just kids for Christs sake!
".. Hitler did more in less time the Stalin. He just hadn't the time to catch up with Stalin..."
Sorry, Marcel but you're wrong. By June 22, 1942, Stalin had done more than Hitler. The purges, the crushing of nationalism in the various "republics" and the starvation of the Ukrainians.
Here is the thing you have to remember. Hitler and his Nazi goons actually thought they were doing the right thing. They thought they were doing good for Germany and Europe (this in no way justifies what they did). Stalin and the Commies on the other hand knew that what they were doing was evil and brutal. They did it because they did not care at all about any form of human life.
Like I said, not trying to justify what the Nazi's did, they were evil and brutal, but Stalin may have been quite a bit worse.
Germany was NOT a backward country stuck in the late middle ages - just a couple of decades past serfdom/slavery - when the Romanov Crown was overthrown in 1917 and the Communists took over. Germany in 1917 was the pinnacle of technology, philosophy and culture - and was about to slip into complete chaos within a year as a consequence of losing a ghastly world war on an unthinkable scale. What would follow was a brutal struggle to define and regain Germany.
In Russia - the Communist program and Stalin - were seen however brutal they were - as the path to modernity and the Future .
In Germany - the Nazi program and Hitler - were seen as a defensive breastworks to stop Communism and any force that would adulterate or weaken the potenency of the German culture and People.
In Russia the brutality was driven by vast ambition to control and BECOME.
In Germany the brutality was driven by the neurosis of having BECOME, collapsed and the struggled to recover.
Russia was a third world country. Still is - were it not for the BOMB. Russia's culture of brutality/corruption today mirrors my description of Germany (above) after 1918. Putin's mission is to restore Russia's greatness.
MM
I read up on Moa and had no idea that he was responsible for the killing of 30 million+ people.
There are some other honorable mentions:
Idi Amin (Uganda: 1971-80)
Ion Antonescu (Romania: 1940-44)
Ataturk (Turkey: 1920-38 )
Francisco Franco (Spain: 1939-75)
Gheoghe Gheorghiu-Dej (Romania: 1945-65)
Yakubu Gowon (Nigeria: 1966-76)
Radovan Karadzic (Serbian Bosnia: 1991-96)
Babrac Kemal (Afghanistan: 1979-87)
Le Duan (Vietnam: 1976-86)
Haile Mengistu (Ethiopia: 1974-91)
Benito Mussolini (Italy: 1922-43)
Ante Pavelic (Croatia: 1941-45)
Antonio de Salazar (Portugal: 1932-68 )
Hadji Suharto (Indonesia: 1967-97)
Tito (Yugoslavia: 1945-80)