Grantanow
M0nica
Grantanow
Tyrannical rules usually preferred to be feared but some loved.
Stalin was feared and loved: he was mourned by many Russians when he died despite being utterly ruthless and a mass murderer.
But I doubt Stalin gave a toss whether people liked him or not He probably thought those who loved him were gullible fools.
What he enjoyed was everybody being afraid of him and being able, quite literally to have the power of life or death over everyone in the country, being able to condemn one or many to death or the gulag depending on how he felt when he woke up in the morning.
I don't disagree but there are plenty of older Russians who would like to turn the clock back to the days when they had pensions and everyone had a job. I recall the department stores lGUM on Red Square where every purchase needed about 5 staff to complete it. The Yeltsin transition to a capitalist economy was traumatic for many: doctors had to work as taxi drivers and old ladies sold their possessions at the roadside.
But in the day of full 'employment' and pensios the USSR was actually in the position the UK is in now. Despite all these pensions and jobs, the Russian economy was failing. It had fallen massively behind other countries, it could not afford the pensions or employment and the transition to a capitalist economy was to try to remedy the failings of the command economy.