I think, ladies and gentlemen, and I particularly address those of you who have a socialist outlook, that we should at least permit this socialist economy to prove its superiority. Let's allow it to show that it is advanced, that it is omnipotent, that it has defeated you, that it has overtaken you. Let us not interfere with it. Let us stop selling to it and giving it loans. If it's all that powerful, then let it stand on its own feet for ten or fifteen years. Then we will see what it looks like. I can tell you what it will look like. I am being quite serious now. When the Soviet economy will no longer be able to deal with everything, it will have to reduce its military preparations. It will have to abandon the useless space effort and it will have to feed and clothe its own people. And the system will be forced to relax.

Thus, all I ask of you is that as long as this Soviet economy is so proud, so flourishing, and yours is so rotten and so moribund—stop helping it. When has a cripple ever helped along an athlete?

Related Quotes

By apeculiar coincidence, the very day when I was giving my address in Washington, Mikhail Suslov was talking with your senators in the Kremlin. And he said, "In fact the significance of our trade is more political than economic. We can get along without your trade." That is a lie. The whole existence of our slaveowners from beginning to end relies on Western economic assistance....The Soviet economy has an extremely low level of efficiency. What is done here by a few people, by a few machines, in our country takes tremendous crowds of workers and enormous amounts of material. Therefore, the Soviet economy cannot deal with every problem at once: war, space (which is part of the war effort), heavy industry, light industry, and at the same time feed and clothe its own population. The forces of the entire Soviet economy are concentrated on war, where you don't help them. But everything lacking, everything needed to fill the gaps, everything necessary to free the people, or for other types of industry, they get from you. So indirectly you are helping their military preparations. You are helping the Soviet police state.
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
communismefficiencypolice-state
- Не иначе как двенадцать, - объявил и Шухов. - Солнышко на перевале уже.
- Если на перевале, - отозвался кавторанг, - так значит не двенадцать, а час.
- Это почему ж? - поразился Шухов. - Всем дедам известно: всего выше солнце в обед стоит.
- То - дедам! - отрубил кавторанг. - А с тех пор декрет был, и солнце выше всего в час стоит.
- Чей же эт декрет?
- Советской власти!
Вышел кавторанг с носилками, да Шухов бы и спорить не стал. Неуж и солнце ихим декретам подчиняется? ("Один день Ивана Денисовича", А. Солженицын)
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn
sovietсоветский