@giadinhkiwi2: Ngày nào mà không thay ga nệm là em chịu không nồi luôn mấy bà ơi😬 Dạo này e bị nghiện chất phi lụa thái này nè , nay tậu thêm bộ mới nữa mà zá 🌰 lắm luôn á🥰😍 #changagoidem #bedding #changaluathai #luathai #luathai3mon

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Friday 30 January 2026 15:38:51 GMT
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.phan_2
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đệm mình dầy gần 20 cm
2026-05-08 10:32:43
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giadinhkiwi2
Shop nhà Kiwi 🥝 :
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2026-01-30 17:21:50
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What do you think of Stalin? Sure we all know he was evil, but he may have been the man for the moment during WWII. But what about before? Did he know how to run an economy? No. Stalin did not “run” an economy so much as terrorize one into motion. His system was not genius planning. It was brute force, paranoia, fake numbers, and mass suffering dressed up as modernization. Under the Five Year Plans, Moscow dictated everything. How much steel. How much coal. How many tractors. How much grain. Every factory and farm received quotas from above, and missing them was not treated like a business failure. It could be treated like sabotage. So managers lied. Local officials lied. Regional bosses lied. By the time reports reached Stalin, the Soviet economy looked like it was smashing every target on earth. And Stalin rewarded the lie by demanding even more. That is where the insanity starts. If a nail factory was judged by weight, it made giant useless nails. If it was judged by quantity, it made tiny useless nails. Factories rushed unfinished tractors out the door to hit deadlines. Warehouses filled with goods nobody could use while ordinary people stood in lines for basics. The human cost was monstrous. Forced collectivization ripped peasants off their land, seized grain from villages, and helped trigger catastrophic famine. Millions died while the state kept chasing industrial targets and exporting grain. Economists, engineers, and officials who told the truth risked being purged, imprisoned, or shot. The brutal irony is that this nightmare did build heavy industry. By the late 1930s, the USSR could produce tanks, aircraft, artillery, and ammunition at enormous scale. But that was not proof Stalin understood prosperity. It proved he understood coercion. When Germany invaded in 1941, that industrial base helped the Soviet Union survive. But it was built like a prison, not a country. Stalin’s economy did not make people rich. It made the state powerful, and it made everyone else afraid. #stalin #ussr #historyskit
What do you think of Stalin? Sure we all know he was evil, but he may have been the man for the moment during WWII. But what about before? Did he know how to run an economy? No. Stalin did not “run” an economy so much as terrorize one into motion. His system was not genius planning. It was brute force, paranoia, fake numbers, and mass suffering dressed up as modernization. Under the Five Year Plans, Moscow dictated everything. How much steel. How much coal. How many tractors. How much grain. Every factory and farm received quotas from above, and missing them was not treated like a business failure. It could be treated like sabotage. So managers lied. Local officials lied. Regional bosses lied. By the time reports reached Stalin, the Soviet economy looked like it was smashing every target on earth. And Stalin rewarded the lie by demanding even more. That is where the insanity starts. If a nail factory was judged by weight, it made giant useless nails. If it was judged by quantity, it made tiny useless nails. Factories rushed unfinished tractors out the door to hit deadlines. Warehouses filled with goods nobody could use while ordinary people stood in lines for basics. The human cost was monstrous. Forced collectivization ripped peasants off their land, seized grain from villages, and helped trigger catastrophic famine. Millions died while the state kept chasing industrial targets and exporting grain. Economists, engineers, and officials who told the truth risked being purged, imprisoned, or shot. The brutal irony is that this nightmare did build heavy industry. By the late 1930s, the USSR could produce tanks, aircraft, artillery, and ammunition at enormous scale. But that was not proof Stalin understood prosperity. It proved he understood coercion. When Germany invaded in 1941, that industrial base helped the Soviet Union survive. But it was built like a prison, not a country. Stalin’s economy did not make people rich. It made the state powerful, and it made everyone else afraid. #stalin #ussr #historyskit

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