Both China and Russia feel easily under the power of communism, but they weirdly were not exactly the perfect fit for communism to take place. In fact communism was intend to be started in countries where industrialization was booming, but instead it started with Russia where economics was heavily based on agriculture. Because of this, Russia and China put a huge emphasis on industrialization after putting communism into place. This consisted of more factory work and the installment of backyard furnaces. Strangely enough communism was not too bad, but in order for it to work completely the whole world had to participate and the leader needed to step down from power. Moa (China’s leader) and Stalin (USSR’s leader) never stepped down from their position of power, so essentially Moa and Stalin were just dictators. After a while the two countries became extremely industrialized and were at the tail of the US in competition. This had a lot to do with the Cold War. Having Russia and Chi...
The collapse of the center refers to the collapse of western influence. European ideology was seriously brought into question after the Great Depression, the Holocaust, the two World Wars and the Cold War, all of which were brought up from a lack of capitalism working properly. For years leading up to these events European ideology was seen as the superior way to go upon living whether it were in terms of politics (democracy), economics (capitalism), religion (Christianity and Catholicism), or even just language (European native languages); however, without regulation the core structures easily collapsed. I feel that I was extremely shocked when it came to the collapse in capitalism during the Great Depression. The United States history books put a huge emphasis on how terrible and evil communism is as a structure, but do not care to lay out the limits that capitalism has. The introduction to loans and credit cards were used so immensely that the value in money heavily decrease...