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An Analysis Of Gregory Stanton's Eight Stages Of The Ukraine Genocide

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American politician, Tim Walz, said, “You have to understand what caused genocide to happen. Or it will happen again”(Tim). The Ukraine genocide went through almost all of the stages and not many people realized that. The Ukraine Genocide is considered a genocide because it meets three of the five parts of the United Nations definitions of genocide, and it went through all of Gregory Stanton’s eight stages of genocide
According to the Chambers Dictionary, “genocide is the deliberate extermination of racial, or ethnic group”(Definition). For example, if people were trying to kill all of the black people it would be considered a genocide because they are an ethnic group. Genocide always has mass killings. The 1948(Genocide1932) genocide convention says that countries who signed …show more content…

He was pushing for collectivization. He was breaking up the Kulaks, which meant he was making their life harder than it was. In 1928(CITE) he raised taxes for Kulaks. The government was demanding impossible quotas of grain from the Kulaks. Stalin raised grain production by forty-four percent.
Ninety present(CITE) of the people didn’t agree with Stalin’s ideas. He was crushing people’s free spirit. Stalin would kill peasants because he thought they were a threat to his ideas and that they were leaders of a revolt. The USSR was taking valuable things from families. Food storages were hunted down and destroyed. If you were caught stealing, you were starved or killed.
In the actual genocide Stalin’s plan was to deliberately stave the nation. In 1928(CITE) communism failed to spread. He transformed the USSR from a rural society to an industrial power. Not only Stalin was killing them, a drought killed many because of starvation. This genocide was considered one of the world’s most heinous acts of genocide. Stalin’s act was to levy crippling quotas. Soviets blamed Ukrainians and denied that it ever

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