ShellBack wrote:Это Вам сами большевики рассказали?
В Европейской России до революции грамотных была треть населения и этот процент быстро рос. Планировали охватить 100% детей начальным образованием к 1922 году.
Сказки про "бедность" - тоже 100 раз уже обсуждали.
Не знаю, что вы обсуждали, вот к примеру, что пишет wikipedia:
The economic causes of the Russian Revolution were based largely on the Czar's mis-management, compounded by World War I. Over fifteen million men joined the army, which left an insufficient number of workers in the factories and on the farms. The result was widespread shortages of food and materials. Factory workers had to endure terrible working conditions, including twelve to fourteen hour days and low wages. Many riots and strikes for better conditions and higher wages broke out. Although some factories agreed to the requests for higher wages, wartime inflation nullified the increase. There was one protest to which Nicholas responded with violence (see Causes: Political); in response, industrial workers went on strike and effectively paralyzed the railway and transportation networks. What few supplies were available could not be effectively transported. As goods became more and more scarce, prices skyrocketed. By 1917, famine threatened many of the larger cities. Nicholas's failure to solve his country's economic suffering and communism's promise to do just that comprised the core of the Revolution.
Такие вещи, как революция не возникают на пустом месте.