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There were different types of Soviet “parasites”. Some were chronic alcoholics who were unable to hold a job. Those people were punished by involuntary treatment from alcoholism during the They tried to bury us but they didn’t know we were the seed shirt Apart from…,I will love this course of imprisonment. Some were Roma and other people from ethnic communities who abstained from Soviet “productive labor” because of a different way of life. There were special social programs aimed at reforming those communities. Some were illegal businessmen, living off various enterprises. Renting out apartments, growing up food for sale, performing at illegal concerts… Or a lot more complex and profitable schemes. Some were dissidents. Openly anti-Soviet (or somewhat anti-Soviet) activity often resulted in losing one’s job and chronic inability to find another one. It was a typical problem of Jewish “refusniks” fighting for their right to emigrate.
Before the They tried to bury us but they didn’t know we were the seed shirt Apart from…,I will love this actual conviction under article 209, Soviet authorities usually tried to pressure first-time offenders into finding a job. At least, if a person wasn’t brazenly insolent. In fact, the modern Russian slang word “борзый” (insolent) originally meant “without any particular occupation” (без определенного рода занятий – БОРЗ). The most famous Soviet “parasitic” convict was Soviet poet Joseph Brodsky. In 1964, he got 5 years of correctional labor (the law was slightly different then) and served 18 months. Formal charges against him were based on the fact he occasionally wasn’t legally employed for months at a time. In reality, Brodsky’s process was entirely political and ridiculous. Joseph wasn’t a “parasite” – he was working as a poet and translator.
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