This has long been debunked. The studies that showed this were relying on food production minus exports. What they weren’t accounting for was spoilage, which was much more common in the Soviet Union. The US could also afford to produce more meat and fish than the USSR could. While it is true that meat especially has health issues associated with it, it was not some health guru that kept meat consumption low. It was simply that meat was scarce. As evidence, Russia has generally been increasing meat consumption over the years.
Thank you for asking the right question instead of just downvoting. I normally wouldn’t link to a Reddit post, but this AskHistorians comment is of decent quality. It in turn cites a document that then has good citations of its own.
Yes, but with a specific reason. It’s a particularly high quality post on a subreddit, AskHistorians, where only historians can answer. AskHistorians has a good track record of producing high quality answers. In turn, it links to a well sourced blog post.
This has long been debunked. The studies that showed this were relying on food production minus exports. What they weren’t accounting for was spoilage, which was much more common in the Soviet Union. The US could also afford to produce more meat and fish than the USSR could. While it is true that meat especially has health issues associated with it, it was not some health guru that kept meat consumption low. It was simply that meat was scarce. As evidence, Russia has generally been increasing meat consumption over the years.
Not that I don’t believe you, but do you have any quality sources that clearly align with your debunk explanation or other debunk explanations?
Thank you for asking the right question instead of just downvoting. I normally wouldn’t link to a Reddit post, but this AskHistorians comment is of decent quality. It in turn cites a document that then has good citations of its own.
reddit is your source?
Yes, but with a specific reason. It’s a particularly high quality post on a subreddit, AskHistorians, where only historians can answer. AskHistorians has a good track record of producing high quality answers. In turn, it links to a well sourced blog post.
Ask historians is full of r/historymeme users who write long paragraphs