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In many online communities and game servers, it’s obvious that symbols like the swastika, Nazi flags, or praise of Hitler are completely banned — and rightly so. They represent hate, oppression, and genocide.
But what often gets ignored is that communist symbols — such as the Soviet flag, the hammer and sickle, or posters idolizing Stalin — also stand for a brutal history of violence, censorship, and suffering. Yet these are often allowed, as if their meaning were somehow less serious. That’s a clear double standard.
Under Stalin’s rule in the Soviet Union, millions of people died from famine, executions, and forced labor in the Gulag camps. Entire populations were deported, and anyone who dared to speak out risked imprisonment or death. The crimes committed under communist regimes in the Soviet Union, China, and Cambodia were just as horrific as those under Nazism — even if the ideology claimed to have different goals.
Despite this, the symbols of communism are often treated as “just history” or “aesthetic,” while Nazi symbols are immediately condemned. That is deeply inconsistent.
When someone shows a Soviet flag on a server, it’s often dismissed as harmless nostalgia. But if someone displayed a swastika in the same way, they’d be banned instantly. Both ideologies caused enormous human suffering, and neither deserves to be celebrated — not even indirectly.
If we truly care about human rights, equality, and respect, we should be consistent. Either we ban all symbols representing totalitarian ideologies — no matter their color — or we allow them only in educational and critical contexts, not as decoration or glorification.
Ignoring the crimes of communist regimes betrays the memory of their victims. The suffering under Stalin, Mao, and other dictators deserves the same recognition and respect as the victims of Nazism. Justice must apply to everyone.
But what often gets ignored is that communist symbols — such as the Soviet flag, the hammer and sickle, or posters idolizing Stalin — also stand for a brutal history of violence, censorship, and suffering. Yet these are often allowed, as if their meaning were somehow less serious. That’s a clear double standard.
Under Stalin’s rule in the Soviet Union, millions of people died from famine, executions, and forced labor in the Gulag camps. Entire populations were deported, and anyone who dared to speak out risked imprisonment or death. The crimes committed under communist regimes in the Soviet Union, China, and Cambodia were just as horrific as those under Nazism — even if the ideology claimed to have different goals.
Despite this, the symbols of communism are often treated as “just history” or “aesthetic,” while Nazi symbols are immediately condemned. That is deeply inconsistent.
When someone shows a Soviet flag on a server, it’s often dismissed as harmless nostalgia. But if someone displayed a swastika in the same way, they’d be banned instantly. Both ideologies caused enormous human suffering, and neither deserves to be celebrated — not even indirectly.
If we truly care about human rights, equality, and respect, we should be consistent. Either we ban all symbols representing totalitarian ideologies — no matter their color — or we allow them only in educational and critical contexts, not as decoration or glorification.
Ignoring the crimes of communist regimes betrays the memory of their victims. The suffering under Stalin, Mao, and other dictators deserves the same recognition and respect as the victims of Nazism. Justice must apply to everyone.






