View gallery anti-Soviet posters of the past.
Those of us who grew up in the Soviet Union, have seen so much anti-bourgeois agitation that she still dream at night, and enuresis provokes. But the world of the West actually we are not much behind and the fruit of their own propaganda masterpieces of the art, trash, nonsense, slander and half-truths. The posters that collected and shown below are owned by different countries and eras, but they share one thing — an incurable hatred of communism, socialism and the Soviet world order.
The capitalists saw the threat in socialism long before the October socialist revolution. Poster “Socialism is strangling the country,” drawn by request of the British of the conservative party in 1909.
The white poster in 1918.
“Bolshevism brings war, unemployment and famine”. German poster, 1918.
So the Germans saw the future under the rule of the Bolsheviks, 1919.
Cover of the French book “What is Bolshevism Europe”, 1935.
The Norwegian anti-Communist poster, inquiring: “would you live in his shadow?”
“Bolshevism without a mask”, a poster from the Second world war.
“So it will be tomorrow”, publishing propaganda comic book 1947.
Printed in the Netherlands in the years of occupation, poster, urging to repel the Communist civilization of barbarians, 40 years.
“Look under the mask! Communism is death”, the 50-ies.
The “Caucasian dance”, poster, 1951.
“Protect us!” — election poster of the German Christian democratic party.
Is a manufacturer of towels in which discomfort in the production is compared with the Communist regime.
Raising funds to Finance the anti-Soviet propaganda radio station.
“Stalin-the peacemaker,” a cartoon from the French anti-Communists, 1951.
Poster Bohn Aluminum & Brass Corporation, manipulative anti-Communist values of America, 1952.
“If the Russians win, many Americans were sterilized. And our women would be helpless beneath the boots of Russian Asians”, 1953.
Canadian aircraft manufacturers call for believers to unite their hearts in the fight against the Communist threat, 1955.
Children’s book with the Catholic anti-Communist comic books on the topic, 1960.
Advertising of Freedom Foundation, appealing to the alleged fact that Americans think too little about the horrors and threats of communism, 1961.
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