“I don’t see any retreat from the collectivization in the mid-30s. In fact, mid-1930s is the time of the Stalin’s regime going into the full-paranoia mode and tightening the screws.”
The ambiguous wording doesn’t erase the fact that this is your rejection of the assertion you later accepted.
Actually, the relevant possibility is that you know more than me, “some idea” is from the same ballpark as “know enough to get yourself in trouble” :-P
I avoid any internal framing of my knowledge as being in competition with somebody else’s, because then I might feel the need to try to “win”, which is pretty much the only way to lose.
The ambiguous wording doesn’t erase the fact that this is your rejection of the assertion you later accepted.
Huh? There is no ambiguity.
I am saying (emphasis mine): “”I don’t see any retreat from the collectivization in the mid-30s”. Note: “in”. What you are implying I said is that I don’t see any retreat from the collectivization after the mid-30s. These are different sentences with different meaning.
as being in competition
It’s not a competition, but if you want to claim some authority (“I do have some idea what I’m talking about”), it would help to not bounce between claims that are wrong (“The mid 1930′s had the first semi-capitalistic change”) and claims that are not even wrong (“the USSR would briefly swap over to a semi-capitalist system for a few years”).
“I don’t see any retreat from the collectivization in the mid-30s. In fact, mid-1930s is the time of the Stalin’s regime going into the full-paranoia mode and tightening the screws.”
The ambiguous wording doesn’t erase the fact that this is your rejection of the assertion you later accepted.
I avoid any internal framing of my knowledge as being in competition with somebody else’s, because then I might feel the need to try to “win”, which is pretty much the only way to lose.
Huh? There is no ambiguity.
I am saying (emphasis mine): “”I don’t see any retreat from the collectivization in the mid-30s”. Note: “in”. What you are implying I said is that I don’t see any retreat from the collectivization after the mid-30s. These are different sentences with different meaning.
It’s not a competition, but if you want to claim some authority (“I do have some idea what I’m talking about”), it would help to not bounce between claims that are wrong (“The mid 1930′s had the first semi-capitalistic change”) and claims that are not even wrong (“the USSR would briefly swap over to a semi-capitalist system for a few years”).