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The Soviet Union
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Was there anything useful in the Soviet Union (USSR) that could be used today?
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Reporting from Minsk, Belarus — It’s a long way from Silicon Valley to Minsk.
Communist-era statues and murals dot the capital of tiny Belarus, which has clung to Soviet traditions for more than two decades since the collapse of the U.S.S.R. President Alexander Lukashenko rules this forested nation of 10 million with an iron fist and a determined political mantra: “There will be no reforms.”
Belarus still relies on state-run manufacturers and Soviet-era collective farms. The European Union prefers not to buy food from those farms because one-fifth of Belarus was contaminated by fallout from the 1986 Chernobyl nuclear disaster in Ukraine.
Video games, however, are another matter, as are mobile phone apps and software products. All these are being produced in a drab industrial park on the northeastern outskirts of Minsk, an unlikely but booming high-tech hub.
Hi-Tech Park is a pillar of the Belarusian information technology sector, which has shown formidable growth in recent years, with some 250 start-ups and outsourcing companies that employ tens of thousands. Lukashenko’s government promotes it further with tax breaks, visa-free entry for Westerners — and claims that products developed here are used by a billion people in almost 200 nations.


... Like remote viewing, telepathy, intuition research, etc


I do appreciate James’s reply. But I’m trying to learn if the USSR’s scientists were unable to contribute significantly to human knowledge (aside from what emerged from the early space ventures and some psychic research) or whether it's rather that no one here feels moved to post about the subject,
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/for......"
Waiting on the follow-up article: "More than a third of millennials polled haven't a clue about the dangers of communism"