{"type":"rich","html":"<div style=\"width: 640; height: 426; font-family: sans-serif,arial,freesans;\" ><div id=\"shared_container_589773963\" class=\"shared_container\"><div id=\"shared_header_589773963\" class=\"shared_header\"><a href=\"https:\/\/pluspora.com\/u\/eyespeer\"><img src=\"https:\/\/ussr.win\/photo\/d615bb2c77dc1d4fa5e108b43354cd52-6\" alt=\"peer of eyes\" height=\"32\" width=\"32\" loading=\"lazy\" \/><\/a><span><a href=\"https:\/\/pluspora.com\/u\/eyespeer\">peer of eyes<\/a>  wrote the following  <a href=\"https:\/\/ussr.win\/display\/8463aec06d850137a19a005056264835\">post <\/a><span class=\"autotime\" title=\"2019-06-10T11:13:13+03:00\">Mon, 10 Jun 2019 11:13:13 +0300<\/span><\/span><\/div><div id=\"reshared-content-589773963\" class=\"reshared-content\">Conversely, what surprised me when I read Marx's Manifesto is that the antagonism to it, like a fertilized egg that developed into the cold war of my time, was already embedded in the Manifesto from the first sentence. So, a real question is: how much was the existence of a western capitalist enemy an ingredient of the Soviet system and its (relative) stability?<\/div><\/div><br \/><\/div>","width":640,"height":426}