Session #85 · 1957–59

Speech #850072064

And the fate of millions of Estonians. Latvians. and Lithuanians in their homeland is not much better. If they were not deported. they certainly suffered much privation and hardship during the war. and are still suffering under the unrelenting tyranny of Soviet communism. We have even heard that the native population of the coastal areas of these countries were moved to the interior in order to make room for Asiatic people brought in to settle there. Outrageous and almost unbelievable this may sound. yet the deliberate policy of the Soviet Union seems to be to colonize these frontiers exposed to the West with people from other parts of the Soviet Union. This of course adds to the misery and suffering of the native population. but since they are living in A4737 what is little more than a concentration camp. it is not surprising. We in the West are fully cognizant of these heartrendering facts. We are well aware of the sad fate that befell to those deportees and of the unbelievable lot of those who are living in the three Baltic countries. I wholeheartedly sympathize with their unfortunate lot. and ardently hope that soon a way will be found to ameliorate their lot and free these deserving citizens of the free world. Civil Rights Act of 1957 SPEECH OF
Identified stereotypes
Generalization about the suffering of Estonians, Latvians, and Lithuanians under Soviet communism.
Keywords matched
deported Asiatic deportees

Classification

Target group
Sentiment
Negative
Stereotyping
⚠️ Yes
Confidence
90%
Model
gemini-2.0-flash
Framing
Victim Humanitarian

Speaker & context

Speaker
Unknown
Party
Chamber
State
Gender
Date
Speech ID
850072064
Paragraph
#0
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