The second part examines the operational reality of the new ruling class once they achieved ultimate state power. It catalogs the intense internal purges, luxury lifestyles, disillusionment, and eventual moral decay of the revolutionary vanguard. It documents how the system created a generation that started "starving for everything" and ended up "completely saturated by everything" at the close of their lives.
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Deca komunizma (Children of Communism) by Milomir Marić, first published in 1987, is a landmark work of Yugoslav investigative journalism that exposes the private lives and political maneuvers of the communist elite [1, 23]. Using a "documentary-novel" style, the book covers figures from the second generation of the socialist state, including portraits of shadowy figures like Mustafa Golubić and cultural icons, leading to an initial ban by Yugoslav authorities [1, 23]. You can find discussions and parts of the book on sites like Scribd. : This article provides information about the book