According to Josef Stalin, communism would develop into the most efficient, fair, and advantageous government on the planet. He projected that communism would create an ideal society that would provide for the needs of all citizens and do so equally. Stalin spoke obsessively of the dangers to world peace and the need for vigilance against internal enemies. Conformity was enforced by police terror, and by a mindless Stalinist cult. Censorship and imprisonment came swift to any likely dissenter, which is why Solzhenitsyn's One Day In The Life of Ivan Denisovich was an unlikely find in the 1962 literary magazine, Novy Mir. Solzhenitsyn's story demonstrated the failures and atrocities of Communism often concealed from the public eye. With One Day In the Life..'s controversial message and Russia's strict censoring policy, it is shocking that many of the items in Solzhenitsyn's work were released to the public alarming Russians who were promised absolute efficiency of the system, equality, and the preservation of all basic human rights (Vigilancia).…