In fact, anti-Soviet sentiments were extremely rare back then, the current thrend of pouring mud over everything Soviet and glorifying the Russian Empire instead was born in the 90s from the state-funded propaganda campaigns that Yeltsin tried to use to justify his predecessor's dissolution of the Union and the resulting spiked anal dildo fuckfest in its former components.
Which is silly, because the USSR was essentially Russian Empire 2: Live Marxist or Die Hard. Anything crimes against humanity the USSR committed were just scaled-up version of things the Empire was already doing.
I would say that this is a gross oversimplification that ignores most of USSR's genuine achievements in the field of human rights and welfare. For starters, the Russian Empire was staggeringly negligent towards its peasants, leading to many, many less-developed regions in it having downright medieval lifestyles and living standards, while the USSR was, among other things, a welfare state without peer that spent inordinate amounts of resources and effort on massive infrastructure and social development projects, such as
Likbez, for example, that have been very successful in raising the HDIs and the standards of living of the Soviet peoples, so much so that many former Soviet countries are still trying to reach the levels of these two things that they had back in the USSR.
Not much autonomy thanks to Stalin. If only Lenin had died a little sooner or a little later.
Yea, Stalin really wrecked that train.
Lenin was somewhat of a brute too though. Just not compared to Stalin.
I'd say that this is a gross oversimplification as well, as Stalin's rule still saw much autonomy from the local governments, if not from the different members of the Politburo.