After Gorbachev's USSR (1992)

Sdílet
Vložit
  • čas přidán 16. 07. 2023
  • PBS Frontline documentary chronicling the struggles of daily life in the newly Post-Soviet Russian Federation.
  • Krátké a kreslené filmy

Komentáře • 565

  • @MikeGuardiaAuthor
    @MikeGuardiaAuthor  Před rokem +68

    PBS Frontline documentary chronicling the struggles of daily life in the newly Post-Soviet Russian Federation.

    • @dutchschultz3076
      @dutchschultz3076 Před 11 měsíci

      Thanks Mike for the upload 👍

    • @Eagle_Delta
      @Eagle_Delta Před 11 měsíci

      Did the reporter travel to the USSR or Russia? I recall they’re not the same countries.

    • @dutchschultz3076
      @dutchschultz3076 Před 11 měsíci

      @@Eagle_Delta I'm pretty sure he went to Russia and some of the former soviet territories (Ukraine, Belarus, ect..)

    • @jamesstutts1681
      @jamesstutts1681 Před 10 měsíci

      Thank you for saving these and uploading them

    • @nutsackmania
      @nutsackmania Před 10 měsíci

      danke you are doing good

  • @okzoomer5728
    @okzoomer5728 Před 11 měsíci +241

    "My wife used to make cookies, but that bastard raised the price of flour to 16 rubles."
    "If he wants a civil war, he'll get one"
    Russians threatening war when grandma can't make her cookies anymore is wholesome.

    • @SpencerLemay
      @SpencerLemay Před 11 měsíci +31

      It's deadly serious. Flour should be so cheap you dont even think about it, and this man is saying it's too expensive to consider buying!

    • @rotors_taker_0h
      @rotors_taker_0h Před 11 měsíci +3

      How times changed since that time...

    • @rotors_taker_0h
      @rotors_taker_0h Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@Ziellossonly if you ignore denomination that slashed 3 zeros from every ruble price

    • @RT-qd8yl
      @RT-qd8yl Před 10 měsíci +11

      @@SpencerLemay Thats how meat in the United States is now, many things are too expensive to buy. If I ate 3 meals a day, let alone fresh healthy ones, I wouldn't be able to pay my bills.

    • @ekesandras1481
      @ekesandras1481 Před 4 měsíci

      @@SpencerLemay Flour shoud have a price that values the farmer's work of planting, grooming and harvesting it, transporting it, milling it, packing it, storing it, moving it into retail, etc.
      It is not the duty of the producer to give the fruit of his work to other people as cheap as possible, so that they don't even think about the price.
      Whoever is not happy with that, can move back to their grandparents village and farm and plant it themselves.

  • @ClassicalMontessori
    @ClassicalMontessori Před 11 měsíci +118

    These are incredible conversations! It shows the real frustration and corruption far better than most documentaries. Seeing real people's experiences will always tell a better story than a retrospective one that's made by experts decades after something.

    • @RT-qd8yl
      @RT-qd8yl Před 10 měsíci +3

      After living through a few experiences first-hand that have had documentaries made by "experts" about them, many times the experts had no clue what they were talking about, what happened, or what the impact was. When I hear "expert", I immediately get suspicious.

    • @billyyank5807
      @billyyank5807 Před 6 měsíci

      There's a lot of books on it.

  • @xxdekuxx362
    @xxdekuxx362 Před 10 měsíci +32

    The man means What is the point of getting freedom if you are having your country totally messed up socially and economically to the point you have left with nothing to feed your family? Total shock!

    • @yegorburov5881
      @yegorburov5881 Před 4 měsíci +5

      Если правительство объявило что вам дали свободу, это не значит что вам её действительно дали. В ы всегда находитесь в товарно- денежной системе, вы вынуждены зарабатывать деньги и платить налоги.

    • @samright4661
      @samright4661 Před 2 měsíci

      @@yegorburov5881That’s called Capitalism! The Kick the Government out of your life. It’s better to work and pay taxes then having the government in every aspect of your life

    • @jond181
      @jond181 Před 2 měsíci

      What’s the point of living if you’re not free to live your life as you see fit?
      Ironic that Russian (Soviet mindset) thinks religion used to control people when that’s exactly what they intend to do - and what apparently - some Russians want (to be controlled and spoon fed). Sad really.

    • @sohelsaheen
      @sohelsaheen Před měsícem

      This problem was solved by Putin. So he is great in the eyes of Russian people.

  • @Enron3000
    @Enron3000 Před 9 měsíci +62

    Don't see journalism like this anymore...

    • @antoniobabb1938
      @antoniobabb1938 Před 9 měsíci +9

      More propaganda now

    • @PopulismIsForBottomFeeders
      @PopulismIsForBottomFeeders Před 6 měsíci

      @@antoniobabb1938 Sure, propaganda, but only if you watch channels from party media wings like Fox, OANN, Newsmax, or you're silly enough to go to social media for news. There's no genuine news can be found on anywhere on social media.

    • @thespeculum785
      @thespeculum785 Před 5 měsíci

      Journalists nowadays are scum.

    • @h0tpotatoes
      @h0tpotatoes Před 4 měsíci +6

      yup. nobody cares enough about the truth anymore.

    • @thespeculum785
      @thespeculum785 Před 4 měsíci

      @@liferx4343 Most “journalism” today, at least from the main-stream media outlets, is really just state propaganda in service to the Regime.

  • @moretar
    @moretar Před 11 měsíci +117

    This is an amazing document. Almost every major issue in today's Russia is foreshadowed here 30 years before.

    • @russiasvechenaya58
      @russiasvechenaya58 Před 11 měsíci +26

      Putin ended this and made the average Russian have a normal life

    • @Chunky246
      @Chunky246 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@russiasvechenaya58 For those in Moscow, St Petersburg and a few other cities he did. The rest of the country neglected. He ended it for the minority. Putin and his gangsters have overseen 30 years of corruption, shown in all its glory in the useless Russian army. More and more freedoms gone from the Russian people, more and more laws. To the point where nobody can speak out, all media is controlled. Russia going backwards again. Russia had a chance 30 years ago and screwed it up. Gangs took over the industries and regions (gangs like the KGB...). The average Russian may have a 'normal' life in your opinion, but it's not normal but any standard.

    • @bordedup546
      @bordedup546 Před 11 měsíci +36

      @@russiasvechenaya58 And how normal is it now?

    • @Paulius-lb4ng
      @Paulius-lb4ng Před 11 měsíci +1

      @ russiasvechenaya58 Это закончилось тем, что Запад финансово поддержал новую экономику РФ, пока Путлер не пришел в себя и не украл 1/3 всей российской экономики вместо того, чтобы тратить ее на школы, больницы и дороги. Он преступник-вор и ничего больше.

    • @MonotoneCreeper
      @MonotoneCreeper Před 11 měsíci +33

      @@bordedup546War is normality for Russians I suppose

  • @fratercontenduntocculta8161
    @fratercontenduntocculta8161 Před 11 měsíci +44

    You truly have the best Cold War channel hands down Mike! I love these obscure ones. I swear I saw this one live when I was a kid!

  • @justschr
    @justschr Před 10 měsíci +68

    52:41 This man knew exactly the direction Russia was heading in.

    • @kennyderoian8904
      @kennyderoian8904 Před 7 měsíci +6

      Premonition to Putin

    • @justschr
      @justschr Před 7 měsíci +6

      @@kennyderoian8904 100% premonition of Putin. It’s really sad to see TBH.

    • @revolter7094
      @revolter7094 Před 6 měsíci +3

      It is really great to see that Russia got a President which follows the Russian interests and is not a puppet of the west. Putin is not totalitarian, he is authoritarian and that is what the people want. The people want a strong leadership with a strong grip over the country, unlike what they had in the 90s, which was an awful time for a lot of Russian people.

    • @ivanshevchenko5045
      @ivanshevchenko5045 Před 6 měsíci +10

      @@revolter7094yeah just completely ignore how far he set them back with his criminal invasion.

    • @justschr
      @justschr Před 6 měsíci +4

      @@revolter7094 LMFAO

  • @denischikita
    @denischikita Před 11 měsíci +14

    Thanks for upload theese truly remarkable pieces of journalist's work. It's for me as borned in western Belarus a wide sight on why we a so doomed here even 30 years later.

  • @merlin6625
    @merlin6625 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Frontline does the absolute best documentaries!! Thank You

  • @quite1enough
    @quite1enough Před 11 měsíci +38

    Mark Masarsky has sadly passed away Jan 27th 2021, at the age of 80. He also participated in working group of final edits of Russia's constitution in 1993.

    • @John3.36
      @John3.36 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Russia was fortunate to have some brave people like that.

    • @gabrielferrer3205
      @gabrielferrer3205 Před 10 měsíci +5

      Masarsky betrayed the workers for the love of money.

    • @quite1enough
      @quite1enough Před 10 měsíci

      @@gabrielferrer3205 wow I didn't know that. Can you tell more about it?

    • @gabrielferrer3205
      @gabrielferrer3205 Před 10 měsíci +4

      ​@@quite1enough watch the video before this video where he said that he and the workers both own the Cooperative. I assume in this video, he took all the ownership of the cooperative just by listening to his words. also he has multiple ventures that doesn't give a fair share to his employees just like the capitalists.

    • @quite1enough
      @quite1enough Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@gabrielferrer3205 Oh, no, in that regard, I googled some info about him, he was far from typical neoliberal half-criminal crook of early-mid 90s in Russia, and seems like paid to his workers fairly. There was plenty of fraudsters back then, like Anatoly Chubais, or founder of financial pyramid "MMM" Sergei Mavrodi, but Masarsky seems really far away from those type of guys. On the other hand, 1993 constitution is quite controversial and some Russian human rights activists have an opinion that that constitution played one of the key role in Putin's power grab.

  • @xlynz69
    @xlynz69 Před 11 měsíci +4

    Thank you for uploading

  • @ShoegazingHammer74
    @ShoegazingHammer74 Před 11 měsíci +71

    Amazing to revisit this time and place - I visited Russia in February 1992 and well remember the feeling of juxtaposing the old and the new. The government building was still blasted black by tank fire from the coup a few months before, the kids were huddling around a small bag of fries in the massive McDonalds in Moscow, and veterans were selling their old uniforms and military equipment in the street.
    I really hope for better days for the Russian people, they're a unique breed of people who deserve so much better than they've always had to suffer under.

    • @cryptocsguy9282
      @cryptocsguy9282 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @ShoegazingHammer74 I always thought that if Americans were allowed to open up Mcdonald's in the last days of the USSR then why weren't the Soviets smart enough to bring a Soviet government owned Russian restaurant franchise to the west. Missed opportunity

    • @evildead9708
      @evildead9708 Před 11 měsíci +7

      @@cryptocsguy9282 Because doing that would involve the soviet union in the realms of capitalism, when they were trying to do the opposite.

    • @cryptocsguy9282
      @cryptocsguy9282 Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@evildead9708 Yes but they're stupid , idk if you watched the earlier episode labeled something along the lines of "inside Gorbachev's USSR 1990" in that episode it does mention that as part of the failed perestroika reforms small amounts of incompetent and stifled capitalist elements were allowed into the country such as people owning private farms and construction business where their only supplier and customer was the government. Also in 1990 they had the new union treaty where they planned to change the name of the country to the union of soviet sovereign republics and eventually switch to capitalism and that's why the failed coup of august 1991 happened to prevent full capitalist reform.
      So with that said if there was an eventual acceptance that communism is failing then I think the USSR government should have considered selling goods in the west regardless because they had to do something to save the economy

    • @timoilonen1926
      @timoilonen1926 Před 11 měsíci +11

      You have a case of Mandela effect. Tanks blasted the Russian White House in 1993

    • @harryricochet8134
      @harryricochet8134 Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@timoilonen1926 Indeed, it's as amazing as it is deeply disturbing how some people can completely manufacture memories in order to prop up their perspectives and egos.

  • @user-dj8fr9sg7h
    @user-dj8fr9sg7h Před rokem +2

    i Was looking for this ... good find

  • @malditaseaintensifies-kd8ec

    Mike with another banger!

  • @Ergilion
    @Ergilion Před 8 měsíci +10

    They shut down the Yeliseyevskiy store in 2021. What a shame.
    These are all scenes from my childhood. I do not know if my family struggled with the prices. If they did, my parents never told me about it. But for me - everything was suddenly there. After empty soviet stores there suddenly were dozens of tiny shops selling everything a kid wanted. I got 5000 rubles for pocket money once a week and I bought a Snickers bar and a can of Coke. Or sometimes we would pool our pocket money with friends and buy a whole tube of Pringles potato chips.
    And Brateyevo is such a nice neighborhood now. I liked to cycle along the river banks alot, they built a really nice chain of parks along both river banks with bicycle lanes. I lived not far away from there. I think I even know the store they are having an argument about, only now it looks entirely different.

    • @Amped4Life
      @Amped4Life Před 5 měsíci

      This is a fantastic story. Thank you for sharing your memories and experiences growing up in this era. I love studying interesting cultures and am eager for a day when I can explore Russia and other countries formerly in the Soviet Union. Soviet mosaics, the unique bus stops, interesting cultural differences, Lake Bikal (and its 🦭seals), much more.

    • @Ragtags
      @Ragtags Před 5 měsíci

      5000 rubles a week for Pocket money in the 1990s? What!

    • @Ergilion
      @Ergilion Před 5 měsíci +3

      @@Ragtags it was before the denomination. They soon became 5 rubles.

    • @Ragtags
      @Ragtags Před 5 měsíci

      @@Ergilion oh thanks for the explanation.
      Sorry for my assumption and blunt inconsiderate reply.
      I did do a quick Google search but being that I'm not familiar with the topic I still interpreted denomination wrong.
      I actually thought you were likely a bot because the amount.was so absurdly high.

  • @asullivan4047
    @asullivan4047 Před rokem +10

    Interesting and informative. Excellent photography pictures 📷 enabling viewers to better understand what/whom the orator was describing. Class A research project!!! Special thanks to the civilians sharing their personal information/experiences. Making this documentary more authentic and possible. Collective 🚜 farming puts Moscow's non workable hook of bureaucratic red tape. Around the farmers neck & strangled him.

    • @slanasik1187
      @slanasik1187 Před 6 měsíci

      I am from Russia i wish I lived in 90s

  • @aliensoup2420
    @aliensoup2420 Před 11 měsíci +279

    sad to hear someone say, "what am I supposed to do with freedom?"

    • @panthermartin7784
      @panthermartin7784 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Exactly, to this day they are accustomed to doing as they are told, suddenly they stand around like farm animals looking for oats, seem oats that were previously supplied by the communist government .

    • @grantbrendon
      @grantbrendon Před 11 měsíci +1

      But it’s the truth they have never been very free either ruled by war lords or a tzar then communist dictatorship to now presidential dictatorship…they don’t know how to govern themselves democratically. But your right it is sad in our eyes but to them dictatorship is a safety net.

    • @Gertieness
      @Gertieness Před 11 měsíci +44

      .... and they're still asking that question. Some peoples are not cut out for democracy

    • @RivieraByBuick
      @RivieraByBuick Před 11 měsíci +103

      why sad? do u understand the context of that time? people have nothing to eat being free, while they had something to eat doing just the same "not being free" - that what he meant.

    • @Rimasta1
      @Rimasta1 Před 11 měsíci +29

      It’s like prisoners who get released and they can’t handle being free. They are more comfortable as prisoners.

  • @nbarrager
    @nbarrager Před 9 dny

    Thank you for uploading all these old documentaries, and if you're from the US happy fourth.

  • @SlaterCAST
    @SlaterCAST Před 11 měsíci +60

    52:55 "In whose hands will that totalitarian power fall?"
    Putin.

    • @ttacking_you
      @ttacking_you Před 2 měsíci

      I love those kinds of anachronistic warnings from the past. There's a Firing Line with William f Buckley from the 60s with Barry Goldwater and ten minutes in these two conservative firebrands start warning America about the wrong person becoming president and then start describing the things that trump actually did

    • @FreedomofspeechSensor-zu8ip
      @FreedomofspeechSensor-zu8ip Před 10 dny +1

      The Russian people love him... that's all that matters.

    • @ttacking_you
      @ttacking_you Před 10 dny

      @@FreedomofspeechSensor-zu8ip no dawg, he criminalizes the opposition. I'll check the New England medical journal of science but I believe you have a textbook case of cranial/rectal inversion?

  • @stanboiko5577
    @stanboiko5577 Před 11 měsíci +8

    Ivanovo were the one of most depressive sity in Russia in 1990th. Because of monoindustrialism. (Textile industry, that fall down)
    Like Detroit in USA after 2008.

  • @toffthe
    @toffthe Před 11 měsíci +11

    When I see documentary TV from that era, I am always struck by the modesty, elegance and thoughtfulness of the commentators. So different to the by turns thuggish and cowering paranoid Court of Tsar Vlad.

  • @shawn9635
    @shawn9635 Před 7 měsíci +4

    Can you imagine coming back to your country and its whole ways and system no longer existed!!!!!

  • @charlesbenca5357
    @charlesbenca5357 Před 7 měsíci +12

    Oh boy the discussion on totalitarianism at 53:00 near the end is mind blowing because he foreshadowed the current state of russia

    • @thespeculum785
      @thespeculum785 Před 5 měsíci

      So goes the propaganda. Of which art the regime media in America has perfected far better than the Soviets

    • @NeidlichesSchwert
      @NeidlichesSchwert Před měsícem

      Was looking for this timestamp; thought the same.

  • @rudijohnsen9674
    @rudijohnsen9674 Před 10 měsíci +2

    Anyone know about a similar video from a few years later on so I can see the change? I was to young to remember these times.

  • @Ruinskiy
    @Ruinskiy Před 6 měsíci +3

    Одни из не многих кадров про настоящую Россию . красавцы

  • @davidroonmeister
    @davidroonmeister Před 6 měsíci +1

    whats the name of the head farmer who shows up around 11mins 20 seconds. trying to work out how to spell his name and find out what happened to him!

  • @norcalreppin1
    @norcalreppin1 Před 3 dny

    Moral of the story is after the market opened up to a free market. The state farms held supply back which caused prices to skyrocket.

  • @yashmishra3773
    @yashmishra3773 Před 9 dny +1

    00:03 The bitter fruits of change in the former Soviet Union
    03:58 Russia's religious revival signifies a renewal of culture and tradition.
    11:46 Staradubsav faces pressure to privatize his State Farm.
    17:06 Struggles and successes of transitioning to private farming
    22:13 Impact of Post-Gorbachev era on Uralmash Factory
    25:27 Transition from State socialism to capitalism through barter system
    30:39 Alexander Sagalovich aims to rejuvenate Oral Mash factory despite challenges
    33:18 Ethnic tensions and independence movements in post-Soviet states
    38:39 Expansion of commodity exchange in Russia
    41:21 Yegor Gaidar implements bold economic reforms in Russia
    47:21 Challenges of post-Soviet privatization and housing distribution
    50:36 Challenges in Russia's newborn democracy

  • @wooddog007
    @wooddog007 Před 10 měsíci +5

    @33:45 ... this was 30 Years ago !!! Just listen to Hedrick Smith's observation given where we are now with the Ukraine war ....

  • @inkedbeast76
    @inkedbeast76 Před 11 měsíci +11

    I distinctly remember, after the USSR collapsed, a woman looking just like Brigette Nielsen and this guy resembling Dolf Lungren came to our school in San Francisco. The man had super shiny knee high boots that looked like glass, tight pants, a belt buckle and I remember the buckle had a hammer and sickle on it. He was sharp looking with a large hat. Maybe it was me being a kid but he made a huge impression on me.
    They sat for three hours and said they did not know what to do without this style of government and therefore it was much better to be communist. Even then I remember thinking, they disappear people arbitrarily and poke people with poison umbrellas. Days 🎉the fu** it.

    • @user-rg6ix2iz6z
      @user-rg6ix2iz6z Před 4 dny

      The umbrella thing was popularized by the West and the US has had privatized prisons that incentivizes incarcerating innocent people and handing out longer sentences for profit and kick backs to politicians. Your values are flawed and your ideology is based on lies.

  • @NordiskSeger
    @NordiskSeger Před 10 měsíci +1

    Why all the dubbing and no subtitles? Is illiteracy the cause?

  • @billyhighfill
    @billyhighfill Před 11 měsíci +2

    This one is good!!

  • @millsyinnz
    @millsyinnz Před 11 měsíci

    Interesting doco.

  • @wooddog007
    @wooddog007 Před 10 měsíci +8

    @52:30 ... amazing how really smart people could see the future ... 30 years later ... this is exactly what happened ....

  • @m.g.9606
    @m.g.9606 Před 8 měsíci +9

    26:00 This sums it up. Why capitalismo worked for China but not for former soviet states (except the ones that got EU funds. If the Soviet Union had just made an eocnomic transition but kept itself together, the transition might have worked.

  • @angusyates828
    @angusyates828 Před 11 měsíci +17

    The road to hell is paved with good intentions......

    • @denisemiller8017
      @denisemiller8017 Před 11 měsíci +1

      This is SOOOOO very honest yet disturbingly simple

    • @krle7970
      @krle7970 Před 2 měsíci

      All the Communist revolutions and attempts in a nutshell

  • @Jeffcrocodile
    @Jeffcrocodile Před 10 měsíci +8

    they sure learned capitalism very fast lol

  • @fredjacobsen5025
    @fredjacobsen5025 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Regarding freedom: how can you aporeciate something you have never had before?

  • @Oubre84
    @Oubre84 Před 5 měsíci

    The man who interviewed clayton bigsby

  • @jimreily7538
    @jimreily7538 Před 11 měsíci

    I wonder if Hendrick Smith, the correspondent in this video, is any relation to Martin Smith, another correspondent for Frontline who's covered the 9/11 era wars, stories about Saudia Arabia and many more. They share some physical resemblance.

    • @Clavdiachauchat
      @Clavdiachauchat Před 11 měsíci +1

      You can actually hear Martin Smith doing a voiceover for a Russian speaker in the intro to this film. He worked on the old CBS Reports documentary series founded by Murrow and Friendly, until it shut down after the General Westmoreland lawsuit, worked with Frontline from the beginning as a producer, and only later started appearing on camera. What people don’t realize about a show like Frontline is that it’s usually a very small, independent team doing the lion’s share of work on each film, and they’re on the hook for their own body armor if they’re going to a war zone. Pretty sure Martin Smith is not related to Hedrick Smith.

  • @oliverwortley3822
    @oliverwortley3822 Před 10 měsíci +12

    I suppose they did things too fast, too haphazardly. They didn’t have any plans or processes or systems or procedures in place. They should’ve had a long term, slow transition plan.

  • @kingbach24
    @kingbach24 Před 7 měsíci +1

    The transition is off, be careful

  • @Foose3535
    @Foose3535 Před 5 měsíci +3

    52:59 he predicted the future right there

  • @umichaa00
    @umichaa00 Před 4 měsíci

    Reminds me of RT documentaries, incredibly informative, which probably have been banned sadly.

  • @anderarmould
    @anderarmould Před 11 měsíci +8

    Capitalists will TELL YOU what to do with "freedom".

  • @user-ms8ur8pr4d
    @user-ms8ur8pr4d Před 9 měsíci +6

    🔴🟡🟢 Всем Успехов по жизненненму пути.

    • @krle7970
      @krle7970 Před 2 měsíci

      Thanks friend, Good Health and long life to you🙂

  • @user-ns3rm8vj8d
    @user-ns3rm8vj8d Před 7 měsíci +2

    heh, the golden time of our parents, the end of the 80s-90s, there was nothing to kill for, poverty, collapse and anarchy, God forbid it to happen again.

  • @johnsrous1616
    @johnsrous1616 Před 2 měsíci

    What made the transition from the communist system of the USSR to one that resembled Western capitalism was that the people really weren't sure if they wanted the change.

  • @ttacking_you
    @ttacking_you Před 2 měsíci

    Fuck my ear hurts! Aw they're hitting me with the damn Havana ray!!!! 👂💥🥁🥁🎻🎻

  • @Espartano_117
    @Espartano_117 Před 11 měsíci +2

    Проблема ясна. Государство имеет большую власть, и они владеют всем. Кроме того, все хотят не остаться в стороне. Русские хотят, чтобы все было одинаково выгодно всем и сразу. В реальности этого никогда не произойдет.
    России 🇷🇺 нужен новый леннинг-сталинский дуэт не коммунизма, а капитализма.
    Пройдут столетия, прежде чем они осознают, что на самом деле у них никогда не было никаких изменений, и что они никогда по-настоящему этого и не хотели. Русские нормально переносят голод и немного голодания, пока это их не убивает.

    • @brianticas7671
      @brianticas7671 Před měsícem

      Russians are hard people man. I've dated girls from Russia here in LA ca USA man. Those girls are hard to give in their heart ❤️ man. It doesn't matter how well you treat them because they stick to their traditional values. I had one tell me that she would only have sex if we married man. They stick to their beliefs and aren't like USA girls that want a whole lot of luxury. Russian girls here in LA ca USA take the subway 🚇 or bus 🚌. No bitching or butts about it.

  • @lucastanga6732
    @lucastanga6732 Před 6 měsíci +9

    Destroying religion has been one of the worst crimes ever in my opinion, worst than death, because it steals a way of life from the whole community, not just those who where killed in infamy.

    • @knkjkjn
      @knkjkjn Před 2 měsíci +1

      I can't say i agree.

    • @krle7970
      @krle7970 Před 2 měsíci

      Replaced with state religion (Marxism) with Lenin as Jesus, can say that it was not as successful or enduring

    • @victorperfecto7472
      @victorperfecto7472 Před měsícem

      God does not exist. under his name, death and misery befell humanity

    • @shubhnamdeo2865
      @shubhnamdeo2865 Před měsícem

      @@victorperfecto7472 That's in your opinion.
      (Note: I am not trying to make you believe in God, I'm giving my side of the argument). Many other good things have happened. Nothing is permanent. In my religion, Hinduism, the God(s) has/have fought wars to defeat evil, and the two most celebrated instances are in the epics of Mahabharata and Ramayana, stories of how the corruption of power can literally drown the world in suffering. My religion calls the age we live in as Kali Yuga, the final age of the cycle of four ages where sin is too common and in fact, celebrated. Where hypocrisy becomes virtue, and wealth becomes the aim of life, where sinners are hailed as saviours and scholars, where hate means piety. So yes, I believe in God, it gives me hope. And logically speaking tyranny should have already taken over us but it hasn't, tyranny never lasts long. for some reason, no matter how powerful and calculating it is, and after tyranny comes an age of peace and prosperity unlike any other before.

  • @dendevis4331
    @dendevis4331 Před 8 měsíci +2

    многие города, кроме москвы, в 80х только более-менее жить начали, а уже всё

    • @VictorPhnom
      @VictorPhnom Před 4 měsíci

      Пришла руская версия демократия😂😂

  • @gonzogil123
    @gonzogil123 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Yeah, the getting of part. Of course.

  • @mango2005
    @mango2005 Před 5 měsíci +1

    I think in hindsight, this transition was badly handled, and the consequences are with us today.

  • @HamburgerAmy
    @HamburgerAmy Před 11 měsíci +10

    looking forward to Frontline's after Putin's United Russian Federation in 2029

    • @doncorleone1553
      @doncorleone1553 Před 11 měsíci +1

      Not going to happen. The only way Putin is resigning is if he dies, he himself has said this. And nobody wants to get rid of him in Russia, he is the greatest Russian leader since Alexander II.

    • @John3.36
      @John3.36 Před 11 měsíci

      US media is no longer capable of making good documentaries.

    • @PopulismIsForBottomFeeders
      @PopulismIsForBottomFeeders Před 6 měsíci +1

      That's about 3 years too generous a deadline.

    • @Vagabund483
      @Vagabund483 Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@PopulismIsForBottomFeeders3 года?)

  • @dendevis4331
    @dendevis4331 Před 8 měsíci +2

    неудивительно, что всё в упадке, ведь экономику разваливали до этого годами

  • @Sirius-me5zy
    @Sirius-me5zy Před 11 měsíci +2

    The mismanagement of the USSR

  • @-r-495
    @-r-495 Před 10 měsíci +2

    I wonder how man of those on top in those days lived to see the new millennium..

  • @klubberzvonhatzenbuhl563
    @klubberzvonhatzenbuhl563 Před 11 měsíci +2

    52:36 - Holy Krap.

  • @Seawitch907
    @Seawitch907 Před 11 měsíci +7

    Those Russians are smart! They do Christmas on January 7th. When the 75% off sales are done.😊

    • @janchovanec8624
      @janchovanec8624 Před 11 měsíci +1

      My dude. Average wage in Russia is 300$.
      Outside Moscow and St. Petersburg, only a fraction of people own a washing machine, or a toilet.

    • @mitchyoung93
      @mitchyoung93 Před 11 měsíci +3

      ​@@janchovanec8624The washing machine info is pure BS

    • @brianticas7671
      @brianticas7671 Před měsícem

      ​@@janchovanec8624I heard Russia had it really hard for the collapse of ussr. That's why they're hard people man. But I heard Moscow and St Peters burg makes LA ca USA look like shit right now. So Putin fixed Russia

  • @matterhaz2980
    @matterhaz2980 Před 11 měsíci +2

    @53:00 interesting point

  • @meth4kidz
    @meth4kidz Před 5 měsíci +1

    Россия ❤

  • @TinTaBraSS777
    @TinTaBraSS777 Před 11 měsíci +3

    это россия 30 лет спустя )
    *архангельск*
    czcams.com/video/_CmHTkmHC1I/video.html
    *воркута*
    czcams.com/video/54eIyebf0lg/video.html
    *мурманск*
    czcams.com/video/Zru7A73yPmk/video.html
    *хабаровск*
    czcams.com/video/l3xY6pkAcGo/video.html
    *кызыл*
    czcams.com/video/6CJrIhsR23I/video.html
    *томск*
    czcams.com/video/6U1F0vRNAkk/video.html

  • @BlackJesus8463
    @BlackJesus8463 Před měsícem

    They be amazed at the price of kettle chips today.

  • @Mark-yy2py
    @Mark-yy2py Před 11 měsíci +27

    Unfortunately this is what happens when the government is responsible for every aspect of a persons life. The person does not think for themselves, as the government will solve all the problems for them. One day the government changes, and these folks have no clue about how to live their lives.

    • @AltairEgo1
      @AltairEgo1 Před 11 měsíci +6

      I don't think it's the average citizens' faults as much as it is growing pains for an economy taking such a drastic turn.
      At the time there was not enough supply, and the prices suddenly skyrocketed. So all people can do is yell at each other, because they can't exactly voice their concerns to their leaders.

    • @ShiningSta18486
      @ShiningSta18486 Před 11 měsíci +4

      Spoken like someone who knows not about what they speak

    • @John3.36
      @John3.36 Před 11 měsíci +4

      @@ShiningSta18486 You sound like Soviet party apparatchik.

    • @charlestorruella8591
      @charlestorruella8591 Před 11 měsíci

      @@ShiningSta18486 NONE OF YOU DO SOCIALISM ONLY WORKS IF EVERYONE DOES THERE PART CAPITALISM ONLY WORKS WHEN THE ONE HOLDING THE MONEY WANTS IT TO IF YOU CANT UNDERSTAND WHAT IM SAYING THEN GO BACK TO SCHOOL

    • @Mark-yy2py
      @Mark-yy2py Před 10 měsíci +3

      @@charlestorruella8591 socialism works for no one except for the ones holding the power. Socialism and communism saps the human spirit, it does not create incentive to do anything more than just what you’re required to do. Mediocrity is king under Socialism and communism.

  • @LindaAndrews-ly1qf
    @LindaAndrews-ly1qf Před 11 měsíci +1

    9:18

  • @yuri2498
    @yuri2498 Před 6 dny

    52:54 It's almost prophetic! He observed even before everything was consolidated where the power vacuum in Russia, after the end of the Soviet dictatorship, would flow! He guessed that someone intelligent and more ambitious and autocratic than Yeltsin would take the place of total control left by the party! It's sad to say this, but Russia never truly understood what democracy is, and after Yeltsin's democratic experience, everything went back to the way it always was in Russia! and a new autocrat was born, and we all know who he is!

  • @oldstyleanalog6459
    @oldstyleanalog6459 Před 7 měsíci +2

    Stalin is having exorcism hearing the pretty xmas songs.

  • @hypnomarket8649
    @hypnomarket8649 Před 3 měsíci

    16:02 true

  • @tonypro1527
    @tonypro1527 Před 11 měsíci +10

    10:36 - haha old dude is ready to go to war for his cookies. Thats the type of dude I’d follow into battle right there!

  • @CarlosGutierrez-ef2pd
    @CarlosGutierrez-ef2pd Před 6 měsíci +1

    33:50 hmmm 🤔

  • @Likwidfox
    @Likwidfox Před 11 měsíci +1

    Those bastards killed Igor.

  • @mrsmerily
    @mrsmerily Před 11 měsíci +18

    It feels so funny they say I wanna go back to breznev time... you had stuff in the shops, because other ocupied countries had to give their items to them... with big discount... russia has never been capable to produce its own food and that was the problem then. Ocupied countries were in a bad state as well and they had been in this situation almost all the ocupation... so the freedom tasted fine, but for they want state to give them everything... that shows well among the corruption why russia is where it is today.

    • @civlyzed
      @civlyzed Před 11 měsíci

      And today they're raping and pillaging in Ukraine. I don't usually do what if's, but imagine if they didn't have oil and nukes. Oh, and F Putin!

    • @MithunOnTheNet
      @MithunOnTheNet Před 11 měsíci +16

      That's the problem with these Russians complaining. They had no clue how things worked. Moscow residents had it much better than those in the republics. Life in Turkmenistan and Armenia were far worse. But due to Communist control of media and information, most Russians were clueless about these things. Heck, Russians couldn't even freely travel to the other republics.
      Just like they were unaware of how the state subsidy system worked. They don't realize Soviet Union's agricultural output was bad for decades and the rulers used oil profits to subsidize and set price controls. Once the debts and losses became too unbearable -- especially after oil crash of the 1980s -- and Soviet Union faced near bankruptcy, the subsidies ended. Thus the "shock" of the 1990s.

    • @brianticas7671
      @brianticas7671 Před měsícem

      I'm hearing other stuff man. I heard Putin fixed Russia and Russia has a bunch of resources.

  • @ekesandras1481
    @ekesandras1481 Před 4 měsíci

    This Starodubtsev is a good example of how close national communism and Russian ultra-nationalism really were. Basically he is saying things that today are again state ideology.

  • @artur92
    @artur92 Před 6 měsíci +1

    Зря вы их тогда накормили,американцы..очень зря!

  • @shawn9635
    @shawn9635 Před 7 měsíci

    Imagine going to Russia around 1990-1992 with $100,000....you wouldve been a millionaire

    • @brianticas7671
      @brianticas7671 Před měsícem +1

      You would have not been a millionaire because you would have been killed. Russia was going through stuff. Anybody going there gets hurt 🤕

  • @lostammo9026
    @lostammo9026 Před 5 měsíci

    No models like there is now young women looked like old ladies

  • @america8706
    @america8706 Před 2 měsíci

    Quite an eye opening documentary and shows how the average Russian of today is the way they are.

  • @stinyg
    @stinyg Před 11 měsíci +27

    Gorbachev is the text book definition of gullible. That pizza hut ad was just humiliation ritual.

    • @tylerclayton6081
      @tylerclayton6081 Před 11 měsíci +10

      It wasn’t meant to humiliate anyone. Russians just think very negatively about everything

    • @MegaUh
      @MegaUh Před 11 měsíci +3

      @@tylerclayton6081 everyone from former soviet nations are always skeptical about thing

    • @stinyg
      @stinyg Před 11 měsíci

      @@tylerclayton6081 It was a humiliating ritual. It would be debasing for any world leader to appear in a fast food commercial. Let alone the leader of the Soviet Union. Thankfully Putin has erased his legacy and made Yelstin and other western lap dogs disappear.

    • @kanestalin7246
      @kanestalin7246 Před 10 měsíci +1

      ​@@tylerclayton6081it only exposed him as a traitor

    • @erazmuz
      @erazmuz Před 5 měsíci

      @@MegaUh
      Only the paranoid survives.

  • @jamesruscheinski8602
    @jamesruscheinski8602 Před 11 měsíci +3

    Christ salvation to follow divine authority instead of human authority

    • @charlestorruella8591
      @charlestorruella8591 Před 11 měsíci +2

      and what good does that do faith won't keep you form starving

    • @doncorleone1553
      @doncorleone1553 Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@charlestorruella8591 Nobody is starving in Russia anymore, and church does big charities to help stop starving.

  • @Suomiy_
    @Suomiy_ Před 6 měsíci +1

    i made 1999 likes to 2000

  • @samright4661
    @samright4661 Před 2 měsíci

    People forget Moscow was called the 3rd Rome that’s where the Orthodox Church went after Ottomans captured Constantinople! We take our Freedoms for granted in America, the market always adjust private investment is the way to go.

  • @SteppesoftheLevant
    @SteppesoftheLevant Před 5 měsíci +1

    Russia is a very free state. They support all their citizens the right to the second amendment just like in america.

  • @kristianbowyer1721
    @kristianbowyer1721 Před 11 měsíci

    Strangled in its crib

    • @doncorleone1553
      @doncorleone1553 Před 11 měsíci +1

      What was? Marxism? Good. Deserves to be eradicated.

  • @5Socialism
    @5Socialism Před 2 měsíci

    Раньше у людей была достойная жизнь а теперь во имя отца сына и святага духа😂

  • @realRainz
    @realRainz Před 11 měsíci +6

    That want to go backwards, let them, but wait, they already did with pootin

    • @booba8565
      @booba8565 Před 11 měsíci

      and thats why they invade other countries now, they liked to get all of their stuff taken off of other people of the urss

    • @civlyzed
      @civlyzed Před 11 měsíci

      Yes, and 30 years later, the systemic corruption and dysfunction is evident in their military's performance during the barbaric invasion of Ukraine. Slava Ukraini!

    • @strategicconsensus
      @strategicconsensus Před 11 měsíci

      The joke is that Russia is evolving backwards. They went from communism to capitalism - and from capitalism to feudalism.

    • @UFCANT
      @UFCANT Před 11 měsíci

      Putin actually got their economy back on track. That’s hey his approval rating is so high even with the war. There two sides to every story. Don’t listen to everything your hear in American news.

  • @FJ5280
    @FJ5280 Před 11 měsíci

    A. MA. ZING.

  • @parallax9084
    @parallax9084 Před 6 měsíci +2

    So many fools in these comments

  • @pasindukanishka7504
    @pasindukanishka7504 Před 11 měsíci +4

    if ussr was still remain under the reforms of gorbachow it may be the super power of world

    • @jagdpanther2224
      @jagdpanther2224 Před 11 měsíci +3

      Gorbachev reformed nothing !

    • @texaswunderkind
      @texaswunderkind Před 11 měsíci +1

      The Russian people expect government officials to be corrupt, so the officials are happy to comply. No country with that level of corruption will ever be an economic superpower. Look at today. Putin illegally forged an election to alter the Russian constitution, making himself emperor-for-life, and the Russian people didn't bat an eye...

    • @Gertieness
      @Gertieness Před 11 měsíci

      Gorby was too late, the degenerate communist system was a lost cause by then

    • @Gertieness
      @Gertieness Před 11 měsíci +3

      ​@@texaswunderkind the most apathetic, submissive people in history, and that ain't getting fixed anytime soon if ever

    • @mrsmerily
      @mrsmerily Před 11 měsíci +3

      it would have collapsed sooner or later... it was kept together by horror and abuse... it would be the same than to say that if a woman who left her abusive husbend would be still a live because the man killed her because she left his abuse.

  • @jamiel5708
    @jamiel5708 Před měsícem

    33:50

  • @besarionioselini2089
    @besarionioselini2089 Před 5 měsíci +1

    გაგაკვეხებთ უკან
    ტანკსაც და ლულასაც

  • @roxana28101956
    @roxana28101956 Před 10 měsíci +1

    President Trump in that year??? whatttt???

  • @booba8565
    @booba8565 Před 11 měsíci

    statist and protectionists feared free market, rules for thee not for me

  • @neoalmaguer6505
    @neoalmaguer6505 Před měsícem

    The hats lol😂

  • @kresimirsantak1209
    @kresimirsantak1209 Před 11 měsíci +1

    Just like covid crisis 2020!

  • @alexedelweiss3267
    @alexedelweiss3267 Před 6 dny

    Putin not only fixed this mess as he also accomplished most promisses made by the Soviets leaders that were never fulfilled before. It's not that difficult to understand his support and popularity among the Russian people.

  • @ilyabenkhin8491
    @ilyabenkhin8491 Před 11 měsíci +9

    Gorbachev he messed up every thing after the ussr fell people are struggling to make ends meet food prices going up people got no work every thing is still state owned gas companies stores you name it it doesn't change everything when I was growing up in the ussr everything was better free housing healthcare education equal rights job opportunities you name it you had no worries about the future what more can you ask for

    • @texaswunderkind
      @texaswunderkind Před 11 měsíci +7

      What more can you ask for? Maybe the right to express yourself without fear of government reprisal. The right to have your extra effort yield you more than a person who gets drunk and does nothing all day. How about the right to vote for an opposition party who has a better idea how to run things, in a free and fair election? The right to not die in a gulag?

    • @Gertieness
      @Gertieness Před 11 měsíci

      Gorby just came along too late, that degenerate backwards communist system was beyond repair by that point

    • @binhduong7817
      @binhduong7817 Před 11 měsíci +1

      @@texaswunderkind Does that make your life better? In the Western now?

    • @janchovanec8624
      @janchovanec8624 Před 11 měsíci +2

      Uhm, except the only reason why he was chosen as a leader was to perform an economical miracle since the USSR's economy was in dire straights.
      Turned out, he was unable to perform miracle.
      Not sure what you expected there, I suppose you want to direct your petty emotions on someone.

    • @civlyzed
      @civlyzed Před 11 měsíci +5

      @@binhduong7817 I don't mean to step on @texaswunderkind's toes or put words in their mouth, but YES, it does make life in the West better. I'd live in any Western country over Russia. We have corruption and billionaires that own most of the country, and we have worthless leeches, but if you're smart and work hard, you can be whatever you want to be, at least here in the USA. I've been working since 1986 and have a family, a house that's paid for, a cabin for vacationing, plenty of food (sometimes too much) and can retire with a pension in 3 years if I want. My family and I make a cross country trip at least once a year and life is great. Sure, there are hardships in life everywhere, but I love my Western lifestyle.

  • @russiasvechenaya58
    @russiasvechenaya58 Před 11 měsíci +2

    how much i would of loved to be around this time. would of “robbed” half the country

    • @texaswunderkind
      @texaswunderkind Před 11 měsíci

      That's exactly that the oligarchs did. As shares in state-owned oil and gas companies, and other major industries were handed out, the smart ones traded those _worthless_ slips of paper for a few rubles or onions. Pretty soon they controlled billion-dollar industries. China took decades to introduce small privatization measures. Russia did it in five seconds.

    • @Gertieness
      @Gertieness Před 11 měsíci

      Easy target

    • @Max-yj4sp
      @Max-yj4sp Před 2 měsíci

      thats pretty much what happened a few people stepped in a robbed the general population blind

  • @meghanwhipp-xr1qf
    @meghanwhipp-xr1qf Před 5 měsíci

    Freedom to be poor