Stalin's speech at the parade November 7, 1941 (1941) documentary

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  • čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
  • November 7, 1941 at 8 a.m. on the Red Square in Moscow began a military parade on the occasion of the 24th anniversary of the October Revolution. A parade was held during the Battle of Moscow, when the front line was a few dozen kilometers from the city.
    With the enemies at the gates, in an incredible show of normalcy, the annual October Revolution parade on Red Square still took place. Usually the Minister of Defense would deliver the commemoration speech on Red Square, however with the situation in the country dire, and the Soviet people fighting for their very survival, Joseph Stalin gives the speech to rally the troops in 1941. After this parade there would be no parades again on Red Square until 1 May 1945.
    Stalin's speech at the parade November 7, 1941 (1941) documentary
    Genre: Documentary
    Production Co.: Tsentralnaya Studiya Dokumentalnikh Filmov (TsSDF)
    Director: Leonid Varlamov
    Cinematografy by Mark Troyanovsky, Ivan Belyakov

Komentáře • 3,9K

  • @captainoblivious_yt
    @captainoblivious_yt Před 4 lety +3730

    2:22 Horse seems to agree

    • @rnrenato2125
      @rnrenato2125 Před 4 lety +50

      @Leone Dos Reis Frauches qual é a sua de ficar falando português com os gringos?

    • @robinmattias
      @robinmattias Před 4 lety +236

      fucking communist horse

    • @oddshaft4851
      @oddshaft4851 Před 4 lety +359

      Comrade horse

    • @livquue
      @livquue Před 4 lety +16

      Bahaha 😂🤣

    • @renwao5483
      @renwao5483 Před 4 lety +20

      Lol😂😂

  • @thecitizenoftheinternet1077
    @thecitizenoftheinternet1077 Před 4 lety +7688

    Mario has really changed.

  • @muharremrevani3895
    @muharremrevani3895 Před 3 lety +1333

    Epic. A fun fact: the soldiers that watched this speech marched straight from there to the battle... Germans were that close

  • @analizin
    @analizin Před 4 lety +8755

    When *WE* hear Stalin’s voice for the first time

    • @justarandomguy3712
      @justarandomguy3712 Před 4 lety +377

      I search this just to listen to his voice

    • @TimMaxShift
      @TimMaxShift Před 4 lety +105

      @@justarandomguy3712 czcams.com/video/zqyRoke3TAI/video.html 1952y his last speech. without translation. Unfortunately only native speakers can understand his Russian, because of strong Georgian accent))
      czcams.com/video/CieQgFW5CcM/video.html 1936y

    • @sarilimanto854
      @sarilimanto854 Před 4 lety +209

      First time?

    • @justarandomguy3712
      @justarandomguy3712 Před 4 lety +66

      @@sarilimanto854 yep

    • @connor-cx5wc
      @connor-cx5wc Před 4 lety +17

      Marius Herscu Stern we*

  • @Hmm_F
    @Hmm_F Před 4 lety +1818

    The most epic thing about this parade is that the soldiers went straight to the front after it.

    • @dnickaroo3574
      @dnickaroo3574 Před 2 lety +98

      It was the counter-attack that threw the invaders into the wastes of Winter.

    • @DavidL1986
      @DavidL1986 Před 2 lety +85

      I genuinely thought some of them looked scared in the face. That explains it.. they knew what was coming

    • @wolfpack6018
      @wolfpack6018 Před 2 lety +26

      of course they did they went to defend the Great Motherland

    • @borisnegrarosa9113
      @borisnegrarosa9113 Před 2 lety +44

      @@DavidL1986 They were proud to fight for Stalin.

    • @benh2678
      @benh2678 Před 2 lety +10

      @@dnickaroo3574 No, the counter offensive took place in december

  • @thecitizenoftheinternet1077
    @thecitizenoftheinternet1077 Před 4 lety +4028

    Fun fact: Stalin stayed in Moscow throughout the entire war. Even when the germans were dangerously close to the city he didn't leave.

    • @ailachanel873
      @ailachanel873 Před 4 lety +653

      he do it in order to keep the moral of Red army

    • @yakutza3922
      @yakutza3922 Před 4 lety +493

      Of course, he had a lot of enemies, who wanted to replace him. He afraid that civil war could begin. And he completely understood that, if he escapes, he would become a traitor. So he even did not trade his own son for Paulus field marshal after stalingrad battle. So... I think he deserved respects, of course he awful, but a great, greater of greatest.

    • @livethefuture2492
      @livethefuture2492 Před 4 lety +107

      he already had a lot of enemies, the whole country might have erupted in civil war if he simply abandoned his post and lost control of the army.

    • @1vlaadchamp198
      @1vlaadchamp198 Před 4 lety +310

      @crystalmdn1 hitler was in a bunker, stalin was in the kremlin

    • @jimd9606
      @jimd9606 Před 4 lety +89

      @@1vlaadchamp198 (big difference) Hitler was in a bunker because Berlin was already taken by soviet forces..

  • @Rustycaddy17
    @Rustycaddy17 Před 4 lety +5735

    Stalin spoke Russian with a thick and heavy Georgian accent. Did you know that Russian was his second language, and he didn’t learn it until he was around 10 years old?

    • @ethanedwards422
      @ethanedwards422 Před 4 lety +603

      He learnt Russian while learning to become a priest at a church in Georgia. Where he witnessed Russian authorities hanging people often.

    • @Rustycaddy17
      @Rustycaddy17 Před 4 lety +348

      @@ethanedwards422 Hence why he probably had a huge hatred against the Russian Orthodox Church.

    • @skidadle5473
      @skidadle5473 Před 4 lety +294

      He's russian actually pretty good for non native speaker

    • @samernabeel7822
      @samernabeel7822 Před 4 lety +29

      Is Stalin considered white ? Can some white people answer me please

    • @AppleUploader
      @AppleUploader Před 4 lety +97

      Samer Nabeel Yes

  • @inspectoralexei3694
    @inspectoralexei3694 Před 4 lety +6494

    When the german kid reminds the class about homework

    • @Nyxrucht
      @Nyxrucht Před 4 lety +534

      Some kid : maam you forgot about our homework
      All kids in the class : Comrades, red army, and red navy men...

    • @among-us-99999
      @among-us-99999 Před 4 lety +60

      tfw the German kid teams up with the Russian kid and builds a wall

    • @greenytoaster
      @greenytoaster Před 4 lety +9

      it's russian

    • @luca_4342
      @luca_4342 Před 4 lety +14

      i am from the same country as Stalin so I would be the one doing the speech

    • @ivolgax4951
      @ivolgax4951 Před 4 lety +2

      Nuggy yeah, and no, Cuz he was born in (Now our days Georgia) but at that time it was the Russian Empire, so Georgia wasn’t really a country it was more like a part of the country so you should say that your from that region he was from, sorry for correcting you comrade:))

  • @jorgenunes2126
    @jorgenunes2126 Před 3 lety +546

    «The enemy is not as strong as some terror-stricken pseudo-intellectuals picture him. The devil is not as terrible as he is painted».
    Great speech.

  • @therothegreen1239
    @therothegreen1239 Před 4 lety +2209

    6:44 when you step in nails

  • @elijahkelley7616
    @elijahkelley7616 Před 4 lety +3052

    Drinking game - take a shot of tequila every time someone says they thought he'd have a deeper voice.

  • @Crosmando
    @Crosmando Před 3 lety +982

    To those people saying he hasn't got a drop of charisma - it's intentional, he's trying to come across as very calm. At this time German troops were all over the Western USSR and it looked like Moscow, Leningrad itself might fall. He did not want to come across as panicked, it was about building confidence, reminding the people the German army wasn't invincible.

    • @harukrentz435
      @harukrentz435 Před 2 lety +86

      People expect clowns like Hitler or Mussolini??

    • @tonyxx4514
      @tonyxx4514 Před 2 lety +8

      @@harukrentz435 ?

    • @allengreene9954
      @allengreene9954 Před 2 lety +78

      @@tonyxx4514 Mussolini and Hitler were known for being very Hammy and Over The Top in their approach.

    • @tonyxx4514
      @tonyxx4514 Před 2 lety +5

      @@allengreene9954 ok

    • @MrAitraining
      @MrAitraining Před 2 lety +90

      Stalin always tried to portray himself as just one of the comrades in speech, his clothes and demeanor. No pageantry or over the top self promotion. He was leader for life. He knew it and Everyone else knew it.

  • @LMSimp2005
    @LMSimp2005 Před 4 lety +936

    2:21 The horse says its ok with that

  • @chompchompmaster2885
    @chompchompmaster2885 Před 4 lety +1354

    I thought his voice would be lower and kinda scary

    • @_TRIAD_
      @_TRIAD_ Před 4 lety +224

      Nah, that's Hitler

    • @ThePeanutButterCup13
      @ThePeanutButterCup13 Před 4 lety +16

      @@_TRIAD_ keep wishing fasci

    • @venuasaur560
      @venuasaur560 Před 4 lety +20

      @@_TRIAD_ not really that's just his speech voice

    • @andrewdeen1
      @andrewdeen1 Před 4 lety +101

      his voice is still scary as shit when you realize he murdered MILLIONS of people with colored pencils

    • @Goran1138
      @Goran1138 Před 4 lety +169

      @@andrewdeen1
      Oh yeah, dat Soljenitsyn tales again.
      In 1937 only 600 000 was shot by political reasons.
      Others just was jailed for typical non-political crimes. And % of the jailed people in the Stalin times was much lower, then in the "democratic" times in the 90s.
      Stalin is a hero for Russians for reasons. And in reality he was an smart man with strong sence of humor, not a crazy maniac.

  • @danielculpepper9258
    @danielculpepper9258 Před 3 lety +400

    His non- Russian (Georgian) accent is striking! One suddenly realises that the Soviet Union was not only Russia...he keeps saying “our country” then adds on “all our countries”...

    • @tamilaromanov6575
      @tamilaromanov6575 Před 3 lety +21

      yes he was georgian from town gori

    • @hardkapitalizm1101
      @hardkapitalizm1101 Před 3 lety +4

      Stalin was a Russian Nationalist.

    • @danielculpepper9258
      @danielculpepper9258 Před 3 lety +24

      @@hardkapitalizm1101 According to his own words, he went through different stages in his beliefs. He was a Georgian nationalist first before anything else! Later on as a Soviet leader, he issued a Russification orders but only because this was serving the Communist agenda of unifying the Soviets! Ultimately communists don’t believe in ethnic groups or divisions. He also killed more Russians than people from any other ethnicity or minority groups.

    • @hardkapitalizm1101
      @hardkapitalizm1101 Před 3 lety +2

      @@danielculpepper9258 Yes and he calls his people “Russian nation”

    • @dnickaroo3574
      @dnickaroo3574 Před 2 lety +38

      The Upper House was the Soviet of the Nationalities, in which about 110 different nationalities were equally represented. It could veto any Legislation. From 1917 Stalin was the Commissioner for the Nationalities before the Soviet itself could be formed. He had defined what a nationality was in writings before the Revolution. That is why indigenous peoples still live on their land as they have for thousands of years.

  • @khoipham4443
    @khoipham4443 Před 5 lety +1252

    Stalin: we had only just begun to create it-
    The horse at 2:22 be like:

    • @khoipham4443
      @khoipham4443 Před 5 lety +180

      Migueldastreta30 nah, he just agree to what comrade Stalin said.

    • @themanok178
      @themanok178 Před 4 lety +14

      Its a camal

    • @euunitedwestand1471
      @euunitedwestand1471 Před 4 lety +9

      Another ,,German”... . Buddy.. Russia overtook Germany in production of tanks ,planes etc .

    • @nikolai1669
      @nikolai1669 Před 4 lety +22

      The horse drank too much vodka

    • @maxim7269
      @maxim7269 Před 4 lety +54

      @Migueldastreta30 no, the horse was just agreeing to stalin's speech

  • @williamlamb7026
    @williamlamb7026 Před 3 lety +334

    Me: I promis I won’t get political
    Me after 2 drinks:

  • @TheShakthirvd
    @TheShakthirvd Před 2 lety +571

    I still can't believe how Stalin executed this plan successfully. "We have temporarily lost some of the regions. Germany is bleeding white, her manpower is giving out. Germany cannot keep up such an effort for any long time. Maybe, few months or half a year or a year Germany will fall." And it happened exactly like Stalin calculated.

    • @imatreebelieveme6094
      @imatreebelieveme6094 Před 2 lety +5

      The power of a Marxist-Leninist/dialectical materialist worldview. Say what you will but if you view it as the German imperialists fighting the entire working class of the USSR there was no chance they could ever truly win. Germany was forced into war because of the economy being solely reliant on war production and stolen wealth, the result of the war was never to be doubted, only blinded by fascist idealism could anyone think it was a winnable war for Germany.

    • @grimreaper492
      @grimreaper492 Před 2 lety +13

      @@imatreebelieveme6094 people who understand military tactics and strategy better than you or me a 1000x times have no need for any kind of erroneous dialectical marxist doctrine, even the soviet generals like Zhukov and Rokossovskiy didn't use dialectics in the war, they just used their experience and skill as commanders.
      I think those communist party generals and officers didn't even know what dialectics meant because it makes so little sense in general, they just pretended they understood it but just used their skill and general war experience and knowledge as commanders.
      You are right that winning against the USSR was very difficult and basically impossible but that is due to many different factors such as Germany not having strong enough logistics to totally defeat the USSR, terrain factors such as mud blocking their mechanized advance, others like winter factors and the USSR simply having a much bigger quantity of material such as mortars, artillery guns, rocket launchers and tanks, not to mention in 1943 the USSR had a numerical superiority so there was no chance of the Germans continuing the offensive once the eastern front had a russian numerical superiority and better material and logistics (even though in the beginning the USSR had a 1:2 numerical inferiority on the eastern front).
      Many military historians have reached this conclusion and they understand this 1000x better and they have never needed to use anything remotely similar to dialectics.
      Also what you said is factually wrong, germany's economy was not prepared for war, it was not completely mobilized even in 1944 and was still operating as a consumer economy, compared to the US, britain and the USSR which were completely geared for war production at that point ignoring the consumer economy

    • @imatreebelieveme6094
      @imatreebelieveme6094 Před 2 lety +42

      @@grimreaper492 The comment was about Stalin and he literally wrote a book on dialectical materialism, so I think he understood it.
      Also by "reliant on war production and stolen wealth" I was talking about how the unemployment problem was largely solved via employment in the arms industry that was created by giving out MeFo checks that had to be eventually serviced, which was done to a not insignificant part with expropriated wealth of those groups that the regime oppressed.

    • @grimreaper492
      @grimreaper492 Před 2 lety +2

      @@imatreebelieveme6094 old bolshevik communist party bureaucrats like Stalin had some degree of "understanding" of dialectics to the degree that it is semantically coherent, but they were not the ones who were actually leading the army and leading major soviet offensives
      Actual generals who lead the red army to victory like Zhukov and Rokossovskiy in Operation Bagration they didn't need any kind of esoteric and erroneous doctrines such as dialectics at all.
      Soviet Deep Battle doctrine was actually invented by ex-tsarist military officers who had no clue about marxism.

    • @imatreebelieveme6094
      @imatreebelieveme6094 Před 2 lety +25

      @@grimreaper492 Well he wasn't exactly talking about battles and strategy but more about economics, which he did know about. I take it you don't even think dialectical materialism is a coherent framework of thought so I don't know how we're going to reach an understanding here, since I do think it is.

  • @vishnu.unnikrishnan
    @vishnu.unnikrishnan Před 5 lety +1438

    "THE DEVIL IS NOT AS TERRIBLE AS HE IS PAINTED"-wow!!..what a fantastic QUOTE!!!!!!!!!

  • @SiameseTankist
    @SiameseTankist Před 4 lety +946

    When the parade finished they went straight to the battlefield

    • @shabegsan
      @shabegsan Před 3 lety +153

      And they proved every word of Stalin about red army Right...

    • @pixel6698
      @pixel6698 Před 3 lety +50

      Sad to know a lot of these guys likely didn't make it back home.

    • @Sam-go3mb
      @Sam-go3mb Před 3 lety +1

      @@shabegsan Here we see a man commenting from morally bankrupt, lonely fantasy-land.

    • @Abu-Talha-Al-Kurdi
      @Abu-Talha-Al-Kurdi Před 3 lety +1

      @JOSEPH Stalin Hi comrade

    • @THEBIGGAME683
      @THEBIGGAME683 Před 3 lety +28

      Red army be like!
      Winter war!
      World: Red army are pussies!
      Manchuria attack!
      world: Lol red army are just lucky!
      Ww2 beginning:
      World: red army are no more!
      Ww2 ending:
      World: woah! Wermacht are no more! URAAA!

  • @mogol109
    @mogol109 Před 2 lety +244

    *Consider the following:* If you felt this speech is very motivational and emotional, how much joy would this speech have brought the russian soldiers who listened to the speech in person?
    We cannot even imagine the emotions a soldier felt during that speech. All we heard is the deafening scream in the last seconds of this video and the occasional pictures of the soldiers standing or marching.

  • @bloxknight1145
    @bloxknight1145 Před 4 lety +1727

    Girls locker room: oh Ryan is so cute!!
    Boys locker room:

    • @ultron-5600
      @ultron-5600 Před 4 lety +23

      Galaxy Knight
      Men in locker room: Playing Horst Wessel Lied.

    • @PieGrip
      @PieGrip Před 4 lety +13

      Girl: Cathy! Your necklace! What it is made of? Its unbreakable.
      Cathy: STALINIUM, MY COMRADES.
      Boys in class, during breaktime: So, we need to craft an armor for the girl's locker room, to protect them from anything, including shooters.
      Boy: I'll make the blueprint.
      Cathy: Hello, comrade, what are you making?
      Boy: Stalinium Locker Armor 1. This will help, when the shooter shoots the locker to kill one of the students, but instead of killed, the student survived because the true power of Stalinium. Stalinium locks might be included.

    • @LONNESYRUPBITCH
      @LONNESYRUPBITCH Před 4 lety +2

      ryan has a small pp

    • @hidof9598
      @hidof9598 Před 4 lety +3

      @Deenie Beenie, he is domineering!

    • @texgg682
      @texgg682 Před 4 lety +2

      facist

  • @mondociaociao
    @mondociaociao Před 2 lety +307

    This speech shows a very intelligent and rational man, not a clown with hysterical speech like Hitler or Mussolini.

    • @RealSnuuy
      @RealSnuuy Před 2 lety +28

      Nah he just sounds dead like every other russian

    • @user-wf8mo1qg9j
      @user-wf8mo1qg9j Před 2 lety +1

      @@RealSnuuy идиот, он не был русским

    • @krindzsman4290
      @krindzsman4290 Před 2 lety +18

      They weren't hysterical at all.

    • @thefirstjim
      @thefirstjim Před 2 lety +10

      if they were so hysterical, why did so many people follow them? cant say a whole nation is dumb, and both hitler and mussolini knew what they were doing

    • @mondociaociao
      @mondociaociao Před 2 lety +40

      @@thefirstjim Yes, study sociology, study about mass hysteria. I'm Italian, I know what happened in my country.

  • @Hello-zg2ev
    @Hello-zg2ev Před 2 lety +161

    This guy is a pure badass....
    When half of Russia have fallen , he talks about liberation of Europe and made his words come true.
    Gods, Red salute

    • @ColonialEagle5455
      @ColonialEagle5455 Před 2 lety +12

      I wouldn’t say ‘liberate’ more like subjugating and occupying foreign countries.

    • @Nooobus_
      @Nooobus_ Před 2 lety +58

      @@ColonialEagle5455 american flag pfp, opinion discarded

    • @MrDarudin
      @MrDarudin Před 2 lety +4

      Well. Subjugation is still better than total annihilation. The Soviet empire may not have been the nicest to live in but at least you would be allowed to live.

    • @Nooobus_
      @Nooobus_ Před 2 lety +8

      @@MrDarudin good thing soviets werent either of those!

    • @azael2078
      @azael2078 Před 2 lety +6

      @@ColonialEagle5455 are you talking abt america?

  • @suedetree970
    @suedetree970 Před 4 lety +387

    He sounds like a friendly guy. I think we should hangout more!

    • @hidof9598
      @hidof9598 Před 4 lety +45

      Don't annoy him
      He won't hit you
      He will have you shot!😀

    • @JS-gw5bg
      @JS-gw5bg Před 3 lety +6

      Chances are high he'd have you executed, just like his former close friends and party members.

    • @solidslfy2879
      @solidslfy2879 Před 2 lety +5

      Everyone in this sub comment is retarded as shit

    • @user-hz5wy5vx1k
      @user-hz5wy5vx1k Před 2 lety +4

      @J S Yes, sure, he executed the whole country. The soldiers who fought with Hitler were in fact zombies. Have a brain transplantation and come back.

    • @JS-gw5bg
      @JS-gw5bg Před 2 lety +2

      @@user-hz5wy5vx1k maybe read my comment again. I never said that.

  • @chrishoatson3186
    @chrishoatson3186 Před 3 lety +77

    Its sad to think how many of the soldiers shown never saw their home again

  • @doctor-atuti
    @doctor-atuti Před 3 lety +96

    As a Russian, very much knowing that Stalin was Georgian, I am very surprised that I heard his voice for the first time ever only today. And it's strange that I never thought that his accent was thick Georgian...

    • @aliabesaa
      @aliabesaa Před 2 lety

      انت روسي لاتفتخر بنفسك كثيرا 🌿🌷

    • @RefriedBean956
      @RefriedBean956 Před 2 lety +4

      @@aliabesaa he should be like damn I wished I was Russian smh

    • @caiolima5016
      @caiolima5016 Před rokem

      ​@@aliabesaano

    • @Sonic_exe856
      @Sonic_exe856 Před 3 měsíci

      He was born in georgia thats why

  • @Gizo02
    @Gizo02 Před 7 měsíci +10

    Stalin showing himself to the Soviet people and delivering this speech in public, with the German army so close to Moscow at the time, was in contrast to Hitler holing himself up and avoiding public appearances when the Allies were close to Berlin.

  • @prateekp8696
    @prateekp8696 Před 4 lety +335

    Stalin had this composure when Nazis were 12 miles from Moscow, Soviet government had been shifted from Moscow much earlier, Stalin decided to stay although.
    This man created the horror that Hitler lived rest of his life with, Soviets.

    • @Swordisk
      @Swordisk Před 4 lety +7

      Prateek Prakhar the footage of him was refilmed. If you pay attention the soldiers are outside in the cold with their breath showing, while Stalin has no cold breath

    • @user-we8ti8zj5s
      @user-we8ti8zj5s Před 4 lety +42

      @@Swordisk There was a parade, and Stalin made this speech on Red Square, but the film crew was not warned about the early start of the parade, and they were late for the parade. Stalin had to repeat his speech, but already in the building.

    • @TheTruth-sd8ey
      @TheTruth-sd8ey Před 4 lety +25

      @@user-we8ti8zj5s he must've been pissed off. I bet the whole film crew went to gulag

    • @Saleh-994
      @Saleh-994 Před 4 lety

      @@TheTruth-sd8ey 😂😂😂

    • @levvy3006
      @levvy3006 Před 4 lety +54

      Stalin didn't hide in a bunker when the Nazis were in western Moscow. Hitler went in his bunker the second the Russians crossed the German border.

  • @Def_7470
    @Def_7470 Před 2 lety +321

    You can see how much courage and faith he had in his army.

    • @kentuckypausal
      @kentuckypausal Před 2 lety

      Putin just scratching balls in his office giving orders. Russian soldiers today are not as motivated as these men when they have a leader to boost their morale.

    • @MrAitraining
      @MrAitraining Před 2 lety +30

      Largely because he didn't care about casualties and over a million women served as well. Soviets lost an insane amount of civilians and soldiers during the war. Far and away the most of any country.

    • @jagdpanther2224
      @jagdpanther2224 Před 2 lety

      @@MrAitraining Stalin cares the casualties, if the German nazi army taken over the entire Russia, the death tolls will be 10 times higher!

    • @lenny3802
      @lenny3802 Před 2 lety +2

      Yeah its for liberation guys...

    • @rebelfriend9006
      @rebelfriend9006 Před 2 lety +12

      @@MrAitraining what was Stalin supposed to do about the Soviet civilians
      And the Chinese took about as many deaths as the Soviets

  • @canonethunderxnaturaldisas8084

    6:27 i bet this is what some of you guys came for

  • @leavenedits5399
    @leavenedits5399 Před 4 lety +668

    The russian kid when he has to do a presentation infront of the class

    • @Rustycaddy17
      @Rustycaddy17 Před 4 lety +28

      Stalin was Georgian, and he killed millions of Russians.

    • @throwfascistsintopits3062
      @throwfascistsintopits3062 Před 4 lety +46

      Rustycaddy Do you want to say that Yeltsin was a good ruler...?

    • @ivolgax4951
      @ivolgax4951 Před 4 lety +23

      Rustycaddy im sorry for correcting you but he wasn’t really from Georgia, Georgia at that time he was born wasn’t really a thing cause at that time Georgia was a part of the Russian Empire so he was more like a person from another region of the Russian empire, not another country but another region:)

    • @Rustycaddy17
      @Rustycaddy17 Před 4 lety +20

      @@ivolgax4951 Doesn't matter if Georgia was part of the Russian Empire. During those times, there was no such thing as nationality or citizenship. Even if you were born in the Russian Empire as a Ukrainian, Georgian, Kazakh, etc. you were still considered a minority. Stalin was a Georgian nationalist before he turned into a Marxist-Communist.

    • @levvy3006
      @levvy3006 Před 4 lety +27

      @@Rustycaddy17 Stalin didn't kill anyone.

  • @hongyihuang1792
    @hongyihuang1792 Před 4 lety +359

    Whatever you might think of him, you can't deny his contribution of beating the axis.

    • @Jalanski28
      @Jalanski28 Před 3 lety +13

      Without the US and british in the western front, he is nothing.

    • @drinkyourwater1039
      @drinkyourwater1039 Před 3 lety +104

      @@Jalanski28
      Of course the Lend Lease was important. But people always forget about the soviet manpower, industry... And sheer fucking balls, what would happen if the germans captured the soviet oil fields? The Steel farms? The Nickel mines? It would be a way bloodier war, maybe the germans could even create a peace and begin a cold war with the US
      But there it was... With balls of steel, the Soviet Bear, encircled Stalingrad, Won Kursk, Destroyed the germans in bagration, and pushed them to Berlin, alone? No. But still. They gave their lives for the end of the fascists, they did not let the pigs torture and kill innocent "inferior" races...
      They caused 2/3 of all WW2 German casualties...
      Who?
      The Red Menace.

    • @rome316ae3
      @rome316ae3 Před 3 lety +7

      Lol most contribution was given by generals like zukokov. Stalin did not care even if his army dies

    • @whenlifegivesyouLSD
      @whenlifegivesyouLSD Před 3 lety +54

      And that the red army is the one who actually captured berlin
      And the fact that the eastern front was much much bloodier than the western front

    • @rome316ae3
      @rome316ae3 Před 3 lety +1

      @@whenlifegivesyouLSD no Germany got banned from speed hack . That's why Soviet won

  • @Kablowshky
    @Kablowshky Před 4 lety +195

    2:20 wow even the horse agrees.

    • @NickariusSN
      @NickariusSN Před 4 lety +3

      You were not allowed to take off your glasses, we are supposed to seem cool

    • @texgg682
      @texgg682 Před 4 lety +1

      facist

    • @organicsharma3266
      @organicsharma3266 Před 3 lety

      someone stole your comment but no problem,its our comment

  • @therevelator31
    @therevelator31 Před 11 měsíci +23

    simple, straight, and from the heart. no histrionics or bombastic rhetoric, exactly what the people of an invaded country on the verge of catastrophe needed to hear.

  • @vazeerkhan4838
    @vazeerkhan4838 Před 4 lety +338

    LOVE THIS QUOTE...
    The enemy is not as strong as some terror-stricken Pseudo-intellectuals picture him. The Devil 😈 is not as terrible as he is painted.

    • @danielcarneiro5483
      @danielcarneiro5483 Před 3 lety +3

      me too

    • @FlatEarthKiller
      @FlatEarthKiller Před 3 lety +3

      same

    • @FlatEarthKiller
      @FlatEarthKiller Před 3 lety +22

      @@behindyou3689 Well stalin said, the soldiers of the USSR defended the country with their lives, And if you go to reality, stalin did NOT kill people. He only just ordered others to kill. Even if it meant he killed it does not mean that. His minions refused to give ukrainians food.
      Basically it can be the army that killed the people, or just the population that killed others.

    • @nathanielleack4842
      @nathanielleack4842 Před 3 lety +1

      Look any man who was buddy buddy with Lavrentiy Beria is not a fucking good man

    • @ethanmorrison814
      @ethanmorrison814 Před 3 lety +26

      @@behindyou3689 Stalin personally ate all the grain in Ukraine

  • @subaruwashi
    @subaruwashi Před 5 lety +564

    So it me

  • @johnparven6187
    @johnparven6187 Před 5 lety +828

    Say what you want about the man. This speech is epic. To arms comrades.

    • @JoseGarcia-ww1bn
      @JoseGarcia-ww1bn Před 5 lety +34

      He wasnt really a speaker

    • @thekgb8270
      @thekgb8270 Před 5 lety +59

      @Sneakston We want to know your location

    • @thomasj.5208
      @thomasj.5208 Před 4 lety +62

      @Andrew Zadworny No, but many people would tell you that. The famine was caused by primarily by the kulaks (the noble peasants), who hoarded grain and slaughtered their animals to protest the Soviet government in the middle of a massive heatwave. They essentially caused the death of 2.5 million Ukrainians.

    • @thomasj.5208
      @thomasj.5208 Před 4 lety +49

      @Andrew Zadworny He didn't actually cause the famine, as I explained earlier. During the time that the famine happened however, the Soviet Union was collectivizing agriculture to improve outputs (which it ultimately did). The kulaks being private farm owners resisted, even though the majority of people supporting the government. What the kulaks did was by no means justifiable.
      As for the purges, 800k people were executed under Stalin's rule, most not even being his direct order. Don't forget, that number includes just regular criminals who were executed. Many of the executions however came from the NKVD under Yezhov. He purposely created chaos by executing innocents and was later executed for his crimes (with Stalin's support).

    • @afonya553
      @afonya553 Před 4 lety +13

      THE THREE BLIND CHICKENS a true communist would never go against Stalin. Or Lenin. Or Mao. Or Castro. Remember these 4

  • @PistaZOV
    @PistaZOV Před 4 lety +117

    2:21 *heavy metal starts playing in horses head*

  • @NameOfTheChannel
    @NameOfTheChannel Před 2 lety +220

    Stalin's voice suits him. He's got that voice of a wise grandpa that has seen it all, and is therefore spreading his vast knowledge to his grandchildren.

    • @schnitzelbratwurst9613
      @schnitzelbratwurst9613 Před rokem

      he is alcoholic demon. I hope he burns in hell

    • @suem6004
      @suem6004 Před rokem +9

      A monster

    • @RoCK3rAD
      @RoCK3rAD Před rokem +20

      Father of Nations for a reason

    • @suem6004
      @suem6004 Před rokem

      @@vuk.505srb Says the Bolshevik loser brigade. Did not work out last time. 60 million too few to slaughter? Volunteer.

    • @kid_toucher
      @kid_toucher Před rokem +1

      ​@@vuk.505srbCry about what? Stalin died, the Soviet Union collapsed and Russia is now pathetic against Ukraine

  • @alinakirill
    @alinakirill Před rokem +26

    It's so funny to read the comments of people from Europe and the USA who write comments like "I thought Stalin had a deep, sinister voice, but he speaks like a normal guy. wow!"
    Did they really think that Comrade Stalin was some kind of cartoon villain from a comic book? 🤡
    Perhaps this is their first step towards questioning all the lies that were poured on the USSR during the years of the Cold War. I hope.

  • @pingua_n
    @pingua_n Před 4 lety +309

    Some video: -about stalin-
    People with the name stalin on yotube:
    Allow us to introduce ourselves.

    • @texgg682
      @texgg682 Před 4 lety +2

      FACIST

    • @mabeSc
      @mabeSc Před 3 lety +2

      @@texgg682 How do you have the energy to respond to all of the comments on here with the word "fascist"?

    • @realteimopielinen
      @realteimopielinen Před 3 lety +2

      @@mabeSc they said "FACIST" lol

    • @mabeSc
      @mabeSc Před 3 lety +2

      @@realteimopielinen well , that too. I had a good laugh he got like 200 comments wrong XDD

  • @Iris_n_Parti
    @Iris_n_Parti Před 4 lety +522

    even though they say he is a bad person, there is still the fact that this speech is inspirational

    • @stantorren4400
      @stantorren4400 Před 4 lety +10

      But he is still a paranoid knohead

    • @stantorren4400
      @stantorren4400 Před 4 lety +6

      Who was reponsible for the famines that happened in Soviet Union?

    • @user-gm3wr9dc9m
      @user-gm3wr9dc9m Před 4 lety +176

      @@stantorren4400 probably droughts that even caused famine in polish and romanian eastern ukraine and belorussia, parasite wheat fungi, kulaks that mass destroyed grain and animals and the fact that russian empire had famine cycles that repeated literally every 8 years.

    • @areulsois8411
      @areulsois8411 Před 4 lety +15

      its not "they say" stalin, like many other leaders at the time, was a murderer regardless of whether holodomor was intentional or not.

    • @gustavofring9148
      @gustavofring9148 Před 3 lety +20

      @@AshliBlattgold yeah man let's just ignore the famine and millions that died under his rule

  • @josephstalin6996
    @josephstalin6996 Před 3 lety +79

    Miss this old day

  • @shamusclarke7512
    @shamusclarke7512 Před 2 lety +257

    The toughest and bravest men I have ever seen. The Soviet Union was really the country that won the war and its people have a right to be proud of it.

    • @vadimanreev4585
      @vadimanreev4585 Před 2 lety +41

      Not Russia, comrade, but the USSR won the war. In the USSR there were more than two hundred nationalities united by class consciousness.

    • @MrHejke
      @MrHejke Před rokem +3

      They have no other choice than to fight. In the first weeks of Barbarossa few million soldiers of Red Army deserted or run away. They found out soon that Germans woud treat them worse than animals, so it's futile to try fighting for the other side. Also, soon special NKVD units started shooting in the back of heads of those soldiers who gave slightest hints of wanting to step back, retreat or desert. In other words:
      Germans would kill if they desert or their own people will kill them, the only choice left was to fight.

    • @MrHejke
      @MrHejke Před rokem

      @@vadimanreev4585 Yeah, "class consciousness", nice phrase for fear of NKVD and nazis.

    • @vadimanreev4585
      @vadimanreev4585 Před rokem +15

      @@MrHejke Both of my grandfathers fought and the one who remained alive never spoke about the fear of the NKVD.
      In total, thirty-four million people passed through the Red Army during the war.During the years of the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945, a total of 999,510 Soviet servicemen were convicted (including 376,300 for desertion), of which:
      427,910 people were sent to penal units to the front
      436,600 people were sent to places of imprisonment
      135,000 people were shot[1]

    • @MrHejke
      @MrHejke Před rokem

      @@vadimanreev4585 Sure, due to your anecdotal, family strory we can throw out all historical evidence of NKVD terror at the rear, and pretend like order 227 never existed and Soviet Union wasn't one of the most genocidal totalitarian state that ever existed (close only to communist China).

  • @nicck
    @nicck Před 4 lety +164

    This man was never interested in the glory. Some say he was power hungry, and that may be true, but given the other options to lead the Soviet Union, he was probably the most pragmatic candidate.
    Really interesting figure. Mysterious too, because apparently he could go more than a year without making a public appearance.

    • @aninditapaul9291
      @aninditapaul9291 Před 3 lety +22

      He wasn't power hungry at all actually. If you want to know more then I can tell you.

    • @ishalakbar4294
      @ishalakbar4294 Před 3 lety +2

      @@aninditapaul9291 can you explain? i don't believe he was power hungry but id like to hear

    • @aninditapaul9291
      @aninditapaul9291 Před 3 lety +20

      @@ishalakbar4294 Well so my reasoning is that towards the beginning of his rule, the entire Politburo had asked him to be Premier, but he had declined and instead nominated Molotov. Also, whenever he had a meeting with the Politburo, he would let them all speak before voicing his own opinion. So I think he wasn't power hungry.

    • @ishalakbar4294
      @ishalakbar4294 Před 3 lety +9

      @@aninditapaul9291 Interesting, thanks for letting me know. I heard he tried resigning multiple times and he almost drank himself to death, which definitely doesn't sound like something a power hungry dictator would do. I've also heard that he hated the personality cult surrounding him and denounced it any chance he got.

    • @aninditapaul9291
      @aninditapaul9291 Před 3 lety +2

      @@ishalakbar4294 Well, thanks to you, I got more stuff I can throw in the faces of people who say he was power hungry. When exactly did he almost drink himself to death, by the way?

  • @wolfpack6018
    @wolfpack6018 Před 2 lety +48

    There is literally no better motivational speech than this

  • @tibchy144
    @tibchy144 Před 3 lety +76

    for all intents and purposes one of the greatest speeches of all time

  • @johndowzard3628
    @johndowzard3628 Před 4 lety +42

    It escapes us that this General Secretary gave us Freedom via the supreme sacrifice of millions of Red Army comrades....lest we forget!!!!

  • @howardmctroy3303
    @howardmctroy3303 Před 5 lety +194

    He was a very measured speaker compared to Hitler and Mussolini. Perhaps that can be an indication of a better tactician?

    • @howardmctroy3303
      @howardmctroy3303 Před 5 lety +13

      @Sp3nd Coin During his speeches he would read from notes and drink wine. Working the room wasn't a strength of his. He relied on other skills to enforce his will.

    • @tNigel
      @tNigel Před 5 lety +45

      Hitler was a better tactician than Stalin, but the same can't be said about Mussolini, who is considerably worse than both of them.

    • @Hugh_Morris
      @Hugh_Morris Před 4 lety +84

      Stalin didn’t need to raise his voice like those two

    • @artificialintelligence8328
      @artificialintelligence8328 Před 4 lety +51

      @Wall Yoof
      The Germans were fighting a single land war on a single front from June 1941 to July 1943. By then they were losing the offensive initiative in Kursk.

    • @anwarulhaque4264
      @anwarulhaque4264 Před 4 lety +27

      During the battle of eastern front, germans didnt have to fight western front coz they already defeated france by then. The western front was quite till 1944.

  • @angelamagnus6615
    @angelamagnus6615 Před 4 lety +68

    This is how a leader should behave. Appear in front of your believers, when the crisis comes. Stalin could have escaped from Moscow, but he stayed because he believed in Soviet victory.

    • @angelamagnus6615
      @angelamagnus6615 Před 4 lety +2

      Ironuniverse 1230 true dat! Though it is not totally his fault. The entire Communist party shared that responsibility.

    • @Heypatchdoggo8745
      @Heypatchdoggo8745 Před 2 lety

      @Ironuniverse 1230 as a Communist i agree with you Stalin Made Mistakes by getting his own People killed as well

    • @user-hz5wy5vx1k
      @user-hz5wy5vx1k Před 2 lety

      @@Heypatchdoggo8745 Yes, he killed the whole country and was the only man alive in USSR. His army in fact consisted of zombies.

    • @lenny3802
      @lenny3802 Před 2 lety

      Yeah its for liberation guys...

    • @neighborhoodmusicsnob5517
      @neighborhoodmusicsnob5517 Před 4 měsíci

      And he always made it clear that while he was the leader of the country, HE didn't defeat the Nazis. It was the combined work of all the people of the country that made it possible.

  • @utahraptor9288
    @utahraptor9288 Před 4 lety +26

    I’m shocked that in the recordings hitler had a deeper voice than Stalin. I always thought Stalin’s voice would be more intimidating. And Stalin would be taller but I guess not

    • @dnickaroo3574
      @dnickaroo3574 Před 2 lety +15

      Those who met Stalin say that he listened carefully to what was being said. In the Soviet Union they would say that he listened to the grass grow. American journalist, Anna Louise Strong, lived in the Soviet Union for about 20 years, and met Stalin. She wrote a report to Franklin D Roosevelt in 1941 -- he wanted to know how Stalin governed.

    • @VNn2023
      @VNn2023 Před rokem +1

      Hitler was THE worst monster ever.

  • @narendrarana3104
    @narendrarana3104 Před 4 lety +87

    I asked my grandfather about this and he told he made The Soviet union was the most glorious and feared country, till 1980.

    • @mylerwilson4879
      @mylerwilson4879 Před 4 lety +8

      He’s definitely a bastard

    • @Karatic
      @Karatic Před 4 lety +17

      more like till 1954

    • @Jalanski28
      @Jalanski28 Před 3 lety +7

      Feared? i agree. The reign of terror that was. Hahaha.

    • @Ivan-wp1ne1
      @Ivan-wp1ne1 Před 3 lety +3

      @@Jalanski28 not actually true. and yours was a small territory of nothing...

    • @renjurichard
      @renjurichard Před 3 lety

      @@Ivan-wp1ne1 your committing a tu quoque phallaxy.

  • @Cesar1492Enjoyer
    @Cesar1492Enjoyer Před 4 lety +106

    I expected Stalin to have a really manly deep voice. The mustache is still intimidating though.

    • @gustavofring9148
      @gustavofring9148 Před 3 lety +8

      @@benjaminrao3274 yes, let's just ignore the millions he killed during his brutal dictatorship

    • @aninditapaul9291
      @aninditapaul9291 Před 3 lety +24

      @@gustavofring9148 Let's just ignore the fact that you are ignoring facts, Mr. Barack Obama.

    • @gustavofring9148
      @gustavofring9148 Před 3 lety +2

      @@aninditapaul9291 ignoring exactly what facts? The only facts here are that he killed millions, jailed (and killed) political opponents to get power, made USSR more of a stalinist state rather than a communist one, only ruled to give himself power, etc.
      If you think I'm ignoring any facts whilst you not giving any, then maybe you are the one ignoring the facts because you are bias. also before you label me as a bias capitalist, I stand for neither side, both have killed many and done many scummy things to benefit themselves, that's just how the world works, those in power will always be a stain on the earth while people praise them (like you) unbeknownst to the atrocities committed against humanity

    • @aninditapaul9291
      @aninditapaul9291 Před 3 lety +16

      @@gustavofring9148 Ok, so first tell me every major time he "killed" someone. I will give you a detailed analysis from there. As for the other parts of your comment, people get rid of their poilitical opponents everyday, nothing unique to Stalin. And they would all be bad for the country anyway, so he actually did the country a favour by getting rid of them. And no, he didn't rule only to give himself power. Once when the entire Politburo asked Stalin to be Premier, he declined and voted for Molotov to be Premier instead. Does that sound power hungry to you? And that isn't even mentioning the fact that the Soviet Union and it's quality of life improved a lot under Stalin. Free food, free healthcare, free and compulsory education, people didn't live like rats in the fields anymore, and actually had money, guaranteed employment, poverty, illiteracy and unemployment went way down, among other things. How exactly is that "ruling just to give himself power"?

    • @gustavofring9148
      @gustavofring9148 Před 3 lety +1

      @@aninditapaul9291 also just because people often get rid of political opponents doesn't justify stalin doing it, also stalin did it on a much bigger scale

  • @GeneralissimusStalin17
    @GeneralissimusStalin17 Před 3 lety +108

    69 years since this show of defiance and a last stand in the capital of the Soviet motherland a show of the Russian and Soviet peoples great resistance, a show that Mother Russia shall never fall to her knees even once. Glory to the Red Army! Glory to Generalissimus Stalin! Glory to the victory of the Great October Socialist Revolution!

    • @T9RX3
      @T9RX3 Před 3 lety +1

      Russia fell to the socialist agenda in 1917

    • @gnas1897
      @gnas1897 Před 3 lety +9

      @@T9RX3 hahaha ikr it would have been better if they still had famines every 3 years huh ?

    • @T9RX3
      @T9RX3 Před 3 lety +1

      @@gnas1897 talk to Stalin if you want to talk about people who starved during his rule .......stay on topic

    • @gnas1897
      @gnas1897 Před 3 lety +10

      @@T9RX3 you were the first to talk about how epic the Russian empire was. I think you should have stayed on topic

    • @T9RX3
      @T9RX3 Před 3 lety

      @@gnas1897 take a course in comprehension ..... don't be ridiculous again

  • @syourke3
    @syourke3 Před 4 lety +57

    This was the real turning point of that war -,Moscow. Not Stalingrad. Moscow. That’s the first time the Wehrmacht was stopped and thrown back. This was probably Stalins finest hour. He refused to desert the city and instead he stayed to rally the people and the soldiers. That took guts.

    • @thebloodwolf9906
      @thebloodwolf9906 Před rokem +4

      When Nazi Germany launched Operation Barbarossa, Hitler knew that they weren’t as strong as the Soviet Union, if they wanted the Soviets to concede, they would have to win fast without giving the Soviets time to regroup. But in the end, he failed to take Moscow and lost the element of surprise, which gave Stalin the time to mobilize the full might of the Soviet Union.
      By the time the Wehrmacht had failed to take Moscow, it was all over for Nazi Germany, because they would always be outnumbered after the Soviets have fully mobilized for the war effort. At any point of the war after Operation Barbarossa commenced, the Germans had over 80% of their forces concentrated on the Eastern Front, and at no point in the war between 1942 and their undoing at the hands of the Red Army were they able to inflict as many casualties or advance faster in the than they did in the 2nd half of 1941.

    • @syourke3
      @syourke3 Před rokem +4

      @@thebloodwolf9906 I think that Hitler vastly underestimated the Soviet Union. He thought that the Russians were an inferior race and that they could not possibly defeat the mighty German army. He told his generals, "Just kick in the door and the whole rotten edifice will collapse". That arrogance was his undoing. He was completely taken by surprise at the huge number of Soviet tanks that appeared out of nowhere. It was Hitler's arrogance that cost him the war - if he had concentrated his attack on Moscow, he would have won. Instead, he spread his forces to thin across a front a thousand miles long. He did not understand the strategic importance of Moscow which was the hub of the Soviet rail system. He tried to take the oil fields of Baku, Moscow and Leningrad all at the same time - which was crazy.

    • @GreoGreo
      @GreoGreo Před rokem

      @@syourke3 I don't think Hitler would have still won.

    • @Emil.Fontanot
      @Emil.Fontanot Před rokem +2

      ​@@syourke3 Hitler knew exactly what he was doing. Concentrating the attack on Moscow was a stupid idea in which only his generals with outdated ideas believed. Hitler did not even want to attack Moscow because he knew that it would have been useless, his generals made Operation Typhoon without orders, that's why he dismissed a bunch of them for it. Hitler understood that such a war was about resources and Grand Strategy, not decisive battles or conquered cities. He still lost but overall he did nothing wrong strategically. He made mistakes during the war but he wasn't the only one

    • @Emil.Fontanot
      @Emil.Fontanot Před rokem

      Anyway for me the real turning point was Kursk. Moscow was too early to be a turning point while the Germans were still not doomed after Stalingrad unlike what many believe.

  • @victorlight9227
    @victorlight9227 Před 2 lety +9

    Stalin seems stoic, in a way that it contrast to hitter's heated, and eccentric way of delivering his speeches.

  • @comradestalin4826
    @comradestalin4826 Před 4 lety +262

    We stan

  • @biliminsrlar5752
    @biliminsrlar5752 Před 4 lety +52

    First time hearing his voice.

  • @nikolatesla708
    @nikolatesla708 Před 3 lety +40

    Thank you very much. It was a pleasure to hear the great Stalin speaking.

    • @nikolatesla708
      @nikolatesla708 Před 3 lety

      @卍 nice pants 😎

    • @kayvan671
      @kayvan671 Před 3 lety +6

      The Great?
      You mean that Guy who forced Communism on eastern Europe?

    • @nikolatesla708
      @nikolatesla708 Před 3 lety +13

      @@kayvan671 I mean the hero who liberated Eastern Europe from German occupation and put an end to the Holocaust.

    • @kayvan671
      @kayvan671 Před 3 lety +3

      @@nikolatesla708
      Oh the people of eastern Europe would like to disagree with you.
      They hated Communism so much that they voted it out, the first chance they got.
      Now all of Europe is part of the EU and NATO.
      Eastern Europe is very happy tp be part of NATO.
      Communism doesnt exist anymore here in Europe.

    • @nikolatesla708
      @nikolatesla708 Před 3 lety +6

      @@kayvan671 As if we had any opportunity to choose. The big powers decided over our fate. Believe me, we were better off in socialism bc that's what we had. No communism. It was socialism. We had peace (no war) and prosperity.

  • @antonmasters8626
    @antonmasters8626 Před 4 lety +16

    That is not at all what I thought he'd sound like. Wow I can't believe this is the first time I've heard him talk.

  • @NotSoOrdinaryFilms
    @NotSoOrdinaryFilms Před 5 lety +74

    Excellent speech. Classic

  • @richelsagario1436
    @richelsagario1436 Před 4 lety +60

    Girl's in sleepovers:did you see the new kid? he is soo CUTE
    Boy's in sleepovers:

    • @kittykittybangbang9367
      @kittykittybangbang9367 Před 3 lety

      The girls vs boys meme is basically the same as the other girls vs me meme
      also czcams.com/video/-1yzoiUIGGs/video.html

  • @digbyfire5446
    @digbyfire5446 Před 4 lety +50

    6:44 When you step on a lego

  • @k3kboi665
    @k3kboi665 Před 4 lety +42

    I can touch the georgian axent from 79 years away.

  • @mikeor-
    @mikeor- Před 2 lety +17

    I have never heard Stalin's voice before I saw this video. He sounds exactly like I imagined, and I understand why people saw him as a god. Yet in the end, he proved to be nothing more than a man.

  • @urbanwinterhound8863
    @urbanwinterhound8863 Před 2 lety +17

    Can't lie, Stalins soviet union is a cool aesthetic

  • @quandaledingle4488
    @quandaledingle4488 Před 5 lety +43

    2:22

  • @Kumar_pushpendra
    @Kumar_pushpendra Před rokem +41

    The great leader + Finest orator + Inspiration to millions.
    Goosebumps every time whenever i watch this speech.
    Love ( from New Delhi, India) you my Russian brothers.
    ❤ ❤ ❤

    • @Sheeeesk
      @Sheeeesk Před rokem +1

      Did you literally just call a man who had killed 23 million people a *great* leader

    • @Mentol_
      @Mentol_ Před rokem

      ​@@Sheeeeskwhich soviet document confirm this?

  • @Byezbozhnik
    @Byezbozhnik Před 5 lety +149

    It's remarkable the lack of outwardly passion in Stalin's delivery. Compare this to his Nazi counterparts. This just makes Stalin's figure more enigmatic and, possibly, compelling as he had such command over people without much theatrics (with the addition of the backing of the propaganda machinery and the NKVD, of course!).

    • @Alex-gf4iu
      @Alex-gf4iu Před 5 lety +28

      His version of theatrics was fear, rather than bothering to persuade his people he simply swept away anyone who could challenge his power

    • @Byezbozhnik
      @Byezbozhnik Před 5 lety +28

      Yes, but to this day there are people who genuinely believe in him. However, I can't deny that there's some truth when it is said that he brought Russia from feudal times to the space age.

    • @The80sWolf_
      @The80sWolf_ Před 5 lety +9

      @Mosley Shoahs
      If the majority owns the monopoly.
      Then it is not a monopoly.

    • @The80sWolf_
      @The80sWolf_ Před 5 lety +1

      @Mosley Shoahs
      There is a reason for like example: 1 out of 3 people in the fall of East Germany got unemployed.

    • @maofas
      @maofas Před 5 lety +10

      Mosley, you're too invested in thinking you actually know something to learn anything new I fear, but when the people are the state and the state owns the means, the people own the means. You can't say it doesn't count when you actually pay attention to where money goes: investment in infrastructure, heavy industry (read: producing more means of production instead of consumer goodies for the few who can afford them), education, people retiring at age 55 (50 for women), free healthcare, housing for all, etc. and then compare the standard of living for an average worker vs. the top bureaucrats and realize it isn't tremendously different (compare to CEOs making 100x or even far more than rank & file employees). All capitalism eventually becomes unregulated capitalism because money is power and not expecting wealthy individuals, interests, or corporations to use their power to unbalance the playing field in their favor is, quite frankly, super dumb.

  • @yonetakamori4801
    @yonetakamori4801 Před 8 měsíci +3

    In contrast to how Hitler gives his speech, Stalin seems to be more calm in doing so
    Admiring the confidence of well-assured Soviet victory👌

    • @Woistwahrheit
      @Woistwahrheit Před 8 měsíci

      The difference between "WE WILL WIN!!!" and "We will definitely win" is massive

    • @Sean3456
      @Sean3456 Před 5 dny +1

      Of course, Soviet Union is always stronger, better and much powerful than Nazi Germany

  • @hellohello-yi8yr
    @hellohello-yi8yr Před 4 lety +61

    Damn what a speech he literally made me wanna fight for the motherland lol

    • @WMSTEOUPAAFFWC8769
      @WMSTEOUPAAFFWC8769 Před 2 lety +3

      Say that to the prisoners in goulag eating insects to survive lol

    • @WMSTEOUPAAFFWC8769
      @WMSTEOUPAAFFWC8769 Před 2 lety

      @Chut_ Pojilou No? I just googled how do you know it’s propaganda?

    • @WMSTEOUPAAFFWC8769
      @WMSTEOUPAAFFWC8769 Před 2 lety

      @Chut_ Pojilou Yes look at the info graphics show they say people got raped

    • @WMSTEOUPAAFFWC8769
      @WMSTEOUPAAFFWC8769 Před 2 lety

      @make a wish No there are videos of people eating insects there because they were starving

    • @MITF2016
      @MITF2016 Před rokem

      @@WMSTEOUPAAFFWC8769 You're repeating western propaganda.

  • @danielzamora9491
    @danielzamora9491 Před 4 lety +60

    1:36 It's look a like Tom Holland.

    • @dr.surendrababu8703
      @dr.surendrababu8703 Před 4 lety +15

      Tom Motherland

    • @jaus4358
      @jaus4358 Před 4 lety +14

      Spider-Man: back in the Soviet Union

    • @anabasauri8582
      @anabasauri8582 Před 4 lety +5

      @@jaus4358 spider man: back in the ussr

    • @palosnes3147
      @palosnes3147 Před 4 lety +4

      I don't see it but one of Stalins sons does. Look it up. His name was Vasilij Dsjugasjvili

    • @aninditapaul9291
      @aninditapaul9291 Před 3 lety

      Idk why but it looks like a combination of Tom Holland and Vladimir Putin.

  • @ianp2410
    @ianp2410 Před 3 lety +8

    I don’t know what I was expecting Stalin’s voice to sound like but it wasn’t this

    • @Olegstuff21986
      @Olegstuff21986 Před 3 lety +1

      Was he supposed to sound like Darth Vader? :) :)

  • @IowaMoss
    @IowaMoss Před 3 lety +10

    I'm here from Sabaton "Defence of Moscow". These men marched straight to the frontline after this parade.

  • @user-qz3bc9qe7m
    @user-qz3bc9qe7m Před 3 lety +17

    Imagine morale of the soldiers after that speech

    • @Obirma
      @Obirma Před rokem

      420Billion morale boosted fr

  • @redplanet9488
    @redplanet9488 Před 3 lety +37

    Glory to the Great Comrade Stalin! Proletarian greetings from the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic! UUUUUUUUUUUUUURRRRRRRRRRRRAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  • @luisjaviersanabriahuanca735

    Stalin él más grandioso jefe militar de todos los siglos y todos los pueblos

  • @parkercushingable
    @parkercushingable Před 4 lety +74

    Stalin warm and thoughtful

  • @faunt07
    @faunt07 Před 4 lety +67

    Comrade Stalin is forever in our hearts! Motherland will never forget its finest son! One day this bunch of oligarchs and corrupt politicians led by Putin will be overthrown and your name will be cleansed!
    Long live comrade Stalin!

    • @Ds4u2
      @Ds4u2 Před 4 lety +11

      Cringe

    • @faunt07
      @faunt07 Před 4 lety +20

      @@Ds4u2, cringe is your knowledge about Russian history and Stalin

    • @MDMcountries
      @MDMcountries Před 4 lety +14

      Agree. We will struggle in the name of Lenin and Stalin. This is the only acceptable way. All other ways lead into abyss.

    • @MDMcountries
      @MDMcountries Před 4 lety +6

      @Alex They knew this would happen. And we will rebuild what Stalin and Lenin created. Death to capitalistic pigs, glory to worldwide Socialistic Revolution!

    • @sbevexlr848
      @sbevexlr848 Před 3 lety +1

      Ah yes the typical Commie who justifies Stalin! And did you forget the great purge, Nazinsky island and Beria??

  • @booter-tw7gd
    @booter-tw7gd Před 4 lety +11

    For the way he looks, I thought he would have a very deep and scary voice.

  • @tradingturtle2313
    @tradingturtle2313 Před 4 lety +20

    2:21 that horse looks like he/she is agreeing to everything Stalin is saying

  • @sovurs6949
    @sovurs6949 Před 3 lety +18

    Великий товарищ Сталин! Политический; государственный деятель планетарного масштаба!

  • @Elcollpohorrible
    @Elcollpohorrible Před 2 lety +72

    He will always be remembered as a hero for the global proletariat

    • @harukrentz435
      @harukrentz435 Před 2 lety +1

      Actually he was the one who halted the global proletariat. Things wouldve been so much different had Trotsky succeed Lenin.

    • @Cd5ssmffan
      @Cd5ssmffan Před 2 lety +3

      @@harukrentz435 Yeah would have been very different, the soviet union would have been crushed by the nazis

    • @stevencoardvenice
      @stevencoardvenice Před rokem

      The Anglo saxon empire will lose AGAIN in Ukraine

  • @rezandrarizkyirianto-1933
    @rezandrarizkyirianto-1933 Před 4 lety +34

    Say what you will about him, but he truly has the voice of Engels

  • @LegoLordPro
    @LegoLordPro Před 3 lety +6

    Wanna know what's interesting? Stalin's speech came exactly a month before Pearl Harbor was attacked by Imperial Japan.

  • @sirsha6973
    @sirsha6973 Před 4 lety +39

    Russia & Europe thank Stalin & Soviets for continued existence & permanent victory over Fascism.

    • @renjurichard
      @renjurichard Před 3 lety +1

      Lol shut up tankie.

    • @jimgreen7477
      @jimgreen7477 Před 3 lety +3

      I'm still trying to understand how communism is better. More specifically the interpretation they had in the Soviets Union.
      Correct me if I'm wrong, but living conditions were better in fascist Italy with far less death until the Nazis took it over.

    • @giuseppesantomassimo4513
      @giuseppesantomassimo4513 Před 3 lety

      @@renjurichard nah

    • @DogDogGodFog
      @DogDogGodFog Před 3 lety +1

      no lol

    • @DogDogGodFog
      @DogDogGodFog Před 3 lety

      @@giuseppesantomassimo4513 nah

  • @Lolpy.
    @Lolpy. Před 4 lety +13

    Look I have two words that mean so much: CZcams Recommendations

  • @Creature491
    @Creature491 Před rokem +11

    Stalin is not like Hitler

    • @donaldtrumplover2254
      @donaldtrumplover2254 Před rokem +1

      close, but Hitler was worse. A lot of people like to compare them but truly dont understand the horrors Hitler planned for Europe if he had won his stupid war.

  • @user-ri3ey6on7v
    @user-ri3ey6on7v Před 4 lety +14

    Самый великий деятель, за всю историю планеты.

  • @mcbone2178
    @mcbone2178 Před 4 lety +8

    Tbh I really expected a deep voice from Stalin. But this is still Godly.

  • @biomuseum6645
    @biomuseum6645 Před 4 lety +42

    When they said: 6:44
    Such deep thoughts and words... I really felt that 😭

  • @emmanuelvincentisraelletse5192

    Him being Georgian and not Russian only states that The Soviet was indeed a union of many states... Unfortunately Russia by enlarge suffered many casualties... During Joseph "Super Mario" Stalin tunier as Ieader

  • @erenyeager3829
    @erenyeager3829 Před 4 lety +88

    Omg Stalin Sounds....
    Less "Booming voice" than I expected.

    • @BETTERWORLDSGT
      @BETTERWORLDSGT Před 4 lety +2

      You don't need a booming voice to be Powerful. You don't need to be big either. Napoleon was very short and nearly conquered the World.

    • @erenyeager3829
      @erenyeager3829 Před 4 lety +1

      You have a point

    • @sebastianflores5090
      @sebastianflores5090 Před 4 lety +2

      BETTERWORLD SGT0589 *Europe

    • @xaviervonalchin3698
      @xaviervonalchin3698 Před 4 lety +13

      BETTERWORLD SGT0589 Napoleon was actually 5’7 which was tall for the time. It was the French measurement system and British propaganda that spread the false rumor

    • @erenyeager3829
      @erenyeager3829 Před 4 lety

      @@xaviervonalchin3698
      Правда правда

  • @GodFatherGB
    @GodFatherGB Před 4 lety +100

    If this man would'nt exist we would be speaking german right now

    • @GodFatherGB
      @GodFatherGB Před 4 lety +1

      @Fevzi Çakmak true too

    • @empty_set_
      @empty_set_ Před 4 lety +15

      @Fevzi Çakmak Okay, joke is good , but it is half true.Soviets were internationalists , I don't think they would integrate Russian language to all countries .

    • @karlisulmanis3810
      @karlisulmanis3810 Před 4 lety

      @@GodFatherGB too true**

    • @karlisulmanis3810
      @karlisulmanis3810 Před 4 lety +6

      @@empty_set_ except Poland, Estonia, Lithuania and (the country where I live irl) Latvia would, aswell a lot of the Balkan nations were slavs by ethnicity, which would make it easier to enforce such a language

    • @a.r.422
      @a.r.422 Před 4 lety

      @@karlisulmanis3810 Estonian isnt a slavic language.

  • @antonioartuso6958
    @antonioartuso6958 Před 3 lety +29

    Stalin was one of the greatest leader of the working class. At a very young age, he joined the revolutionary movement by workers and peasants of Russia against the feudal and the capitalist-imperialist ruling classes that exploited the working class and the peasantry, and the government of the tsar and the royal parasites. Stalin studied the theories of Marx and Engels, met Lenin, joined the Boshevik party, whose program was to overthrow the capitalist state, collectivize all the means of production and replace the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie (capitalists) by the dictatorship of the working class. With the Great October Socialist Revolution of 1917, Lenin, Stalin and the Bolshevik party lead the workers and the peasants of Russia to put an end to capitalism and feudalism and created the Soviet Union, the first government of the workers and peasants. In 1918, immediately after the October Revolution, 14 capitalist-imperialist powers attacked the Soviet Union to try to destroy the first Socialist country in the world. In 1924, at the death of the great leader Lenin, Stalin and the Bolshevik Party continued the construction of the Soviet Union and stated building the Soviet Union and transforming the backward country in a powerful power (economy, politics, social, technological, scientifical), and when Hitler and the German imperialism attacked Stalin, the Soviet people and the Soviet army destroyed the fascists. Stalin is hated by the fascists, by the capitalists-imperialists because he was the formidable builder of the Soviet UnionEastern bloc of People's Democracies in Europe, the supporter of the National Liberation Revolutions and of the Socialist Revolutions in Asia, Africa and Latin America, the leader of the International Communist Movement - Communist Reconstruction Canada - For a United Front against Fascism and War - pueblo1917@gmail.com

    • @harukrentz435
      @harukrentz435 Před 2 lety +2

      You forgot to mention that he was a bandit in his younger years. He robbed, shot, bombed, kiled, kidnaped people (including civilians) to fund his political activities.

    • @jackachkinsheinz2066
      @jackachkinsheinz2066 Před 2 lety

      @@harukrentz435 Source?

    • @lenny3802
      @lenny3802 Před 2 lety

      He killed his own folks...

  • @MarouenAK
    @MarouenAK Před 3 lety +64

    Whatever we say about stalin, he had a positive impact in history.
    Afghanistan needed a leader like him to face the talibans.

    • @dnickaroo3574
      @dnickaroo3574 Před 2 lety +4

      The Taliban resulted from US policies pursued since 1979. The US was fighting its own creation.

    • @aineval1836
      @aineval1836 Před 2 lety +1

      +++
      США готовы были поддерживать хоть террористов, хоть сатану, лишь бы русским нагадить. Это называется азло бабушке отморожу уши.

    • @MarouenAK
      @MarouenAK Před 2 lety

      @make a wish No they are subhuman trash like nazis. Stalin knew how to deal with such people

    • @zuzu091
      @zuzu091 Před 2 lety +1

      You literally contradicted yourself so bad that it's funny

    • @GettinJiggyWithGenghis
      @GettinJiggyWithGenghis Před 2 lety

      @make a wish do you mean the Taliban who only exist because america was funding brain dead Islamist militants solely to combat soviet influence in Afghanistan? Those afghans?

  • @mrac159
    @mrac159 Před 2 lety +10

    Stalin's voice warm my heart

  • @user-hh7hl8js7o
    @user-hh7hl8js7o Před 7 měsíci +2

    Обратите внимание на лица солдат и офицеров - разум, мужество, решительность и уверенность в победе,

  • @user-ps5ey2ss2q
    @user-ps5ey2ss2q Před 4 lety +188

    Спасибо!!! Сталину Слава!!!