How the Rich Ate Moldova

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  • čas přidán 16. 09. 2023
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Komentáře • 1,9K

  • @OzMat
    @OzMat Před 9 měsíci +1835

    From 2004 to 2011, I worked with many Moldovans in the U.K. on building sites. A Moldovian forman had bused about two dozen labours from Moldova. He took a third of their meagre pay each day plus their rent, and kept them all in the same house. He was a very violent fellow. I always wondered why his "workers" put up with him and didn't throw him off the 10th floor.
    The kickbacks weren't just a Moldova thing. English bosses extorted the English workers.
    Irish bosses the Irish workers, Albanian the Albanians, the Romanians, Polish, Chinese and Africans did the same to their own .
    Forget about racism, I have found that people are harmed, robbed, extorted and killed mostly by people from their own country, race, religion, colour, community or family.

    • @davidjma7226
      @davidjma7226 Před 9 měsíci

      Yep most crime against black people is committed by other black people.

    • @stellviahohenheim
      @stellviahohenheim Před 9 měsíci +9

      Nope not religion

    • @TheVanillatech
      @TheVanillatech Před 9 měsíci

      True there are arseholes everywhere. But lets face it ... the Americans have the blackest most murderous rap sheet by a country mile for the last 70 years. And I'm kindly leaving out slavery and the genocide of the 100 million natives.

    • @thehipsterking2184
      @thehipsterking2184 Před 9 měsíci +179

      As a Romanian that emigrated to the West, "Not working for Romanians" was one of my principles. Nobody ever condemned me, actually when I say this, people tell me a story about a bad experience of such (not limited to my people).

    • @agapitoliria
      @agapitoliria Před 9 měsíci +75

      A principle that holds very much true to most racism is that usually the most racist people are found among the affected group itself. Among the discriminated there's always a need to differentiate yourself from that group, sometimes by pushing down on your own, a lot of people end up hating their own groups like that. It's tragic but very human.

  • @TheDacoMelon
    @TheDacoMelon Před 9 měsíci +2082

    As a Moldovan I can say that I hate my life

    • @ecoandrei328
      @ecoandrei328 Před 9 měsíci +143

      O sa vina si vreme mai buna.

    • @TheDacoMelon
      @TheDacoMelon Před 9 měsíci +87

      @@ecoandrei328 Sper, frate :(

    • @benjammin9745
      @benjammin9745 Před 9 měsíci +63

      I feel for you..

    • @iandaniel1748
      @iandaniel1748 Před 9 měsíci +33

      At least have great song all time 😊

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt Před 9 měsíci +98

      Move over the border to the Romanian Moldova where it's a somewhat better. At least they speak the same Romania language.
      It wasn't mentioned in this video that actually there are two Moldovas, one in Romania and the other adjacent independent Republic of Moldova.

  • @IulianYT
    @IulianYT Před 9 měsíci +378

    I am from Moldova and still living here. I had participated on some protests against plahotniuc. And at it's peak, his influence was so obvious, that he would make announcements at their party HQ, about policies, laws, decisions... which only later would be approved by the Parliament and Government. He had a corrupt majority in Parliament (his party got twentyish mandates out of 101, but later, through bribery or threatening (e.g. with criminal prosecution) he got more than 50 deputies, so they could have full control over Government, and also adopt almost any organic law. But what was really pissing of - when there were protests in the center of the capital city, a lot of policemen were not watching over the protests, there were only few (the protests were peaceful), but instead were staying in the courtyard of the party HQ, in case the protests turned violent and decided to storm it (which never happened). But it shows his cowardliness from one side, and depressing from other side, that lots of people who should protect the citizens - were protecting him.
    Strangely enough, right after they lost power, they gave up their HQ office, as they "didn't have funds"... which again raises question - what happened guys? from where were you getting money before, not by stealing from us, by chance?

    • @happyelephant5384
      @happyelephant5384 Před 8 měsíci +29

      Wow, as Ukrainian I thought our country is pretty stereotypical oligarchy. But meeeen was I wrong. Like, we have many pretty overinfluential people, but they often disagree and piss off each other. But having one person control the country with such an obvious demonstration of power ... That's wild

    • @hydrolifetech7911
      @hydrolifetech7911 Před 8 měsíci +14

      ​@@happyelephant5384at least in Ukraine the oligarchs compete against each other and most of the time inject themselves in support of popular issues to gain the approval of the citizenry. The Moldovan situation is bonkers!

    • @himanshusingh5214
      @himanshusingh5214 Před 8 měsíci +5

      Moldovans have been ruled by outsiders for many centuries, so they will need quite a lot of time to learn to organize themselves and have good governance. Checks and balances will take centuries to form properly.

    • @markonikolic7957
      @markonikolic7957 Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@hydrolifetech7911so who is the main guy running things in Moldova right now ?

    • @RandoBurner
      @RandoBurner Před 8 měsíci

      Voi ati vrut asta, cum zici tu, sunt doar cativa la proteste. Asa cum e si in Romania de altfel.

  • @simonschneider5913
    @simonschneider5913 Před 9 měsíci +287

    your pronounciation of "Plahotniuc" probably puts >70% of Europe to shame! Respect!

    • @amosmoses5630
      @amosmoses5630 Před 9 měsíci +9

      Less than 70 but more than how many?

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 9 měsíci +15

      Only 70%? I'm sure 95% of Europeans have little idea of how to pronounce Romanian names... or anything that's not their own native language and some mediocre English (myself included, mind you).

    • @davidjma7226
      @davidjma7226 Před 9 měsíci +11

      Grammar Nazi. Look at the bigger picture and remember - it is easier to criticise than create.

    • @simonschneider5913
      @simonschneider5913 Před 9 měsíci

      @@amosmoses5630 alright, that was stupid! :)

    • @simonschneider5913
      @simonschneider5913 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@LuisAldamiz i would say there are eastern europeans who should know..

  • @ZeroSouthBall
    @ZeroSouthBall Před 9 měsíci +464

    Moldovan here, very good analyses, but there is no such language as “Moldovan”. we and Romanians understand each other absolutely well. So saying it’s different languages it’s like saying that the language they speak in Austria is Austrian. No, it’s not. There is just a dialect. That’s it. Btw I have to mention I am not Romanian nationalist, my first language is Russian, my parents are ethnical Russians and identify themselves as such. But they were smart enough to make me learn the national language and by knowing it very well I can say that there are no differences between the language they speak in Moldova and Romania. Just dialects and regionalisms, which all languages have.

    • @stanlis5408
      @stanlis5408 Před 8 měsíci +56

      as a romanian ,i would like to thank you for speaking out the truth even though you could be seen as going against russia's external policies.

    • @tandemlabs9408
      @tandemlabs9408 Před 8 měsíci +15

      🥹🥹 God bless your family

    • @divelea
      @divelea Před 8 měsíci +10

      I started to read the comments before watching. If it says moldovan language in the video, this video is crap and propaganda. It's 2023 ffs.

    • @ZeroSouthBall
      @ZeroSouthBall Před 8 měsíci +43

      @@divelea chill man. Foreigners don’t know about it. It’s obviously a foreigner. I live in Portugal for example and people just don’t know about it, it’s a surprise when they at least know the capital of Chișinău. There are still a lot of people in this world that don’t know that Portuguese and Spanish are different languages, so not everything is Propaganda. It’s a difficult world, you can make a good research, but miss some essential things. But the author just told what was happening during last 30 years of Independency, and he summarized it very well. His theme of research wasn’t nor cultural things nor language issues in Romanian speaking countries. It was about politics and corruption.

    • @goranatanasovski6463
      @goranatanasovski6463 Před 8 měsíci +12

      If somebody were to say that someone spoke "Austrian" I would just assume, that this person was speaking with a noticeable Austrian Accent because his native language was one of the Austrian "dialects".
      Of course there is no "Austrian" but some quite different (and for most Germans mostly unintelligible) "dialects". Standard-Austrian-German and Standard-German is very simmilar and very easy to understand. The various (unfortunately in most of Germany almost exctinct) "dialects" on the other hand are NOT and can be as far apart as Dutch, Danish, English and German are to each other. But since there is a common German identity there is also a common German language.
      The terms "dialect" and "language" are all highly political of course and could be (and of course were) used for political reasons.
      I guess it's very simmilar with the tongues spoken in this region and, if somebody wanted, he could create a few highly unintelligible languages, based on the local "dialects", but a majority of the people living there wouldn't agree. Am I right to assume this?

  • @audrey72537
    @audrey72537 Před 9 měsíci +137

    You are expanding into Europeanometry!

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 9 měsíci +27

      Europe is a mere peninsula of Asia.

    • @corvus_monedula
      @corvus_monedula Před 9 měsíci +15

      Eurasianometry😄

    • @Danny-qh4su
      @Danny-qh4su Před 5 měsíci +1

      @@LuisAldamiz Rome, a European civilization, was the greatest civilization of all time.

    • @LuisAldamiz
      @LuisAldamiz Před 5 měsíci

      @@Danny-qh4su - I would not describe the Roman Empire as "European", rather "Mediterranean". Rome failed to conquer Germania and thus half of non-Eastern Europe remained at large from their imperialism (3/4 of Europe were never under the Roman Empire, if we include Eastern Europe, as we should). On the other side it did conquer all the Mediterranean region and integrated it in a single political, social and economic entity.
      Could this have happened under a non-European power? Probably not, although Carthage had a shot at it. Why? Because Europe is a peninsula of many peninsulas and some, like Italy, manage to provide for a large number of people (in Roman times, when non-Mediterranean agriculture was still limited, and even today). Maybe if the Lydians decided to go naval instead of trying to invade Persia, maybe if Egypt was not already a Greek colony... but probably not: the geography of Italy was uniquely optimal for such endeavor and the context in which Rome expanded was uniquely favorable for them: sufficiently but not excessively influenced by Greeks and Phoenicians, as well as the often forgotten Etruscans, who also came from the East (Asia Minor surely, Troy-related).
      As for considering it "the greatest civilization", I beg to disagree: it was a very powerful and extremely influential one, comparable to China or India in their day, or Parthia/Persia, their eternal rival, as well. China actually accidentally triggered Rome's downfall by defeating the Huns (Turkics almost certainly) and sending them packing to the west, which in turn, as you surely know, gained control over most of the rest of Europe, sending many Germanic tribes packing to the Roman Empire.
      They were anyhow, especially as the Empire consolidated, a civilization of lazy oligarchs living on slave labor, who considered work something bad. They shine at military prowess at the beginning but gradually they become relatively poor even at that.
      IMO the ultimate cause of their deep crisis and downfall was that oligarchic lazy avarice, which sent all the precious metals to Asia in exchange of stupid luxuries like silk and cinnamon. Once the slave-manned Iberian and Dacian mines got exhausted, they got into a most serious economic crisis, which turned socio-political and weakened the state until the barbarians kicked down their rotten doors.
      I would rather think that other civilizations like Perikles' Athens or modern Switzerland are much much greater than Rome. Persia even was much greater in many aspects like not relying on slavery...

  • @damirsirotic052
    @damirsirotic052 Před 8 měsíci +34

    Same thing happened in Croatia. The then ruling political party implemented "privatization" while the war for independence from Yugoslavia was still going on. The majority of the population left their workplaces for the battlefield, and during that time a few (today the creme-de-la-creme of the Croatian political and economic scene) bought and sold the most valuable companies and factories, when the people returned from the battlefield, everything was over and there were no more jobs to return to. Croatia, together with Yugoslavia (although Yugoslavia was not evenly developed, but Slovenia and Croatia stood out) used to be a term in the dictionary for well-being, for Poles, Czechs, Slovaks and Hungarians, while Romanians and Bulgarians were a term for us for poverty and underdevelopment, and today Croatia is economically at the very bottom of the EU (Croatia is today in the EU what Kosovo was in Yugoslavia), and all those listed above, except Bulgaria, are economically much stronger than us. We used to comment with a sneer when in the 70s and 80s they came to the sea with their burned-out Škodas, Trabants and Polish Fiats, carrying even food with them, so we called them tomato-tourists, and now they come in Škoda Superbs and with a sneer buy real estate from the locals for cash all along the Adriatic coast. And yet, we still vote for that same party from the beginning of the story.

    • @MVProfits
      @MVProfits Před 8 měsíci +5

      I admit IDK what is going on in Croatia. But if what you say is true, and as we see in Moldova, not even mass distrust and anger form the population result in any overthrow attempts or mass popular upheaval. It means that here too in the West we are doomed if this continues on this path. Central banks creating mass inflation by design, restrictions, censorship, the coming digital currency and identity etc.

    • @LordDucarius
      @LordDucarius Před 5 měsíci +1

      That is what happens if you betray your own people. Maybe the croatians learned for the future

  • @arminfeuerkreuter233
    @arminfeuerkreuter233 Před 9 měsíci +519

    As a Romanian, I can only say that it is quite surprising how accurate were the information from somebody who lives in a such far away part of the world from Moldova, but that was to be expected from you.
    However, I should point out some things which you might have overlooked. First of all, there is no such thing as Romanian language and Moldovian language, they are both the same thing, maybe the accent differs, but that's all, I mean, they are more similar between themselves than Cantonese and Mandarin, for example. Secondly, I think you could have pointed out the links between the businesspeople and politicians and secret services, which is a very common practice in former soviet countries, like Russia and Romania. The businesspeople get heads ups from the secret services, they make profitable business and split the profit with the secret services and this goes too for the politicians. They make a pact with secret services and they get helped to be elected. Many say, for example, that the April revolution from 2009 was a secret blow from the Romanian secret services and for a while Plahotniuc was Romania's guy.
    Anyway, a very good video from you and many thanks for that!

    • @The_Ballo
      @The_Ballo Před 9 měsíci +44

      Cantonese and Mandarin aren't that similar, though.

    • @calinnilie
      @calinnilie Před 9 měsíci +68

      As a Romanian having visited Chisinau and listening to Moldovan TV, I can definitely say that the differences in language are comparable to American vs. British English

    • @user-mj2xg8qj5g
      @user-mj2xg8qj5g Před 9 měsíci +48

      @@The_Ballo Yeah, he tried to make a point. If you google the official language of Moldova you'll see is Romanian, international standards don't view Moldovan as a language. Is like saying people in USA speak American, they speak English same as Brits speak English, there are differences of course, but in the end is the same language.

    • @arminfeuerkreuter233
      @arminfeuerkreuter233 Před 9 měsíci +9

      @@The_Ballo I know they are not, that it is what I am pointing. Romanian and Moldovian languages are basically the same, they should not be representend as something different

    • @The_Ballo
      @The_Ballo Před 9 měsíci +17

      @@user-mj2xg8qj5g A better analogy might be Latin American castellano vs Spanish castellano

  • @tegli4
    @tegli4 Před 9 měsíci +339

    Great episode! The sad part is that this is to some degree or another, the story of probably all of the ex-soviet/Warsaw Pact countries. Mine (Bulgaria) has its own version of each of those "characters".

    • @todorkolev7565
      @todorkolev7565 Před 9 měsíci +62

      at least we managed to squeeze in to the EU, which provided SOME governance bracket, SOME re-invogiration of the economy and, most importantly, an OPTION for Bulgarians to improve their lives individually (by immigration), if not as a nation on its own land...
      Moldova is a small, poor and unaffiliated country with already a strong divide in its population.
      They have a lot to chew on!

    • @JohnSmith-ez7ip
      @JohnSmith-ez7ip Před 9 měsíci +17

      well you opted for capitalism, that's it!

    • @abygorsonabor7982
      @abygorsonabor7982 Před 9 měsíci +5

      it's really not the story of all Warsaw Pact countries, not anymore at least

    • @christycullen2355
      @christycullen2355 Před 9 měsíci +23

      ​@@JohnSmith-ez7ipso did every other former soviet Republic so what's your point

    • @ImperativeGames
      @ImperativeGames Před 9 měsíci +8

      It's the story of almost every country with Capitalists in power. But some of them had Oligarchy *and* managed to obtain colonies (and slaves) so ordinary people in them had a better life.
      But colonies are stopping being colonies now...

  • @dmd17
    @dmd17 Před 9 měsíci +333

    Great episode, as usual.
    Just one point: Moldovans also speak a dialect of Romanian.
    Classifying Moldovan as a separate language was part of the Soviet playbook, to culturally separate Moldova from Romania.

    • @whomthis
      @whomthis Před 9 měsíci +53

      Not a dialect, we learn the 'Romanian', not Moldovan language in all schools, it is as close to Romanian as the Romanian from Transylvania.

    • @entropy_of_principles
      @entropy_of_principles Před 9 měsíci

      Moldovan doesn't exist, not even as dialect...what a stupidy😂

    • @octavianracu
      @octavianracu Před 9 měsíci +47

      There is no "moldovan dialect". The same dialect is spoken in Romania and Moldova - North Danubian. Dialects of the Romanian language exist only south of the Danube

    • @ra1nbeetle
      @ra1nbeetle Před 9 měsíci +15

      definitely not a dialect of romanian. the romanian language is taught and spoken in moldova. if you wanted to refer to some differences in the pronunciation, you might want to check the definition of an accent. i do understand that there are some region specific words used in moldova but that is not enough to make it a dialect.

    • @gs637
      @gs637 Před 9 měsíci +13

      Moldavians have always spoken Romanian, not a dialect, (unless you believe the russian propaganda) Same language & different province = specific accent. Think Louisiana vs New York for example.

  • @SomeGuyInSandy
    @SomeGuyInSandy Před 9 měsíci +55

    You would be a step up for Taylor.

    • @user-lt5no1xt1z
      @user-lt5no1xt1z Před 9 měsíci +6

      That's what I'm saying😂

    • @falconeshield
      @falconeshield Před 9 měsíci +4

      She dated a racist lately, time for her to date a philosopher lol

  • @MoonDweller1337
    @MoonDweller1337 Před 9 měsíci +134

    "Moldova back then had about as much chance at EU membership as I have at Taylor Swift."
    This left me cracking up for a while! Good one!

    • @lenas6246
      @lenas6246 Před 8 měsíci +4

      its not that unlikely. Its delusional to think that other former soviet countries that landed in thr eu didnt have any of those problems, they just mananged to get in before the eternal series of crises started and eu decided to become a closed club. Actually moldova, urkraine and georgia are simultanioisly trying to acess eu and only the former one doesnt have progress as of late

    • @NeblogaiLT
      @NeblogaiLT Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@lenas6246 These days, Georgia is the one that is problematic, while Moldova under Sandu has good prospects.

    • @simonocerous3138
      @simonocerous3138 Před 8 měsíci +6

      Dude shouldn't sell himself short. I've heard that Taylor throws herself at anyone after a couple of tequila shots...
      🍹🍹🍹

  • @Relikvien
    @Relikvien Před 9 měsíci +248

    I was in Moldova, and it was a beautiful country, and the people were so friendly! Wish better for them!🇲🇩❤️

    • @davidjma7226
      @davidjma7226 Před 9 měsíci +15

      That's often the case in the poorest and most oppressed countries. Iran is another example.

    • @gargoyle7863
      @gargoyle7863 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Maybe the war in Ukraine helps to oust all the Russian mobsters.

    • @laikanbarth
      @laikanbarth Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@davidjma7226The Iranian people are wonderful people. I can’t stand their government but the people are great. I’ve met quite a few in the USA. As a matter of fact my female doctor was from Iran. She not only treated her regular patients. She also treated the poor people in our community.

    • @davidjma7226
      @davidjma7226 Před 7 měsíci +1

      ​@@laikanbarth Yes, I lived in Iran for two years until recently. They are the most generous, hospitable people you will find anywhere on the planet. The first thing they will tell you is that they are not the Government of Iran! OK, I am biased, I have a Persian wife......but she is the epitome of the kind of generosity you refer to. Always thinks of the other person and people less fortunate. She makes me feel quite humble, god bless her.

  • @gs637
    @gs637 Před 9 měsíci +288

    Sorry for the people of Moldova, they have suffered a lot

    • @BillAnt
      @BillAnt Před 9 měsíci +11

      Indeed, they've been under many influences like the Ottoman Empire, Romania, Russia, till they finally became the independent Republic of Moldova. Yet to this day there are still skirmishes along the border with the contested Trans-Dnienstria region with a majority of Russian speaking population.

    • @AverageFornaxEnjoyer
      @AverageFornaxEnjoyer Před 9 měsíci +7

      @@BillAnt Return to Translyvannia; ascend to godhood.

    • @TheVanillatech
      @TheVanillatech Před 9 měsíci

      And they will suffer more. Because they are weak and feeble and need to be enslaved and exploited. Serfs they are, and serfs they will remain!

    • @aniksamiurrahman6365
      @aniksamiurrahman6365 Před 9 měsíci

      Be sorry for yourself perhaps.

    • @dand7763
      @dand7763 Před 9 měsíci +5

      ​@@BillAnt stop saying moldovans are other nation than romanians, we are the same NATION!!! SAME LANGUAGE, TRADITIONS ETC! russian propaganda alienate moldovans TO THINK THEY ARE OTHERS than romanians , stop bullshit! even Maia Sandu recently fixed this ,officially, that the language of moldovans is romanian ,not anything else "moldovan" (russian propaganda)

  • @n1k0n_
    @n1k0n_ Před 9 měsíci +38

    This channel and rare earth are all ive ever needed on YT.

    • @swimmerboy172
      @swimmerboy172 Před 9 měsíci +3

      This channel and microprocessors are all I need

  • @zarzavattzarzavatt9309
    @zarzavattzarzavatt9309 Před 9 měsíci +101

    hi from moldova! brief and very accurate depiction of what moldova is!
    some small remark though: moldova and romania have exactly the same literary language. also half of moldova's population are also romanian citiziens (even many of those who don't like romania :)

    • @jparsit
      @jparsit Před 9 měsíci +2

      Pleaase explain why they hate Romanians? Is it about class?

    • @GabrielRotar
      @GabrielRotar Před 9 měsíci +10

      It all goes back to the ol' father of nations himself Stalin and his policy of resettling Russian nationals within the SSRs and other distinct ethnic regions of the union. This has been a source of discord between the various ethnicities ever since.

    • @maximmaslov3569
      @maximmaslov3569 Před 9 měsíci +4

      @@GabrielRotar Stalin was not ethically Russian (he was Georgian), so he had no any reason to resettle Russians to SSRs, so, he never did that specifically. Russians had been living on lands which then became Moldavia for centuries.

    • @maximmaslov3569
      @maximmaslov3569 Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@jparsit It's devided state. Roughly, 50/50 pro-Romanian/pro-Russian. It's a long story how it happened

    • @MusicalTranscendence
      @MusicalTranscendence Před 9 měsíci +10

      @@maximmaslov3569 if "for centuries", you mean since the Russian Empire annexed Basarabia, then you're right. But no, before that, it was predominantly Moldovan (Romanian), with some Ruthenians (Ukrainians) and Turkic people. Even after 100 years of Russian Imperial rule, only about 10% of the population was Russian (in the 1930 census), despite very clear policies aiming to assimilate Romanian-speakers. If you read any documents from the 1600s or so, Russians were not even close to existing in that region (it was a mix of, again, predominantly Romanians, Ukrainians, Poles and Tatars). Until about 1850, there were only about 1% of Russians in Bessarabia.

  • @petervarley3078
    @petervarley3078 Před 9 měsíci +103

    It is obscene that a poor country with a population of under 3 million had 70 billionaires!
    I've written to NPR's Planet Money a few times over the years to do a story on this as it deserves to be more widely known. I'll try again and link to this.

    • @noonecaresaboutgoogle3219
      @noonecaresaboutgoogle3219 Před 8 měsíci +23

      For Russia the corruption is a feature, not a bug. Russia is happy for it's former colonies to be nominally independent as long as they are very corrupt. The corrupt money can flow up to Russian oligarchs as indirect 'tribute' which satisfies them.

    • @xenialove2032
      @xenialove2032 Před 7 měsíci +2

      ​@@noonecaresaboutgoogle3219will you blame Russia for Romanian corruption too?

    • @noonecaresaboutgoogle3219
      @noonecaresaboutgoogle3219 Před 7 měsíci

      @xenialove2032 Romania has its problems but jailed vast numbers of corrupt politicians since joining the EU
      czcams.com/video/IqZWApreqoM/video.htmlsi=BOK-5iDRoxeYKjUf
      It's why Russia would never join as it's run by gangsters who'd lose power in the EU.

    • @poki580
      @poki580 Před 6 měsíci +3

      @@xenialove2032 russia is a get out of jail card for them, its been 30+ years the current state is their own making

    • @porcudracului
      @porcudracului Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@xenialove2032of course. These things go hand in hand

  • @HaartieeTRUE
    @HaartieeTRUE Před 9 měsíci +43

    4:09 no such thing as 'the Moldovan language' they speak romanian. Imagine saying austrians speak austrian instead of german, just because the country has a different name

    • @christopherconard2831
      @christopherconard2831 Před 9 měsíci +9

      Probably dialect would have been a better word. America and England both speak English, but have many words and phrases that are unique in meaning to them.
      A couple generations ago they spoke such different forms that US troops in England complained they couldn't understand their British counterparts though both believed they were speaking proper English.

    • @Anwar74
      @Anwar74 Před 9 měsíci

      As a person that lived in the UK it will have been the regional accents that made them confused lol@@christopherconard2831

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Před 9 měsíci +5

      Well there's also Dutch and Flemish languages which are... identical save for pronunciation. Nobody should really care whether you should consider them languages or dalects of each other.
      Technically a dialect is a way of speech that isn't formalised and evolves wildly, while a language is one that has an official governing body. So indeed British English and American English should be considered languages, not dialects. In turn Bavarian (Boarisch) is not understood by most Germans, but is a dialect, since there isn't somebody formalising it and teaching it at schools in that form.
      Declaring that something is a dialect can have a bit of imperialistic stink to it especially if the carriers of that way of speech happen to disagree.

    • @rca4788
      @rca4788 Před 9 měsíci +3

      ​@@christopherconard2831it's not an dialect because the 4 dialects of romanian are very diferent

    • @insomniacresurrected1000
      @insomniacresurrected1000 Před 9 měsíci +1

      Imagine Ukrainian and Belarussian not being dialects of Russian. 😂 Imagine Kazakhstan or Azerbaijan being real nations. 😂

  • @AnnaLeWild
    @AnnaLeWild Před 8 měsíci +21

    Sending love to our Moldovan brothers from Romania 🇷🇴 Thanks for the video! The world needs to hear about their struggles.

  • @juice6459
    @juice6459 Před 9 měsíci +16

    What a mess, corruption never sleeps.

    • @MrReymoclif714
      @MrReymoclif714 Před 6 dny

      Like republicans.

    • @juice6459
      @juice6459 Před 6 dny

      @@MrReymoclif714 More like the DC swamp, controlled at the moment by democrats, with rino's taking the helm from time to time to keep up the appearance of a functioning representative republic.

  • @kahuna5164
    @kahuna5164 Před 9 měsíci +70

    Your history content is some of the most informative on CZcams. Thank you for these

  • @tombombadil9123
    @tombombadil9123 Před 7 měsíci +5

    19:15 a very similar thing happened in "the West" in 2007 and 2008. somehow it was necessarry to give the tax payer's money to the richest people in the world. I still don't understand how that benefited us, "the little guys"
    except nobody got arrested

  • @Novusod
    @Novusod Před 8 měsíci +37

    The rich ate Moldova?
    Correction: the rich ate the entire planet.

  • @imnothere6906
    @imnothere6906 Před 9 měsíci +25

    New break - Asianometry is currently dating Taylor Swift.

  • @EmilNicolaiePerhinschi
    @EmilNicolaiePerhinschi Před 9 měsíci +133

    You forgot to mention that the Republic of Moldova was caught in between two trading blocks, EU and CSI, and each of those trading blocks limited Moldovan's access to their markets and the access of the Moldovans to work ... the only way out was through Romania. Even for the Russians of Moldova moving to Russia was more difficult and more unpleasant than moving to Romania, getting citizenship then moving further West.

    • @nvelsen1975
      @nvelsen1975 Před 9 měsíci +4

      Also known as Haiti-syndrome. 😉
      Shutting out the world or getting shut out by the world, never works.

    • @Hey-uj3ee
      @Hey-uj3ee Před 8 měsíci +4

      Incorrect, Moldova has always wanted to be part of the EU however they cannot join because they have Russian military stationed illegally in their territory. Also there are some trade facilitation accords from the EU. So no the EU it's their biggest partner with 50 percent of their export going to the EU, and If it wasn't for Russia imperialism they would be in the European Union (63% percent of Moldovan want that)

    • @EmilNicolaiePerhinschi
      @EmilNicolaiePerhinschi Před 8 měsíci +2

      @@Hey-uj3ee Moldova became independent in 1991 and EU was created in 1993, so Moldova could not "always" want to be part of the EU :-)

    • @Hey-uj3ee
      @Hey-uj3ee Před 8 měsíci +4

      @@EmilNicolaiePerhinschi I mean, pretty much no country that was part of the soviet union had any choice before 1991 (dissolution of the soviet union), but people even then wanted to be part of the west. Also moldova was part of greater Romania and wasn't really happy when it got invaded by the ussr. So yes, we can say always

    • @alphana7055
      @alphana7055 Před 8 měsíci +6

      ​​​@@Hey-uj3eeJoining the EU would have been national suicide as we have seen in Bulgaria, completely sucking up all the work force leaving behind only old people, only subsisting EU grants until dying off.

  • @jon123xyz
    @jon123xyz Před 8 měsíci +7

    Weak intitutions are play things for psychopaths

  • @alfonsopalacios2725
    @alfonsopalacios2725 Před 9 měsíci +126

    Botched land reform? Economy controlled by landed elites? Remittances being a huge part of the economy? Poverty? Even a trafficking problem? A huge and belligerent neighbor trying to exert authority and influence? Intensely corrupt society?
    That sounds so familliar.
    My goodness I feel for my Moldovian brothers. Cheers from the Philippines. Lord knows we got the shitty hands in life. We hope we can get through this and experience a democracy that actually serves the people.

    • @user-ux9bm2ho1h
      @user-ux9bm2ho1h Před 9 měsíci +4

      While reading this, I was getting more and more confident about our shared nationality. But, I was wrong, luckily or sadly? Not sure what would be worst

    • @lenas6246
      @lenas6246 Před 8 měsíci +12

      as a person from ukraine who studied political science in germany i have always thought that studying mostly eu is a waste of time for ppl who specialize in estern europe and that SEA is a better alternative for comparative studies

    • @kparker2430
      @kparker2430 Před 8 měsíci

      Philippines; not a great example of democracy. You got rid of the murdering thug and voted in the son of the dictator. Philippine politics is so depressingly corrupt. ,,, and i can't even blame the Russians for this.

    • @himanshusingh5214
      @himanshusingh5214 Před 8 měsíci

      Phillipines is another country which has been under foreign rule for more than 500 years. This means that the people will take time to learn how to handle power and have checks and balances. It is natural to not know what and how to do when you are suddenly free after being a slave since birth.

    • @eritain
      @eritain Před 8 měsíci

      Businessmen whose business expertise is all just being in the right place to grab things, becoming the political power? Politicians shooting people on a hunting trip and trying to cover it up? "Inflation" for the ordinary folks, record quarterly profits for the rich?
      Cheers from the USA. I wish this wasn't so familiar.

  • @user-wd9uz1ng4p
    @user-wd9uz1ng4p Před 9 měsíci +42

    Just moved to Moldova 2 months ago, what a timing!

    • @transportabelle
      @transportabelle Před 9 měsíci +30

      Is it much like Moldova 1?

    • @korana6308
      @korana6308 Před 9 měsíci +15

      @@transportabelle I prefer Moldova 3, everything is bigger in Moldova 3 as they say😂👍

    • @jub21
      @jub21 Před 9 měsíci +4

      unless your Ukrainian......why?

    • @SofaKingShit
      @SofaKingShit Před 9 měsíci +7

      @@jub21 l think it's called work. Or retirement.

    • @kokomo9764
      @kokomo9764 Před 9 měsíci +4

      What was your motivation to do so?

  • @rationalactor
    @rationalactor Před 9 měsíci +29

    Magnificent work, as always.
    This process is probably at work in every country, to a greater or lesser extent, but here we can see it under the microscope. Thank you for the clarity.

    • @yourface4248
      @yourface4248 Před 9 měsíci

      you are right, this is how most systems of governance work around the world. the consequences are starkly visible in moldova because of its tiny size and unstable political landscape.

  • @colin1177
    @colin1177 Před 9 měsíci +18

    The Lei is pronounced "lay" It means lion. Mircea is "Mir-Cha" Its my fathers name, he is Romanian Moldovan(the neighboring Provence in Romania, and other half of the region). It is a weird language that requires switching from very latin pronunciation to very slavic. Thanks for showing time for my peoples rarely discussed history.

  • @Mastermind12358
    @Mastermind12358 Před 9 měsíci +12

    Insanely sad how so many people suffer in poverty because of greed from just few individuals.

    • @slimpickens01
      @slimpickens01 Před 6 měsíci

      Yeah but the mainstream media doesn't report on the many poor European nations. They prefer to be fixated on poor African nations that are RICH in natural resources. There are no abundance of rich natural resources in these armpit nations in Europe. Hence those nations will remain poor unless they latch onto an African nation like France. Speaking of France they too would be just as poor as any Eastern European nation had it not been for them holding on to so called Francophone nations, but their time is coming to an end.

  • @fireiceuk9221
    @fireiceuk9221 Před 9 měsíci +46

    I admire your ability to make informed videos on subjects as diverse as Moldova, Philippines and Taiwan. What is your secret? Are you researching all that by yourself 🙂?

    • @havencat9337
      @havencat9337 Před 9 měsíci +4

      he's BS ing... at least about Moldova i know well because i live there...

    • @wilimow
      @wilimow Před 9 měsíci +7

      ​@@havencat9337Oof, sounds like life could be a lot better. Feel for you bro

    • @grumpybollox7949
      @grumpybollox7949 Před 9 měsíci

      i bet moldova is actually so nice, romania wants to join them and create the great moldova@@havencat9337

    • @g0urra
      @g0urra Před 9 měsíci +18

      @@havencat9337What about Moldova is he BS'ing about?

    • @zarzavattzarzavatt9309
      @zarzavattzarzavatt9309 Před 9 měsíci +18

      @@havencat9337 i also live in moldova and i can say he's spot on

  • @lordr1800
    @lordr1800 Před 9 měsíci +23

    Thanks for this insight into this country. American media rarely ventures outside the US except to dwell on how good/bad the US is doing on whatever, so learning about nations like these and their struggles offers a new perspective. Thank you.

  • @eaubert1
    @eaubert1 Před 8 měsíci +5

    I have visited Moldova and feel bad for its people. There are street dogs attacking pedestrians, Gypsy children begging and the infrastructure is in dire need of repair. At the same time you see some of the most expensive sports cars in the capital Chisinau. The corruption is evident no matter where you are.

  • @bergweg
    @bergweg Před 9 měsíci +38

    Thanks for the video! Correction: 4:01 / 8:26 Romanian language and "moldovan" languages are actually one and the same language, the title "moldovan language" was invented by the soviets

  • @xpr3ss.755
    @xpr3ss.755 Před 9 měsíci +25

    What many youtubers fail to mention about the past of Transnistria is that it had been founded way back in 1920s by Lenin as a autonomous region within Ukrainian SSR (Moldavian ASSR) to build up tentions between Romania and USSR in hopes of snatching back Bessarabia through revolutionary means (look up Tatarbunary Uprising, Khotyn Uprising and Bender Uprising) The territory it had was double it is today because back then they included a 'triangle' towards Balta which wasn't even a quarter Romanian but was incorporated as a economical capital. But after the successful 1940 ultimatum towards Romania, Stalin, on the recommendation of Khruschev (The same guy who would later give Crimea to Ukraine) stripped Moldova of its coastline (Budjak, Cetatea Alba) and Hotin (Khotyn) region from the newly conquered territory and gave it to Ukrainian SSR in exchange for modern day Transnistria minus Balta region. The official excuse for the "exchange" of territories was to create a more homogeneous population within Soviet SRs. but in reality its because they wanted to create a more secure protected region around Odessa in case things go south and Moldova reunites with Romania hence why also aforementioned in the video that Transnistria had the most infrastructure and supplied the country with electricity, they built it specifically in Transnistria for exactly the same reason, in case of Independence/Reunification, the country remains paralyzed and without infrastructure. The same goes for Cernauti.

    • @lenas6246
      @lenas6246 Před 8 měsíci +1

      bruh are you high? chetnivtsi is a ukrainian city. I am from there, this is not some moldovan territory glued onto ukraine lol Also since when is odesa romanian or moldovan lol? jfc

    • @xpr3ss.755
      @xpr3ss.755 Před 8 měsíci +10

      @@lenas6246 Cernauti fell under Russian control in 1940 after Romania ceded it after the ultimatum (and then assigned to Ukrainian SSR). Before that it was Romanian and before that it was Austro-Hungarian, it didnt say it was "Moldovan" nor did i say that about Odessa. I said that they took Budjak to make a more "secure" region AROUND Odessa.

    • @kedi1923
      @kedi1923 Před 8 měsíci +2

      ​@@lenas6246Cernauti was romanian teritory. You do not know the history of your town.

    • @naturalnonsense
      @naturalnonsense Před 6 měsíci

      @@lenas6246як будь яка інша прикордонна територія, це не завжди було Україною. Просто на даний момент всі змирилися з українізацією Чернівців, і це ок.

    • @porcudracului
      @porcudracului Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@lenas6246since when? Read a little more than your government propaganda

  • @ydid687
    @ydid687 Před 9 měsíci +30

    Good luck Moldova

  • @FlorinArjocu
    @FlorinArjocu Před 9 měsíci +45

    Not "close similarities" between Romanian and "Moldovan" language, they are the same language. Even the Republic of Moldova's Academy declared that the national language is Romanian language. The "moldovan" language was a politically one to convince people they are not the same people as the moldovans (Romanians) on the other half of the former Principality divided in 1812 for the first time. The naming of the country can be confusing, it is like the North Macedonia issue, as the former antique entity (and Greek speaking) called Macedonia was divided and became part of multiple countries, much of it being in Greece. For many Romanians, the Republic of Moldova has a special meaning: we were the same country, we speak the same language, but we were separated and most likely the only "unification" can happen under a common roof, European Union; but there are many problems there caused by the separatists regions, under heavy (or total) Russian influence.

    • @TukozAki
      @TukozAki Před 9 měsíci +1

      *caused by the greed for money and ways to own more and more. Any neighboring power has, is, and will use this feat. Countries in such a half baked state joining a half baked multinational organization (eg the UE) will make such organization shift towards their oligarchy's standards rather than being helped by it any day.

    • @FlorinArjocu
      @FlorinArjocu Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@TukozAki It is way more complicated. In order to adhere, one must satisfy lots of criteria, including corruption fighting, fixing teritorial disputes etc. The last part means that the Transnistrian (probably also Gagauzia) problem has to find a solution before. A simpler one would be for the Russians in Transnistria to attack Ukraine and for Ukraine to finally "close" those Russian military bases, after which, the Russian influence will degrade by itself as it cannot be enforced.

    • @TukozAki
      @TukozAki Před 9 měsíci +2

      @@FlorinArjocu First, sorry if my pov feels excessively detached to any people in or from Moldova.
      Question please: Are those 4k Russian troops in Transnistria the main and first cause for the actions presented in this Asianometry's synthesis of the last 30 years? In case not, please why are you focusing on them?
      Am French btw; as the Roman used to say, « Rome didn't build itself in a week ». Nor did Romania, Spain, Italy, France, Hungary, Germany, Korea or any of the past and present nations on planet Earth.

    • @FlorinArjocu
      @FlorinArjocu Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@TukozAki No they are not the sole reason, but the one that is a stopper for any change more consistent regarding Transnistria. When half of the historical Moldova principality/region was taken by Russia (or the Tzarist/Russian Empire, but for keeping it simple I will call it Russia) (the other half became a founding principality of the Romanian Kingdom in the XIXth century) the administration had all sorts of decisions to russify the population: deporting some to far away parts of Russia and bringing russians in their place, banning Romanian language in schools in the second part of the XIXth century, changing the name of the country (to Basarabia, which was only the name of the much smaller region in the south now part of Ukraine) and the name of the spoken language (into "Moldovan" language) to try establishing a new identity, changing the alphabet from the latin one to the slavic with cyrilics, inventing a new history to cut it from the other Romanian provinces etc. From this point of view, this clip is either too short to cover these complex things or too simplistic (the subject is correctly presented which is the main thing). To get to the point, one of the Russian tactics applied also in Ukraine, Georgia etc. is to have some russified population or moved russians in those countries and whenever Russia felt things getting out of their influence, interfere. See the invasion in Georgia, to "protect" the russian population. Or in the east part of Ukraine. The ones that escaped this vicious cycle are the Baltic countries because despite having just like Republic of Moldova maybe about 20-30% pro-russians or russians, they had a strong pro-weatern movement, joined NATO and EU, otherwise they would have been invaded a long time ago. Russia helped powerful anyi-western parties in Moldova and, of course, corruption. A strong country, with strong institutions cannot be controlled. The stealing of those billions was made with some Russian help for sure, too. And very corrupt people from Rep. of Moldova usually run in Russia when things get bad for them. The guy with the televisions & political party (some, banned now) is one of them, but he continues to sponsor protests, political movements etc. One of the lasts protests tried to overthrow the current leadership, but failed; see how during a protest they had militarized men in front of the crowd. And this is just a part, the story os longer. Greeting from France, too.

    • @FlorinArjocu
      @FlorinArjocu Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@TukozAki Forgot to also say that Rep. Moldova does not have a regular army and is a neutral country, this was set in the cease fire agreement in 1991/1992. So at this point in time, they don't have an army to kick the Russians out and set the rule of law in Transnistria.
      PS2: that Șor guy, the one involved in stealing the billion and trying to overthrow the power, now hiding in Russia, was discovered with another illegality: running the main airport in the country. A company he made in early August 2013 was somehow given the management of the airport in late August 2013. Sure, the corruption chain is way longer, but look who was the beneficiary, the same Șor guy. Btw, that company had 2 Russian companies as owners, fronts for Șor. About 9 years later, a dedicated government undid this in justice (in 2022, I think) and took back control over the capital 's airport. It is truly amazing how powerful that guy became some years ago.

  • @zsteinkamp
    @zsteinkamp Před 9 měsíci +1

    Great stuff as usual.
    Perhaps look into a pop filter for your mic or apply a 120hz high pass filter on the narration audio track to avoid low frequency thumps on P's and other plosives.

  • @marzukazar7698
    @marzukazar7698 Před 9 měsíci +8

    Great channel! Much effort from a smart man makes for very high quality videos!

  • @dragosstanciu9866
    @dragosstanciu9866 Před 9 měsíci +17

    There is no Moldovan language, it is Romanian language.

    • @muleyamwiinga3988
      @muleyamwiinga3988 Před 6 měsíci +1

      His point is Romania was Maldova. However, I understand your gripe

  • @Houthiandtheblowfish
    @Houthiandtheblowfish Před 9 měsíci +80

    how the rich ate the world

    • @dewiz9596
      @dewiz9596 Před 9 měsíci +10

      Invest in pitchforks!

    • @jesus2621
      @jesus2621 Před 9 měsíci

      They cult of money is worse than covid

    • @0neIntangible
      @0neIntangible Před 9 měsíci +10

      Elon Musk could buy Moldova and rename it.

    • @ArgumentumAdHominem
      @ArgumentumAdHominem Před 9 měsíci

      That's a communistic statement btw. If we agree to equate those sufficiently rich with immoral oligarchs and thieves, then we admit that we really want to have systematic wealth control, be it progressive taxation or other means of capping the allowed individual/family wealth. I personally would agree that there are certain levels of rich which are very unlikely to acquire by hard work alone, and certainly more can be done towards improving wealth inequality by forcing those excessively privileged to share some of their wealth with those excessively underprivileged (within reason of course, no revolution required). However, I am quite surprised that Asianometry used this title. I get the feeling he is more of a free market supporter, although my intuition may be wrong.

    • @mmaximk
      @mmaximk Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@ArgumentumAdHominem
      Aisianometry uses tropes such as "How the rich ate Moldova" and "How Malaysia(or Japan)ate the rich" as headers for discussing economic development in his videos.

  • @boreanonekatto8146
    @boreanonekatto8146 Před 9 měsíci +28

    Moldova deserves better

  • @chesthoIe
    @chesthoIe Před 7 měsíci +3

    That guy getting shot during that hunting trip reminds me of the death of Dietrich von Hülsen-Haeseler. He was on a hunting trip with as the aide de camp to Kaiser Wilhelm II. He was giving the Kaiser a dance in a tutu, and during his bows, dropped dead of a heart attack. They rushed to him, trying to remove the shame, but dude had sewn himself into his lady costume.
    It was a huge scandal. The Kaiser's whole crew were fired, and the people they were replaced with quickly started WWI.

  • @AlyxGlide
    @AlyxGlide Před 9 měsíci +5

    sounds like a privatization problem to me

    • @user-jh5dq9vc1v
      @user-jh5dq9vc1v Před 8 měsíci +3

      Any swift redistribution of material resources on national scale is a problem and bad news really

  • @top6ear
    @top6ear Před 9 měsíci +25

    You forgot the famous Moldavian macadamia nuts.

    • @johnd2058
      @johnd2058 Před 9 měsíci

      Well but that would be a lot of people eating, wouldn't it?

    • @onlooker774
      @onlooker774 Před 9 měsíci +4

      are you sure there is such?

    • @decry-goma
      @decry-goma Před 8 měsíci +1

      whaaat??? 😮😂

  • @AnnatarTheMaia
    @AnnatarTheMaia Před 9 měsíci +1

    Researched really well. You did a cracking job.

  • @todtnau
    @todtnau Před 7 měsíci +3

    Please make a video titled "How the rich ate the world" next. It's about time we discussed the elephant in the room.

  • @mharley3791
    @mharley3791 Před 9 měsíci +18

    When the EU, US and Russia are all on the same page and telling you to chill, you know you’ve messed up big time 😂

  • @OmegaSparky
    @OmegaSparky Před 9 měsíci +9

    DW had an interview with Ilan Shor a few months back. Interesting piece. The interviewer was pushing Shor a good bit about his connection when the Sor party but he claimed he wasn't actually running it. He's on the lam in Israel BTW.

    • @ImperativeGames
      @ImperativeGames Před 9 měsíci +5

      Ofc he wasn't running it. He is a Capitalist! He hired managers for that.

    • @TarebossT
      @TarebossT Před 9 měsíci

      That scum is a real piece of work, I tell you that.

  • @businessandinvesting2804
    @businessandinvesting2804 Před 8 měsíci +12

    as a nigerian even i'm shocked by the moldovan corruption, that bank robbery is crazy.

  • @miaorenfeng3620
    @miaorenfeng3620 Před 9 měsíci +10

    Mexico needs one of these episodes too

  • @tadroid3858
    @tadroid3858 Před 8 měsíci +31

    When visiting Florida, my family were enchanted by a bright and beautiful young Moldovan woman, who was working at a restaurant. She told us that she was much happier in the US. We hope she's doing well.

  • @hugoboyce9648
    @hugoboyce9648 Před 9 měsíci +7

    Great video as always!

  • @pablodana1512
    @pablodana1512 Před 9 měsíci +26

    It's not Moldova, per se. Corporatocracy is a sign of this times, for any country.
    Nice work, as always. Like.

    • @ImperativeGames
      @ImperativeGames Před 9 měsíci

      It's a natural state of Capitalism. Only if a country has (neo)colonies *and* threat of Communists/Socialists exists Capitalists share some of their wealth with lower classes. Since USSR fell even richest country in the world (USA) becomes a country of poor people and rich oligarchs.

    • @weirdshibainu
      @weirdshibainu Před 9 měsíci +4

      Yeah, but it's easy to bully small countries

    • @The_Ballo
      @The_Ballo Před 9 měsíci +6

      @@weirdshibainu easier still to bully unsophisticated peasants

    • @maschyt
      @maschyt Před 9 měsíci +3

      @@weirdshibainuIt’s not about bullying. It’s more that Moldova being a small country, it serves as a Petri dish for Corporatocracy where you can see it’s fast growth more easily.

    • @atulvaibhav5376
      @atulvaibhav5376 Před 9 měsíci +1

      ​@@weirdshibainulike singapore eh?

  • @andriygolovnya
    @andriygolovnya Před 9 měsíci +7

    Similar stories had happened in Ukraine too. I remember a lot of scandals there after termination of USSR. Same stories, different names.

  • @lukegraven7839
    @lukegraven7839 Před 9 měsíci +4

    Love your videos- keep making content please.

  • @pipster1891
    @pipster1891 Před 6 měsíci +2

    For a long time rich people paid politicians to do their bidding. At one point fairly recently, the rich thought, "Hang on. Why don't _we_ just become the politicians and cut out the middle man?" And everything gets worse.

  • @xerenas1593
    @xerenas1593 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Really great work, I enjoyed the video as a first-time viewer to your channel, but I have one question: How did you go a whole episode about Moldovan ethnic and ideological conflict without mentioning Gagauzia? It seems like a pretty important thing to mention. Maybe worth a follow-up?

  • @BracaPhoto
    @BracaPhoto Před 9 měsíci +16

    Serbia next !
    Cause i love saying the word salad
    Slobodan Milosovic out loud 😂😂

  • @ShannonWare
    @ShannonWare Před 9 měsíci +7

    I have been told that a distant cousin of mine was appointed US ambassador to Moldova. I think it is Dereck Hogan, but I was told on facebook and I don't feel like going back and looking at my timeline. When I heard the news it was more or less the first time I had heard of Moldova. Since the war, we here more and more about Moldova. At the time I remember thinking that Moldova was in eastern Europe, and I hope he survives.

    • @kinai01
      @kinai01 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Derek Hogan play the significant part to remove Plahotniuc from power during the wekk were there was a duality of power Derek Hogan had visited with Plahotniuc and i am not sure what kinda off threats were given but it was within hours that his popet government had resigned and he fled

    • @pasdpasse439
      @pasdpasse439 Před 9 měsíci +2

      Dereck Hogan was called in Moldovan politics "The black overlord" due to the fact that he managed to remove Plahotniuc from power by uniting Maia Sandu and Igor dodon

    • @jsnldn
      @jsnldn Před 9 měsíci

      hes probably working with Victoria Nuland rn to bring war to Moldova in order to get back at Russia.

    • @lenas6246
      @lenas6246 Před 8 měsíci +2

      survives what? There is no combat in that region even in ukraine

  • @phillylifer
    @phillylifer Před 4 měsíci

    The pace of the essay and cadance of the essayist are perfect

  • @miketurner3964
    @miketurner3964 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Stumbled across this, absolutely excellent, great piece well executed.

  • @adrianpc1369
    @adrianpc1369 Před 9 měsíci +27

    As a Moldovan I say nice work , you cannot change a nation in just such a short time , we had our freedoms since 90s , democracy in England took centuries

    • @adnanbosnian5051
      @adnanbosnian5051 Před 9 měsíci

      Democracy is fake. There is no freedom there.

    • @anonymousAJ
      @anonymousAJ Před 9 měsíci +13

      Democracy has little to do with freedom and is probably opposed
      What freedom requires is common law - the same law applies to poor & rich, popular & unpopular, etc
      If you really want to be free arm the common folk & use only precious metal as money (this should ensure something resembling common law, at least for a while)

    • @adnanbosnian5051
      @adnanbosnian5051 Před 9 měsíci

      @@anonymousAJ Good people to unite. No uniting based on race, skin color, nation, etc, no unitiy with Satan. Only good with the good and take all what is good because it belongs to them. If the satans try to impose on the good people then the good must destroy them.
      The elections are not only rigged like one of their actors, Trump, says, but its completely fake, its a TV show.

    • @yourface4248
      @yourface4248 Před 9 měsíci +13

      there is no democracy in England my friend. the people there are all subjects who had been broken to their knees centuries ago.

    • @bobhemphut4011
      @bobhemphut4011 Před 9 měsíci

      England....you mean commoners subjects and peasants. I just see oligarchs in the West and East... Using technocratic Socialism and consumerist materialism to soothe the masses into a state of comfortable amnesia. Even many Americans are perfectly happy being subjects and pissants today.

  • @itikutok6568
    @itikutok6568 Před 9 měsíci +10

    Great video, thanks! I see so many parallels with Bulgaria's transition, it's incredible.

  • @Mikekl54
    @Mikekl54 Před 9 měsíci +3

    I was not expecting from you a video about my country. I love your videos about microelectronics and is a contrast with Moldova but I truly hope that this contrast will be smaller in future and there will be possible in future to make a video about Moldovian microelectronics 😊

  • @Kpot009
    @Kpot009 Před 8 měsíci +3

    This happens everywhere. This video should be called How the rich ate the world.

  • @GThu1
    @GThu1 Před 7 měsíci +3

    I would like to see a success story in contrast, like the Slovenian.

  • @deckape714
    @deckape714 Před 9 měsíci +3

    Your friend in Seattle Thanks!

  • @radzid
    @radzid Před 8 měsíci +2

    Very informative! Can you do a video analysis of Croatia?

  • @_Joy_Unleashed
    @_Joy_Unleashed Před 9 měsíci +9

    Ilan Shor. *Every. Single. Time.*

  • @jmansfield8554
    @jmansfield8554 Před 8 měsíci +5

    Based on my experience I agree with you entirely. I wonder if the parasites are just more comfortable exploiting their own?

  • @WisamSafi1978
    @WisamSafi1978 Před 8 měsíci

    I love your meticulous research and great delivery. I wish you do similar video. Same structure but about Singapore. A successful nation building.

  • @gohstand
    @gohstand Před 8 měsíci

    Great summary thanks for the effort!

  • @AlexandruNicolin
    @AlexandruNicolin Před 8 měsíci +18

    A small addition at the start of the video. The separatists in Transnistria were helped by the Russian 14th Guards Army to keep control of the region which stayed there afterwards for years. Even now, 30 years later, Russia maintains around 2000 "peacekeepers" in the area, and the tensions were really high at the start of the Russian invasion of Ukraine since the plan of the "Special Military Operation" called for the South of Ukraine to be taken, creating a contiguous "Little Russia" (Malorussia) all the way to Transnistria.

    • @ilyaorlovskiy
      @ilyaorlovskiy Před 6 měsíci

      So what? What will happen if Russia withdraw the peacekeepers from there? Transnistria will immediately decide to get back under Moldova's control? Moldova will start its own military operation?

    • @naturalnonsense
      @naturalnonsense Před 6 měsíci

      ⁠@@ilyaorlovskiy “PMR”’s reunification with Moldova has already kinda started as a slow process. Tons of people who live there are moving elsewhere. In addition, russian occupation forces who keep the status quo are in a more vulnerable position… It remains unknown what happens next, but a few things can indeed speed up the dissolution of “PMR”

    • @ilyaorlovskiy
      @ilyaorlovskiy Před 6 měsíci

      @@naturalnonsense "It remains unknown what happens next" You can easy imagine this. Just look to Georgia. Georgia took control back on Adjaria in a peaceful way in 2004, after long negotiations between Adjaria and Georgia. Russian military base there really helped to stay calm for both sides. By 2007, russian troops were withdrawn. In 2008, Georgia decided to "speed up" and attacked russian peacekeepers in Osetia. You know the result. Believe me, there is no need "to speed up" for Moldova, unless you want to enter EU and NATO ASAP at all costs. The cost may be really high.

    • @ayararesara6253
      @ayararesara6253 Před 4 měsíci

      Maybe New Russia/Novorossiya? "Little Russia" is the name given to the northern half of Ukraine.

  • @recoverhealth2062
    @recoverhealth2062 Před 9 měsíci +5

    What this video doesn't tell you is the effort Romania makes in turning Moldova into a functional democracy since the early 2000, it's sad as a Romanian to see how R. Moldova exists in a perpetual state of poverty and misery.

    • @kedi1923
      @kedi1923 Před 8 měsíci

      So how many moneys are pomping Romania in Moldova to develop the contry, isn't it?

  • @davidcunningham2074
    @davidcunningham2074 Před 9 měsíci

    another great video from an excellent channel.

  • @totenkopfgrgdfhb1336
    @totenkopfgrgdfhb1336 Před 9 měsíci +20

    please do one for Bulgarian semiconductors next! :)))

    • @user-sd3ik9rt6d
      @user-sd3ik9rt6d Před 9 měsíci +8

      Is not transistor, is potato

    • @kallucelfrumos4946
      @kallucelfrumos4946 Před 9 měsíci

      @@user-sd3ik9rt6d The first computer digital an ABC , was created by a bulgarian ...surprise ! (ok bulgarian origin)

    • @totenkopfgrgdfhb1336
      @totenkopfgrgdfhb1336 Před 9 měsíci

      @@user-sd3ik9rt6d ?!

    • @TheHesseJames
      @TheHesseJames Před 8 měsíci +1

      And then one on Greenland's horticulture industry, right after Iceland's space program!

  • @taWay21
    @taWay21 Před 9 měsíci +10

    Your research is impeccable!

  • @gondwana6303
    @gondwana6303 Před 9 měsíci +16

    Hopefully you will do a similar piece on the various corruptions of Taiwanese, parties both the KMT and DPP. If there were a straits crisis, most of the leaders would leave for their homes in California, leaving the people to fend for themselves.

  • @cobymartin5920
    @cobymartin5920 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Can you make a similar video about Romania and their economic journey?

  • @drajitshekher
    @drajitshekher Před 9 měsíci

    Very useful background. Thank you.

  • @ciprianpopa1503
    @ciprianpopa1503 Před 9 měsíci +23

    You left out the most important player in this equation. After the fall of USSR and the independence, the main trading partner of Moldova was of course Russia. The first show of pro western sentiments led Russia to embargo all Moldova's exports towards Russia and we saw the gas pipe game leverage, from Russia again of course . So, every time Moldova expressed its true fillings it was coerced into unconditional love towards Russia. Guess what Russian did that.
    Ah yes, and you left out the war in 1992 which was a preamble of what we see today in Ukraine.

    • @elibrod9981
      @elibrod9981 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Under Soviet “occupation” Moldova was one of the best places to live.. Perhaps, you are too young to know how in the late 80s thousands of Jews and Russians were pushed out from the universities and jobs and were forced to immigrate, leaving this now shit hole to rot in its own inadequates and corruption

    • @Zerinor
      @Zerinor Před 8 měsíci

      It's almost as if Russia doesn't own you it's gas or it's trade, why would they want to make business with someone who is openly hostile? Go beg West for handouts then.

    • @alexanderchristopher6237
      @alexanderchristopher6237 Před 7 měsíci +5

      You make a big deal about Russian coercion, but it also left a big opportunity for Western governments to fill in the trade void with Russia and be their new BFF. Did they manage to fill it in? Did they brought the promised wealth and prosperity? Did they stay away from privatization of the nation’s assets? No, they didn’t, right?

    • @MrReymoclif714
      @MrReymoclif714 Před 6 dny

      Moldovan identity is often the butt of political satire in the MeediaFeedia. Red+Red2?

    • @ciprianpopa1503
      @ciprianpopa1503 Před 6 dny

      @@alexanderchristopher6237 Who is they?

  • @rairaur2234
    @rairaur2234 Před 9 měsíci +4

    At first, I was sceptical since Moldova is far from Asia (which I supposed to be your area of expertise). I'm delighted to be proved wrong! Great video!
    As other Eastern Europeans have noted, the similarities between Moldova's story and other CIS countries are quite-quite sad.

    • @IainShepherd1
      @IainShepherd1 Před 8 měsíci +1

      Check out his videos on East Germany, Soviet computers, etc - fascinating stuff (fascinating to me, a Brit)

  • @CAROLDDISCOVER-FINDER2525
    @CAROLDDISCOVER-FINDER2525 Před 9 měsíci

    Another very insightful documentary on this subject.

  • @fernandoanaya9250
    @fernandoanaya9250 Před 9 měsíci +2

    Nice episode! Moldova reminds me Argentina, don’t know why …😢
    Btw, you’re pretty far away from Asia in this one but I-love the idea
    Success!

  • @gwky
    @gwky Před 9 měsíci +4

    When the going is good, every oligarch is vibing, but when shit hits the fan, it's game theory time - every man for themselves.

  • @MrAdrianeagle
    @MrAdrianeagle Před 9 měsíci +11

    I clicked on the video out of curiosity as I am Romanian, but I just cannot finish it man..
    I feel like Moldova is and always will be part of Romania and I hope that I'll get to see my brothers and sisters across the Prut coming home one day and become the one country we should've been this entire time.
    And it will happen, one day

    • @maximmaslov3569
      @maximmaslov3569 Před 9 měsíci

      No, it will not happen

    • @A_Simple_Neurose
      @A_Simple_Neurose Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@maximmaslov3569 It will. Once Russia realizes it has zero power to protect its failed sphere of influence puppet states, they'll all break off and we'll be happy free people.
      The infection that is Russia will be cured, eventually.

    • @epicrobloxgamer1995
      @epicrobloxgamer1995 Před 8 měsíci +3

      two more weeks

    • @stefan2serb
      @stefan2serb Před 8 měsíci +1

      We all suffer with this in the Balkans. Half of Bosnia and a quarter or today’s Croatia was and is inhabited by Serbs. North Macedonia is inhabited by Bulgarians. Montenegro is inhabited by Serbs. Moldova is inhabited by Romanians. Instead of being properly formed and developed countries we are a hodgepodge of Mickey Mouse states with identity disorders and hatred for our neighbours. Luckily Romania itself is of a decent territorial size and has experienced 3 decades of stability and is on the up.

  • @pusicer
    @pusicer Před 9 měsíci +2

    did not expect seeing a windy cross-over. haha

  • @The_Red_Off_Road
    @The_Red_Off_Road Před 9 měsíci +1

    I like these history lessons. You do a good job of it

  • @ArgumentumAdHominem
    @ArgumentumAdHominem Před 9 měsíci +12

    Great work! Indeed, it is quite commonplace for Eastern European countries' dominant politicians to change allegiance on a whim. The major players of the communist parties during USSR become leaders of the radical nationalist parties after independence. It really puzzles me how damaged these people are. With so much power in their hands, the only thing they can think of is accumulating more wealth as opposed to following through with some sort of vision for the country. I don't even care which vision any more, just commit to something.
    A very similar situation to the Moldovan bank scandal happened in Latvia which you mentioned. A Latvian bank gave money to a shady Russian businessman, then the bank got sold to the government for 1$, government used the pension fund to cover losses (of that one deal), and then split the bank into two banks: one with good assets, and one with bad assets. Quite a few people got poorer that day I imagine.

  • @PeculiarNotions
    @PeculiarNotions Před 9 měsíci +7

    Another great video. Thanks for sharing.

  • @bergweg
    @bergweg Před 9 měsíci +2

    V.Plahotniuc smiling kinda reminds me of some cartoon/movie villain

    • @zarzavattzarzavatt9309
      @zarzavattzarzavatt9309 Před 9 měsíci +2

      ironically he did act like a cartoon villain and it almost worked (and he still has a lot of influence in moldova)

    • @user-jh5dq9vc1v
      @user-jh5dq9vc1v Před 8 měsíci

      If you were rich, you would smile like that, it's just your net worth bend your facial features in perception of poor people

  • @sjoerdglaser2794
    @sjoerdglaser2794 Před 6 měsíci

    After hearing your advertisement for the newslater quite a few times now, I still don't know whether you sometimes send the letter twice in a week or once every two weeks.

  • @onlooker774
    @onlooker774 Před 9 měsíci +4

    There is no similarity between the Romanian and Moldovan languages, it is the same and only one language...

  • @MP-ck6nx
    @MP-ck6nx Před 9 měsíci +4

    @asianometry I just need to point out that Romanian and Moldovan aren't two separate languages. Linguistically and now legally as well there is only one language, Romanian.

    • @kedi1923
      @kedi1923 Před 8 měsíci +1

      As a romanian I can tell you is the same language. We can understand each over. The "moldovan" language was invented by russians occupiers to divide the romanian nation. Divide and imperia!

    • @MP-ck6nx
      @MP-ck6nx Před 8 měsíci +1

      @@kedi1923 correct!

  • @quadnumber
    @quadnumber Před 9 měsíci

    excellent video, your skill in creating informative and interesting videos on such a wide array of topics is impressive, please keep them coming

  • @YalokIy
    @YalokIy Před 9 měsíci +8

    Very well presented material as always.
    But as already mentioned by many, with exception of language.
    Since independence, all the schools in Moldova teach Romanian language. So nobody speaks "Moldovan language" in Moldova. There is still a minority of people that think that Romanian language should be named Moldovan though. Markedly, in Transnistria, Romanian language is still written in cyrillic and called "Moldovan language".

    • @AABB-px8lc
      @AABB-px8lc Před 9 měsíci

      Known fact, neighbor Romania trying to assimilate Moldova and doing that intentionally and with big effort and applause of EU (Declaring that Moldova is just bad weak part of Great Romania with perverted "true" Romanian language, etc, etc.) Nothing new.

    • @bergweg
      @bergweg Před 9 měsíci +1

      @@AABB-px8lc It does not really matter how one calls the language as long as they don't claim that they are two different languages

    • @zarzavattzarzavatt9309
      @zarzavattzarzavatt9309 Před 9 měsíci +2

      in transnistria neither romanian nor moldovan is written. "moldovan" it's there only to allow them to brag about 3 state languages. otherwise it's a complete mockery, it's not used at all.

    • @kedi1923
      @kedi1923 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@AABB-px8lcyou are using russian propaganda. We do not want to assimilate romanians from Moldova because we are the same nation from centuries. The language is the same, we can understand each over. Trust me, i was spoken with romanians from Moldova and they are our brothers.

    • @AABB-px8lc
      @AABB-px8lc Před 8 měsíci

      @@kedi1923 as i said above, great Romania, part of it occupited by evil communists and named Moldavia, poor tortured Moldavia ppl keep trying to get rid of avbsolute evil toward drugs-sex-rocknroll-HDTV-LGBT, but being by definition less strong as Real Romanian only achievement is renaming Moldavia to Moldova. But you keep trying, gogo make all Soviet Moldavia to famous Borat abortionist-welder glory. And free weapon to all, btw.

  • @catalinm756
    @catalinm756 Před 9 měsíci +3

    The polytechnic university of Chișinău ( or moldova i am not sure) holds a microelectronics contest for students. I think they will be at the 12th edition next year.
    If moldova would join romania that would make it part of EU and russian wouldnt like to have an EU country next door.

    • @SianaGearz
      @SianaGearz Před 9 měsíci +2

      Well Russians shouldn't have a say in which political/economic (or indeed defence etc) alliances nearby nations join.
      Not to speak of the fact that Finland and Baltics are EU and adjoining Russia and Poland is adjoining Kaliningrad, while Moldova does not share a border with Russia. So like that ship has long sailed; and if you want an alliance, you can't just do it by force, you have to offer something better than another alliance in return. If Russia doesn't have much to offer besides blackmail and passing stinky gas well it only has itself to blame for lack of economic political cultural and scientific development.

  • @user-cd4bx6uq1y
    @user-cd4bx6uq1y Před 7 měsíci +1

    Ngl this feels like talking about politics with a friend in a good way