Officially known as the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, the USSR was a one-party state, governed, controlled, and tormented by a single party rule. That of the Communist Party. No nation has inflicted such destruction on its own population in the name of progress. Power corroded the leadership, leaving the masses to suffer in the name of history. They very people who were supposed to be governing themselves. There are many factors that effected the Soviet Union's turbulent history, but the sheer ungovernable vastness of the country was inescapable. It was a nation the size of a continent stretching from Moscow to Vladivostok and from Leningrad to Stalingrad. What we might consider European Russia was dwarfed by the reaches of Siberia. Enacting any kind of policy took force. Complicated, contradictory figureheads would come and go, men who held this impossible country it seemed by sheer will.
@philipgrice1026 Жыл бұрын
Errrm. Have you ever visited a Native American concentration camp... ... I mean 'reservation'. The fake American 'democracy' has slaughtered tens and possibly hundreds of thousands of native Americans. We invaded Korea on false pretenses. We invaded Vietnam on false pretenses. We invaded Afghanistan on false pretenses. We invaded Iraq on false pretenses. We invaded Mexico on false pretenses. I'm sure there's more but that's all I can remember at the moment. The USA was and still is a terrorist nation, currently supporting the apartheid 'state' called Israel that occupies Palestine currently. Good grief!
@СергейЗнамин Жыл бұрын
Бред сумасшедшего!
@goldgeologist5320 Жыл бұрын
USSR it was not a Union, it was not Soviet, it was not Socialist and it was not a Republic.
@marvinwilliams9697 Жыл бұрын
Individual rights nor freedoms exist in Russia nor China today nor back then. These governments built what they have by making sure their people know that they don't matter n only worthy of being soldiers in wars they so anxiously want to have. China nor Russia doesn't mind losing millions of their people during wars n will kill their own people themselves if they refuse or go against their dreams of ruling the world!!! Just because u have a million man military doesn't mean ur automatically a great power. If ur opponent can out general and out fight you then your garbage with a lot of superpower weapons.
@Contessa63635 ай бұрын
My professor for Russian History in Grad School had a relative who survived the Battle of Stalingrad. It was his great aunt on his mother's side. Evidently the family had written her off. Somehow after 10 years she was able to trace her sister who had settled in the US after the War. A true survival story!
@FreeDocumentaryHistory5 ай бұрын
that is awesome
@Dubbadizzo86 Жыл бұрын
Fantastic series. Thank you.
@FreeDocumentaryHistory Жыл бұрын
so glad you are enjoying it and thanks for stopping by to let us know!
@davidstronach3261 Жыл бұрын
This should be shown in schools great documentary
@FreeDocumentaryHistory Жыл бұрын
thank you and I agree.
@debbiestyer453 Жыл бұрын
Thank you for this series.
@wbiro7 ай бұрын
43:36 Love that Leonid Brezhnev music at the end -- totally appropriate.
@dorianphilotheates3769Ай бұрын
@wbiro - Say what you will about Leonid Brezhnev, but he was by all accounts a FANTASTIC kisser! 💋
@Contessa63635 ай бұрын
My consuler's parents were from Lithuania. They decided to take the risk of leaving Lithuania before Stalin annexed Lithuania , Estonia,and Latvia. They went on foot behind the Eastern Front. My consuler was born in a refuge camp in 1949. She spent her first 8 years there before her family was allowed to come to the US. Incredible stories from the civilian population in WWII!
@youtubehatesus2651 Жыл бұрын
great series. thank you.
@jjt1881 Жыл бұрын
5:32 No, the T 72 tank was not produced during WW2. Production of this tank was started in 1969 !!! 😒🤦♀🤦
@patd4u2 Жыл бұрын
give the old guy a break please 😂😂
@TheDavidlloydjones Жыл бұрын
@@patd4u2 No, don't give the guy a break. Please! Please teach the children that incorrect sentences in documentaries are sometimes innocent mistakes. And sometimes they aren't. Judging which are which is a vital life skill. It is an important skill for our schools to hone.
@patd4u2 Жыл бұрын
@@TheDavidlloydjones yes, I agree with you 100%, it's a way they change history. here in the USA, we are taught we won World War II, not much mention of Russia. The US military could not of withstood the casualties the Germans took on the eastern front. Two out of every three German soldiers fought on the eastern front. And we had a hard time fighting them in France and they were not first line troops.
@jeremymerrifield7244 Жыл бұрын
I believe 8 out of every 11 German military deaths were by Russian actions@@patd4u2
@troyswierczek4517 Жыл бұрын
Was wondering the same thing.
@IdealX-fr4eg9 ай бұрын
Fantastic doc!
@ryandavis989810 ай бұрын
History is written by the winners
@musamusashi19 күн бұрын
And yet discerning people can see even through partial historical narratives like this one.
@sophieholloway_00Ай бұрын
Brilliant documentary, thanks! Subscribed :))
@zawiszaczarnysulima3700 Жыл бұрын
5:20 - T-72 produced east of the Ural Mountains during WWII? With the German shells bouncing off of them? Didn't anyone check this for historical accuracy? A hint for the "historians" in this documentary: The letter T in the model designation means "Tank". The number is the year in which the design of the tank was completed, and the tank was ready to be handed to the Army. So the T-72 taking a part of the WWII is completely bogus, unless the WWII was still raging in Europe in 1972. A spoiler: the end of WWII in Europe was May 8th, 1945. It was a Tuesday, if anyone cares.
@derekjancart215 Жыл бұрын
Oh man shut the whole thing down, they mistook the T-72 for the T-34.
@zawiszaczarnysulima3700 Жыл бұрын
@@derekjancart215 Hyperbole much?
@junglesuperstar9270 Жыл бұрын
A lot of factories were moved to Siberia.
@zawiszaczarnysulima3700 Жыл бұрын
@@junglesuperstar9270 Yes, and they were making T-34s, not T-72s.
@CdaG22 Жыл бұрын
@@derekjancart215its a pretty egregious mistake for a historian to make, given this is a documentary. It’s not just slightly wrong, it’s incredibly wrong.
@shanegriffin2215Ай бұрын
This series was incredible. All of these should be shown in our schools. As a lesson to show all the miserable, tragic failure of governments set up by evil lunatics who want nothing to do with God and have no regard for the people they desire to control.
@markphelt6395 Жыл бұрын
What’s crazy is that as a child of the 80s (and a history nerd) I was always told that Khrushchev’s exit among other things started with his “failure” during the crisis. And after the movie weird science had me in the library looking up missiles lol (rip Bill Paxton) even I knew we were wrong for having missiles there
@dorianphilotheates3769Ай бұрын
5:32 - Oops! - careful, Professor: production of the T-72 tank did not begin until 1973. He’s thinking of the famous Soviet T-34 which essentially won the war on the Eastern Front: cheap as chips to produce, effective, and, most importantly, easily replaceable - just like the Red Army infantryman...
@jdmdt33283 ай бұрын
Thank God I was born an American!
@wooden21872 ай бұрын
Indeed, you get to see the US's first autocrat in 2025. 😮
@jdmdt33282 ай бұрын
@wooden2187 what?
@morfruseАй бұрын
@@jdmdt3328 Is English not your first language?
@childfreesingleandatheist8899Ай бұрын
@@morfruse It's his first language. He's just surprised by the stupidity of wooden2187's comment.
@juanmontoya6622 Жыл бұрын
Great Documentary, but it leaves out very important bits: 1)Richard Sorge told Stalin that Japan was not going to open a second front. SIberian troops were moved to defend Moscow. 2)Both US and USSR employed captured German Scientists to advance Space Programs. The US was not as astute or image building as the Soviets. Therefore, it came as a surprise to the masses, but not the Leaders at that time. 3)While controlling and or influencing a vast swath of the planet, the Soviet Union retrograde mindset failed to create a lasting economic advancement. Trade was mostly based on armaments and heavy industry in a mercantile manner. Whereas the US became both a consumer and exporter to the world building up upward mobility to the masses beyond its borders and continent.
@junglesuperstar9270 Жыл бұрын
1) not true . Actually it is a big tragedy for Russians as they had to keep quite many soldiers in East to protect borders and thus these soldiers could not help in west .
@AugustusOmega Жыл бұрын
3 money printing and fraudulent mechanism of colonial dominance do not construe as lasting economic advancement, the US built a mafiosa business...straight outta the streets of brooklyn to the treasury
@FreeDocumentaryHistory10 ай бұрын
first of all sorry for the delayed response and secondly, thanks for the extensive comment. In the doc’s defense, it’s almost impossible to put all nuances and political undercurrents in there and it’s appreciated when commenters like you add these things.
@foodbadgersnew2 ай бұрын
nice one sir
@dorianphilotheates3769Ай бұрын
Russia is unconquerable.
@dorianphilotheates3769Ай бұрын
I am fairly confident that with combined effort, Taylor Swift, Oprah, Elon Muck, Jordan Peterson, Donald Trump, Joe Rogan, Kris Kardashian-Jenner, Ben Shapiro, Milton Friedman, Margaret Thatcher, and Kanye West, could have turned Joe Stalin away from communism, and persuaded him to embrace our free-market liberal democratic way of life...too bad so many had to needlessly suffer...
@FreeDocumentaryHistoryАй бұрын
@@dorianphilotheates3769 Actually, the combined efforts of those named might have strengthened his resolve so i would be hesitant to use that example. Elon Musk?! Yikes.
@lindsey79517 күн бұрын
Ben Shapiro😂 Joe Rogan😂 Margaret Thatcher😂I'm not even a communist and they make me wish I was...
@jons4418 Жыл бұрын
The coverage of the Cuban Missile crisis is poor.
@jamesglenn52597 ай бұрын
N. Khrushchev was much better at keeping the peace than J. Stalin. He wasn’t evil like Stalin in fact he denounced Stalin so he couldn’t be all bad! I’m a baby boomer and I can still remember the Cuban Missile Crisis and President Kennedy’s assignation. Those were some scary times!
@georgeemil3618 Жыл бұрын
I've always wondered if the Soviets would have been able to defeat the Germans in Stalingrad, Moscow and Kursk if the Soviets had a different leader than Stalin. On the one hand, no Stalin meant no purges so the good generals would have remained when Germany entered. On the other hand, no Stalin no 'Not a Step Back' order so no hug the enemy at Stalingrad.
@Won4theTeam Жыл бұрын
Stalin didn't start the "no step back" in the military - this became policy under Trotsky during the Russian Revolution amongst the Red forces. One must also consider the number of able-bodied men during WWII that were dedicated to the NKVD (precursor of the KGB) - continuing political purges, even during the war. In sum - Stalin was a horrible leader whose only desire was complete dominance. There was NOTHING good about him as a man or a leader.
@gondolin1211 ай бұрын
@@Won4theTeamand that regime either. My country and people endured immense suffering and misery from that country. I’m glad it’s gone into the ashes of history
@Mentol_9 ай бұрын
@@Won4theTeamIf Stalin had been a bad leader, then the USSR would not have had a large margin of safety during the Second World War.
@jkainel Жыл бұрын
Great documentary, thanks a lot for uploading! However, the story about Stalin having Kruschev´s son killed is presented here as a 100% fact, when in reality it is more like conspiricy theory. I had never heard about this, though I consider myself strong in Soviet history. Therefore started to do some research and it is very likely that Nikita´s son, Leonid, who was a fighter pilot actually was just shot down and killed in airbattle. Not that Stalin could not have done it, sounds like him. Should definitely mention that its a rumour, now I have to second guess every piece of new information in this documentary :D
@danalexandru3022 Жыл бұрын
true, there are a lot of conspiracy theorys that are presented as facts in this documentary.
@AugustusOmega Жыл бұрын
"Not that Stalin could not have done it, sounds like him." it is bad enough the things i did are true, but even things i didnt do are given to my evil the credit.
@jackmcgrew5272 Жыл бұрын
T72 tanks in ww2???????? Ummm so there making things up now or did I forget that?
@southwestxnorthwest8 ай бұрын
They're
@dorianphilotheates3769Ай бұрын
41:10 - Few in the West understand Russian humour: they inherited it from the Greeks along with Orthodox Christianity and the Cyrillic alphabet...
@FreeDocumentaryHistoryАй бұрын
@@dorianphilotheates3769 It’s true. Unfortunately those associations don’t help either :) Learning the language certainly helps as through structure and certain ways of saying things provide a deeper understanding of a culture.
@confusedson Жыл бұрын
[21:07] Taiwan turns red ??? Who does your editing ? Not the CCP I hope....
@adamhand71192 ай бұрын
The only issue with documentaries. Is theres too short handed of a framing in all education to equate controlling governments as speaking for even a majority of the inhabitants of a country but i love the knowledge
@bugtesties Жыл бұрын
I’m only 1:50 in and if they don’t bring up the lend lease agreement and how america supplied the hell out of Stalin for him to save russia I’m going to be disappointed
@myassizitchy9 ай бұрын
I see they miss that in alot but bein that Simon Sebag is in this one im sure they do at some point
@erikriza71658 ай бұрын
russia never wanted to admit that we helped them during WW II. We sent them many tons of everything thru Alaska.
@motojunkie8348 Жыл бұрын
Whats funny is the people who support communism today think that they'd be allowed to write poetry & smoke weed all day. 😂
@username19237 Жыл бұрын
How exactly is your comment relevant to any event discussed in this video or constructive in any way.
@HelberGalarga69 Жыл бұрын
@@username19237doesn’t it matter if his comment is irrelevant to the video? His opinion/statement is relevant, wasn’t the Soviet Union a communist country?
@real.mir_ Жыл бұрын
@@username19237Exactly
@username19237 Жыл бұрын
@@HelberGalarga69 considering how well constructed and researched this series of videos is, it’s confusing why someone would provide such an unsolicited and misguided opinion on a particular ideology, when their comment isn’t relevant to the video.
@danscott3880 Жыл бұрын
"You'll work hard with a gun in your back for a bowl of rice of day"....Dead kennedys
@pontifixmax Жыл бұрын
Yuri Gagarin hated his celebrity. All he wanted to do was fly planes. Ironically, he was chosen to pilot the first manned mission into space because of his small stature, which allowed him fit into the capsule. His growth was stunted as a consequence of growing up in Ukraine in the 1930s during the great famine. After his historic trip into space, Gagarin returned to being a test pilot. Sadly, he was killed short years later in an aviation accident. It's a small consolation, but at least he died doing what he loved.
@tatasto380911 ай бұрын
Летчик-космонавт СССР Юрий Алексеевич Гагарин родился 9 марта 1934 года в селе Клушино Гжатского (ныне Гагаринского) района Смоленской области.
@jakehaye6371Ай бұрын
Great to hear a little backstory of a brushed over historical figure!
@skip_myles21610 ай бұрын
One thing is all these guys loved their country..
@ShadeRaven2227 ай бұрын
i dont like hearing one side of the story. now i want to watch a Russian documentary on the USA
@cneve086 ай бұрын
Go read gulag archipelago. Written by a communist Russian.
@antilaw99115 ай бұрын
You can hear testimonials from immigrants and defectors. That should tell you something
@musamusashi19 күн бұрын
You will not get it on YT.
@kellyrateau106810 ай бұрын
The commercials are ridiculous
@Live-Interaction-8325 ай бұрын
I have seen an ad after every 5 mins
@crinihendrix1350 Жыл бұрын
24:34 This story of Kruschev's son being executed is NOT TRUE. Leonid Kruschev was most probably killed during an aerial fight with German planes. What this "historian" is claiming here is: 1. Kruschev's son flew to Germany to avoid being executed. 2. Was taken into German captivity. 3. Escaped back to Russia only to be executed again. Why would he do that? Doesn't make any sense. Anyway this is total BS, what this guy is saying. How can you let this kind of speculation in without fact checking?
@danielpaschjr3547 Жыл бұрын
Khrushchev's oldest son had accidentally killed a fellow soldier in a military hospital and as punishment had been sent to the front. His plane was shot down by the Germans.
@oneshothunter9877 Жыл бұрын
@@danielpaschjr3547 "Accidentally killed" 😀 How did that happen? He three him out a window expecting they were participants in a cartoon? Sorry, couldn't resist. But, honestly, how "accidentally"?
@domenico_ginny61645 ай бұрын
@@oneshothunter9877you have an attitude
@rodneybjornstad90164 ай бұрын
I agree. That part was “ new” to me. I couldn’t have heard of it before because it probably didn’t happen
@L0LrevneD2 ай бұрын
21:08 ummm Taiwan 🇹🇼?
@roselynjrserrano9706 ай бұрын
Is it right that Khruschev remove the missiles from Cuba.
@charlesmhorn2 ай бұрын
Leonid Khrushchev was not executed by Stalin. Not sure where the historian who said that got that from. C+ documentary.
@FreeDocumentaryHistory2 ай бұрын
@@charlesmhorn What’s true is the fate of Leonid Khrushchev remains unsolved. Most likely he did perish in a dogfight. But some also believe the story as depicted in this documentary is possible. The reason these rumors persist is rooted in the fate of the country, when reformers are considered to be weak and tyrants strong. Stalin and Khrushchev are the two icons representing those forces. So, it’s legitimate some historians give credence to the execution theory.
@RoseSlane Жыл бұрын
Welcome to Africa... Again.... Thanks NYPD
@SuperGreatSphinx5 ай бұрын
OUR LADY OF AFRICA THE BLESSED VIRGIN MARY
@agneoa-b2x4 ай бұрын
A lot of people (my grandparents) from my country Kyrgyzstan didn’t came back from this war. They gave everything to help ussr and stop germany. But I hate ussr myself and how Russians treated Central Asia.
@kidmohair8151 Жыл бұрын
19:46 a turn of phrase based on the old brit empire saying about the peoples they had subjugated… “…for we have got the Maxim gun, and they have not.” 33:56 initially the Cuban revolution was not a “communist” one. Castro made overtures to the US, and was rebuffed by the Dulles brothers, who still exercised deep control over US foreign policy. it is worth remembering that the two of them had financial interests in Central America and the Caribbean, including Cuba. indeed, they had made fortunes in the so-called “banana” republics. that left Castro with no choice but to approach the Soviets. which has led to the ghosts of Dulles Bros. Inc. still exercising that control to this day.
@Jayjay-qe6um Жыл бұрын
"Mankind is divided into rich and poor, into property owners and exploited; and to abstract oneself from this fundamental division; and from the antagonism between poor and rich means abstracting oneself from fundamental facts." -- Joseph Stalin
@strfltcmnd.9925 Жыл бұрын
That sounds like Brandon
@sten260 Жыл бұрын
and then he went on and made himself the largest property holder and exploiter in the world, greedier than any capitalist ever
@travelsxv11 ай бұрын
Such a good docu.
@whitemailprivilege28309 ай бұрын
Yes, if you’re clueless about history.
@vegetatarian Жыл бұрын
T 72 was way after ww2
@billotto602 Жыл бұрын
My heart breaks for the Russian people. I can't fathom living in a country that the wrong word to the wrong person, even a family member, could condemn you to horrors beyond description.
@abelradebe9644 Жыл бұрын
😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 you are sick, I would rather be in Russia than in any western country not knowing if am a girl or boy, it's crazy that children are no longer safe because a grown adult male could wake up tomorrow and claim that his a little girl that's horrible.
@theshipoperator722711 ай бұрын
I can't believe how many people still think along these cliches. I have one word for them: Assange
@jons441811 ай бұрын
@@theshipoperator7227 Putin
@jons441811 ай бұрын
@@abelradebe9644 Are you trying to make sense?
@theshipoperator722711 ай бұрын
@@jons4418 all right two words: Snowden 🤣
@marianmaslak Жыл бұрын
Stalin got to Berlin, but Alexander got to Paris.
@shaiaheyes2c41 Жыл бұрын
39:38 just like today's Soviet Russia, the exact same crude rhetoric, accusing others of colonialism while they themselves colonialize the world.
@junglesuperstar9270 Жыл бұрын
Really . What colonies did the ussr have ? But check the meaning of the word colony first .
@musamusashi19 күн бұрын
😂 who colonised what, you 🤡
@d.n.891915 күн бұрын
@@junglesuperstar9270Caucasus (Georgia, Armenia, Chechnya, etc.), far Eastern Asia (Siberia), Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, etc.). And the USSR carried out “Russification” campaigns in all of these areas, severely limiting the indigenous cultures and languages. Much of this was an extension of the Russian empire’s colonialism
@masudmd5327Ай бұрын
সের খুল গেয়া ☠️☠️☠️☠️
@petermitchelmore2592 Жыл бұрын
Thankfully, Churchill didn't take too long to see through Stalin.
@joegerhardusa90179 ай бұрын
Had Churchill not pushed for war over Poland and in general not demonized Germany then the British would have had a powerful ally in Germany to fight the Russians. Poland wouldn't have been destroyed and eastern Europe wouldn't have been taken over by the communist. Germany was offering an alliance with Britain and Poland for that matter against the Soviet union. All they wanted was Danzig. Instead Churchill and the British pushed for war with Germany. By doing this they destroyed their chance of saving Europe from the communist. They defeated a nation who wanted to be their ally just to have another country seize Europe anyway. All because the British were afraid of Germanys economic resurgence. Anthony Eden British foreign secretary literally said that's why they went to war. Churchill was a complete fool. And remember who did European peoples side with when Germany invaded Soviet union? They sided with Germany. Hundreds of thousands volunteered to fight alongside the Germans against the communist.
@musamusashi19 күн бұрын
Churchill had more blood on his hands than Stalin himself though.
@ShadyCauseWhyNot8 ай бұрын
19:10
@kennedymcgovern54139 ай бұрын
14:50 Wrontg answer pal. The Soviets were not more powerful than the "western allies." They were more powerful than the British and the French. The United States would have wiped the floor with them in the immediate aftermath of WWII. The Ruskies were extremely poorly equipped and they had no leadership. All they had was bodies and a complete disregard for human life. The only strategy available to them was to keep throwing bodies at the Germans until they ran out of bullets and gas for their tanks. The United States would not have run out of bullets and gas. On top of the obvious, we were just about to bring all of our forces back from the Pacific. If Stalin had started a fight, we would have slaughtered him. Why do you think he did not start that fight? Was he just being a nice guy to Winston?
@TV-ph1tw Жыл бұрын
gargantuan; gigantic massive large-scale
@Subrankur Жыл бұрын
In world war moscow and usa colwar result. No comme who best That new chapter iread that ussr crisis on hugary power of. Battle.
@DiorvvАй бұрын
Who is watching this after Trump win election? Dictator +Dictator= WAR
@Lady_Mahoney8 ай бұрын
The space race was all about launching spy satellites. The rockets that "carried men into space" never happened. The rockets carried the spy satellites. How do I know, ... my father was one of the chief engineers for the government who developed the cameras on the spy satellites (rockets). There used to be an article about the cameras/satellites on the rockets on the Smithsonian website, but I am not sure it is still there.
@TheCrazyMachinist7 ай бұрын
Yeah I bet FDR and Stalin did agree on a lot.
@arkady714 Жыл бұрын
Things that Americans are never taught: 1 - Yuri Gagarian was the 1st man in space. We only learn about Alan Shepherd, 2 - The U.S. placed missiles in Turkey before the Russians did in Cuba. 3 - Said missiles were removed from Cuba after the U.S. removed theirs from Turkey... and, as a favor to Kennedy, Kruschev agreed to not publicize this.
@jons4418 Жыл бұрын
This is false info.
@jons44188 ай бұрын
@salvadorvizcarra769 as I said before it is totally untrue. Every single one of those things is untrue. Number one we are taught that Yuri Gagarin was the first man in space number two I don’t only learn about Alan Shepherd number three. I know that missiles. were placed in Turkey. Number four they were not removed from Cuba after the Americans removed theirs they were removed before the Americans remove theirs in Turkey, but that’s how little you know. You are poorly educated, or just an out and out liar.
@phil-jo8px2 ай бұрын
You weren't paying attention in class. We were taught all of that
@arkady7142 ай бұрын
@@phil-jo8px You were. I wasn’t. Plain and simple.
@phil-jo8px2 ай бұрын
You said "Americans are never taught". Anyways, you weren't paying attention. That's pretty common core stuff
@Norg1 Жыл бұрын
i always wondered how a communist style government would look like if it prospered and secede like how it would be for the people compared to a capitalism style mainly for the middle class
@oneshothunter9877 Жыл бұрын
Look at China of today.
@antilaw99115 ай бұрын
Cuba
@alumni2a692 Жыл бұрын
🤣 5:37 Russian tanks T-72 of which "shells bounce off them" ... 🤣Yeah we saw them in Ukraine, even saw T-72s' turrets flying 😂🤣😂
@defunctchannel942Ай бұрын
This documentary was pretty disappointing because of how little it actually discusses the Soviet Union itself and it mostly just looks at the Soviet Union in relation to the United States and the rest of the West. There was a bit about Soviet life in the 1st party during the Lenin and Stalin years, but that quickly fades, and the Soviet Union ceases to be the largest country ever taking up 1/6th of the Earth's landmass with the largest population, and becomes just a label on the map as we look at Czechoslovakia, Vietnam, Cuba, Germany, and so on. We would never do a documentary about the United States but only looking at it in relation to other nations, but somehow a nation that rivaled it enough to be considered a superpower can be diminished to just ignoring its internal politics, culture, daily life of its people, and any of its non hostile international relations. The Soviet Union for the millionth time is just the villain of a play called Cold War, and we learn nothing new.
@ep932110 ай бұрын
So what have learned :)? Not much has changed.
@grusgameplays1308 Жыл бұрын
when the soviet union fell it was one of the best times in the world did anyone else notice that terrorism around the world fell und rose again since russia is stronger?
@musamusashi19 күн бұрын
😂
@bugtesties Жыл бұрын
The T-72 was made in the 70s what the hell is this guy talking about they had T-34s that weren’t superior to German tanks.
@dritemolawzbks8574 Жыл бұрын
😂 @ 23:40. Nikita Khrushchev was "badly educated."
@oneshothunter9877 Жыл бұрын
😁😂 Same goes for Stalin. A simple and uneducated thief. Obviously intelligent, though. Streetsmart.
@crazy_cl1ck52 Жыл бұрын
Um... Is there information here about how the United States was the first to create NATO without any real threat, and then put high-range missiles on Turkey? Thus giving rise to the Caribbean crisis.
@snapdragon6601 Жыл бұрын
There was a threat. Stalin didn't keep his word about allowing free and fair elections in Eastern and Central Europe. There was every reason for the rest of Europe to be nervous that they would be next.
@billotto602 Жыл бұрын
And they were medium range missiles. NOT high (assuming you mean LONG range).
@crazy_cl1ck52 Жыл бұрын
@@billotto602 The point is not in the naming, but in the fact that the Jupiter rockets had a radius and power. Such a missile, deployed in Turkey, could hit Moscow and Leningrad with a yield of almost 1.5 Mt.
@jacobtennyson92136 ай бұрын
Pure proletarian dialectical materialism.
@JiTiAr35 Жыл бұрын
I wonder why the Soviets didn't point their missiles toward Alaska.
@FrankyXG Жыл бұрын
We pretend to work and they pretend to pay us.
@WayneReid-o2l5 ай бұрын
All these men use to do is go around and capture places
@TheDavidlloydjones Жыл бұрын
"Toll" is a noun. It's singular form or "number" is "toll." Its plural number is "tolls," made by adding a S. "Death toll" is a noun-phrase or noun phrase, made by modifying the noun "toll" with another noun, called a noun in apposition, "death," which modifies it. Because the noun "toll" is singular," the noun-phrase "death toll," heard at about 8:49, is also singular. To say "the death toll in these battles "are" anything, using the plural verb with a singular noun doing the verb, is nonsense. It is evidence that the speaker, or the writer, or the documentary itself, has lost track of his or its subject. In a sense, we can say "The narrator," or not to personalise things, the notional author speaking through the film, "doesn't know what he is talking about." I write this not to be pedantic or clever but to make a very very important point about "history," the stories we tell ourselves about our past. This video, with it's emotion-stirring so-called "music" and bombastic background sound effects, is written and distributed for effect. It tells a take that we share among ourselves as part of the mythology by which we live our lives. Was the death toll of all these battles "absolutely enormous"? Or were it? "Were" feels better to the speaker's mouth and throat, and so it better serves his poetic purpose in carrying forward this bit of speech or narrative. I don't think there is any great political error being made here. There is nothing nefarious about saying "were enormous" when the fact is that the sum total of many many small battles and three or five big ones was enormous. But we can learn something very very important from this absent minded error. It is something worth teaching in the classrooms where this and many other good and competent films and electronically mounted scripts will be used to teach our children. It is that history is a body of stories we tell ourselves and each other. Sometimes it is a coherent story, supported in detail by precise and voluminous evidence. At other times, by contrast, it is rodomontade with which we thrill ourselves and exalt a moral tale with which we inspire. Here the tale, which is important, and moving, and in a sense profoundly "true," is that of the sacrifice of the Soviet peoples during WWII. Other histories tell other moving stories. Some of them are equally true. Many of them are not. This is a very important lesson for us to teach our children. The facts -- "One death is a tragedy, a million deaths are a statistic," (plural ==> singular, deaths ==> statistic), as Stalin is said to have remarked, supposedly quite offhand -- are one body of things that we can pass on to our children. The fact that "facts" change in the telling is another and quite different lesson we should be teaching them assiduously and with care, thought, and discussion.
@TheDavidlloydjones Жыл бұрын
P.S. I suspect that children know this on sight. It takes teaching to make them ingest "the toll are."! And I suspect that the children figuring out one thing while teacher is saying something different is one small act of the creation of cynicism and distrust, which subvert our politics and thus our society. If they were taught that facts vary with time, place, and provenance, they would be able to deepen their mulch of understanding without becoming jaded or suspicious about them.
@strfltcmnd.9925 Жыл бұрын
You need to get out more often. Don't take life too serious.
@username19237 Жыл бұрын
Huh
@FreeDocumentaryHistory Жыл бұрын
You know what? Be glad this information is accessible for everyone in the free world. Yeah yeah yeah - we’re not really free bla bla bla. I know. However, i doubt anyone in today’s Russia has access to this. And back in the day, they had no access whatsoever which has led the world to the dilemma with Russia. They have a lot of catching up to do and it can’t happen in a month or a year or even a decade. The growing pains can’t be sidestepped or avoided as we are seeing now. Anyways, dude I seriously suggest taking the advice of getting out more. Comment below.
@bundeswehr7676 Жыл бұрын
..I bet you’re fun at parties
@khairulnaeim7567 ай бұрын
Lots of people money they taken.... there are unbalance in society will happen
@Awells898 ай бұрын
Lenin: Hey man tell whoever’s in charge of giving people jobs not top let that jerk Stalin become the next leader. By the way who did I put in charge of giving people jobs? Guard: That would be Stalin sir. Lenin: Bleh *Dies*
@VonHugo1 Жыл бұрын
They get them maps wrong a lot for a historical documentary.
@jamesglenn52597 ай бұрын
😮
@Backertothegrave11 ай бұрын
They failed to mention the crazy amounts of equipment the US allocated for the Soviet Union, this documentary seems a little one sided.
@khairulnaeim7567 ай бұрын
To much or to little.....🤥🤔... whack time...
@kevincaldwell4707 Жыл бұрын
USSR, and by default modern Russia, main attribute was their huge population and land. China is the same in population and land. Unfortunately due to their dictatorship governments, these two countries will be the end of our western way of life and liberty.
@johnlenin830 Жыл бұрын
Interesting fact: dictatorial communist China does not invade other countries or support coups d'état around the world, unlike the democratic US, which does it regularly. Yet, at the same time, Washington sees China as a threat. Washington sees Russia as a threat, even though Russia has never threatened the United States. Russia and China threaten the weakening of American hegemony, for the sake of which the U.S. is ready to do anything, for the sake of which it uses Ukrainians as cannon fodder.
@billotto602 Жыл бұрын
I pray daily that you're wrong. ❤️🙏❤️🙏❤️🙏
@kurzeful Жыл бұрын
Every country has right to choose their government type. If America wants democracy, then their choice, if Russia or China prefer Autocracy, it's up to them. I don't see a problem with either. Neither types will make us humans live for thousand years.
@ManiaMusicChannel Жыл бұрын
Nope, the end of this country (US, the west) will be itself. Capitalism is and has corrupted itself many times throughout the years and now we got to a new high point. Plus, all the hypocrisy the west promotes in the name of "Freedom", people know is not like in the old days.
@smokey39484 ай бұрын
If u make big bomb u get nice house nice car nice life if u not make big bomb u get ppsh41 to the head
@haq.thetruth Жыл бұрын
Please make all of your channels videos with a male commentary. It gives a feeling that sends chills down anyone spine and feels a lot more dramatic. Considering men have generally been apart of the war itself. It makes it a lot more enjoyable so please take this advice.
@T.Ty711 ай бұрын
Wtf?
@haq.thetruth8 ай бұрын
@@T.Ty7 do u rlly enjoy a womans voiceover
@mpkr5337 Жыл бұрын
Lenin was a good man for his time and turbulent situations. Western historians try hard to forget that the West was colonial power back then, what democracy and civil liberty are been compared with Lenins Russia😂
@dalewier97359 ай бұрын
That's the funniest thing I have heard said about Lenin,...ever! Thank you I needed that.
@sabrewolf897 ай бұрын
Please fix your maps! Germany already controlled much more territory by 1941 than you show!
@khairulnaeim7567 ай бұрын
What iron when economy gotta be problem...both side...this people not the build...but the spending...iron become plastic...🤡
@Mrgunsngear10 ай бұрын
🇺🇸
@kahhowong341710 ай бұрын
1922 Soviet Union was formed? You mean 1822.?
@FreeDocumentaryHistory10 ай бұрын
The Soviet Union existed from 1922 until 1991.
@kahhowong341710 ай бұрын
@@FreeDocumentaryHistory OK thanks. I missed the difference between the Soviet and the Soviet Union.
@danielraymadden Жыл бұрын
Free doc is cursed with lies....
@EWP-ms4bb Жыл бұрын
This documentary is a very superficial and presents a simplistic view on the event of that time. Very poor job.
@davidblick219210 ай бұрын
Read the Bible.
@Sgreenenov139 ай бұрын
Fiction
@francoluissotomayor55219 ай бұрын
💯
@southwestxnorthwest8 ай бұрын
Waste of time
@ChainsOfBelief3 ай бұрын
I did but it made me realize that God supports genocide in the old testament and slavery in the new testament. I'll take a pass on those stances.
@davidblick219210 ай бұрын
Read the Bible for ultimate answers.
@ImSpun138 ай бұрын
🤦♂️
@Malfore7 ай бұрын
👽🤣
@northernbohemianrealist5 ай бұрын
After all, it's been so helpful through the years. The germ theory of medicine, how gravity works, and advanced farming techniques - all given to us in the bobble.
@surfingnet61236 ай бұрын
That Granny Diane is terrible at explaining things...she shouldn't be there on the video
@besarionioselini208910 ай бұрын
ორი ... პატარა წყეული კაცუნა რომლებიც სათავეში მოექცა. !