Most of the world is exhausted with the Russian Mobsters.
@Miroslaw-rs8ipАй бұрын
Former Soviet Republics should separate themselves from Russia and forge their own culture and languages. Russia has forced the people of Eastern Ukraine to only speak Russian for centuries and this is now changing, no one needs the Russian language.
@briseboyАй бұрын
Learn to listen to THEM, rather than prescribe what they should do!
@oldowleye3161Ай бұрын
@@briseboy … sure krembot … even in russian ocupied region of kursk they speak Ukranian!…😂
@МихаилНаумов-ч3ъАй бұрын
How is it possible when eastern ukraine was inhabitate by russians and cossacks before bolsheviks gave this land to ukr?
@МихаилНаумов-ч3ъАй бұрын
@@oldowleye3161thouse are ukranian refugees who were welcomed in muscowy
@necronix9947Ай бұрын
If a couple of the former Soviet Replublics started to turn on Moscow, Russia might have massive logistic issues and be unable to do anything.
@BrandyF2Ай бұрын
Where does Russia get off giving a crap about any child as Russia has indiscriminately bombed (and with impunity, I might add) civilian infrastructure in Ukraine, which includes maternity hospitals, theaters, and over 1,000 Ukrainian schools!? Ffs! (Pardon my French Sir.) 💙🇺🇦💛
@joshgulrudАй бұрын
They are really not, for one.
@AaronC123-q9tАй бұрын
They make it up as they go to suit themselves. They don't care about children as we all know but they will pretend to if it suits them . Pure evil .
@navyreviewerАй бұрын
Russia's last NATO recruitment drive was so successful theyve decided to do it again in the -stans?
@briseboyАй бұрын
As you know, Uzbeks, Tatars, Ukrainians, were forcibly moved around into and out of that nation, with ethnic russians moved in. More subtle kremlin threats are ALSO being made to Kazakhstan, and other presently separate nations, including even Mongolia. This is not well- published in the media to which most attend., but, as rusdia is now quite militarized , unless soundly defeated in Ukraine, EXPECT other Groznys, other Ukraines..
@deanfirnatine7814Ай бұрын
The threats a couple weeks ago toward Kazakhstan I would not call subtle, they were pretty much a open threat.
@russthompson4296Ай бұрын
All countries trapped under Russia's 'umbrella' should take this opportunity to take back their heritage and culture. In a few case even their borders.
@aloragreenteam2343Ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing your expertise !
@PSYACTIFАй бұрын
to be fair, not all is as bad with ruzzia as people portray. They gained many toilets and washing machines, plus lifelong loyal friends like NK and Iran
@azizazicojan3979Ай бұрын
We , Uzbeks, no longer need so many Russian schools and classes. The Russian language can be presented as a foreign language. However, as modern scientific research and innovations are mostly done in English, we need to focus on learning and spreading English across the country. There is no benefit of the Russian language for Uzbeks.
@davelawday6609Ай бұрын
Thank you for your input ❤❤❤
@jasonhindle4054Ай бұрын
Can Russia actually afford to pick another fight at this point?
@rikibo861Ай бұрын
FREE UZBEKISTAN.
@marshallmkerrАй бұрын
Luckily for Tashkent, Mr Putin is apparently for the time being still saving his ICBM-threats for targeting London, Washington, Berlin, and Warsaw.
@FrithonorАй бұрын
And he thinks Russia will survive the counter-attack...how?
@marshallmkerrАй бұрын
@@Frithonor Family values and the Patriarch Kirill's incense clouds, I guess.
@oldowleye3161Ай бұрын
@@marshallmkerr😂😂😂
@TonyM540Ай бұрын
If Russia can get them out of the ground.
@TheDavidPooleАй бұрын
@@marshallmkerrlol. I think that there may be something else mixed in with the incense there 😂
@RichardLadyАй бұрын
Thank you Professor 👍🏻👍🏻
@larrycleave4199Ай бұрын
You can not force anyone to like another Country
@fainitesbarley2245Ай бұрын
I watched a 1420 video where this elderly Russian woman said (about Ukraine) ‘they don’t love us anymore. We should kill them all’. She went on to recommend invading Poland next to ‘kill them all’ because ‘they hate us’. To the best of my knowledge Russia has not been invaded since its erstwhile Nazi allies did so. But Victimhood runs deep in these people.
@davidreynolds3082Ай бұрын
Well done to brave Uzbekistan for standing up to Putler the Tyrant.
@prudencegoldsmith2475Ай бұрын
Hasnt Uzbechistan just signed an agreement with USA?
@absolootely2571Ай бұрын
Google _NGOs in Uzbekistan._
@rebeccaaldrich3396Ай бұрын
@@absolootely2571sounds like Uzbekistan has Putinesque tendencies.
@artfx9Ай бұрын
pootin, the master strategist 😂
@OrangoTrumpotanАй бұрын
Slava Ukraine and Uzbekistan. Free yourselves from Russian imperialism.
@gumbycat5226Ай бұрын
I think it was the former president of Russia who first levied the threat to Uzbekistan.
@stephenwalsh1332triumphАй бұрын
Soviet union and pootin failed!
@chrischad4087Ай бұрын
China has good relations with Uzbekistan ,and has been investing there .
@4rct1c9Ic3m4nАй бұрын
As if China is any better. Both are rotten
@issigonis975Ай бұрын
The thing with Soviet nostalgia that seems to pass the Putin crowd by is Russia was a Federal Republic in the Soviet union not the 'Soviet Union' so it has gone it's way after it broke up and former republics theirs. This is the crux of the problem the Dugin lot cannot understand this. You often get the pro invasion lot going on about how Russia won WW2 forgetting it was the USSR that won in the east which was a Union of countries that included places like Uzbekistan. They have every right to remove any legacy monuments for example they want and stick up ones with local context. The USSR is dead and gone except in Putin's fevered imagination. If they used that legacy to work in a positive way they could achieve some of their goals but Putin is too thick for that.
@tomwende5529Ай бұрын
Turkey's Great Turan project is gaining traction. It offers a viable counterpole to the former SSRs' de-russifying cultural identity by seeking to unite all Turkic peoples under a common cultural and linguistic banner. For the last few years, this has taken the form of trade and economic assistance, but we can be confident that it has a military dimension as well. I haven't dug into the Great Turan at any depth for nearly a year (it's extremely effortful for me to do so because the region is opaque to me due to language barriers), but given the state of russia's economy, military, and status as the world's biggest hermit kingdom, I think that we can safely assume that Turkey will double down. The entire region is probably aware of the disarticulation of Georgia and how that relates to similar disarticulations in Ukraine and Moldova. If/when Turkey makes a serious, concerted effort to penetrate the region's media, I would take that as a strong sign of intent. Georgia's on again, off again relationship with russian "foreign influence" is a solid microcosm for the region's relationship to the same influence. The Uzbeks have an advantage in the form of a TINY russian minority (excluding the people who voted with their feet at the beginning of the invasion, which the Kremlin doesn't seem to want back). The casus belli for carving out a DPR in Uzbekistan is WAY too thin. Anyway, not my most coherent comment, but it's all in there... somewhere.
@edthebumblingfoolАй бұрын
sounds like another crackpot imperial idea
@tomwende5529Ай бұрын
@@edthebumblingfool Could be, yep. I honestly don't know. However, the region lacks unity resulting from forced resettlements during the Soviet era, so imperial or not, it may be of some benefit.
@edthebumblingfoolАй бұрын
@@tomwende5529 The only solution for multiethic states is an arrangement like the EU where small nations can benefit from being part of a larger stable group
@stephenkoludrovic-q5pАй бұрын
Now is the chance for the UK to forge a strong Diplomatic and trade agreement with Uzbekistan.
@jiyushugi1085Ай бұрын
Now's their chance!
@ianmuir3640Ай бұрын
They are hardly in any position to threaten anybody
@nighthawkcofАй бұрын
Someone might want to get the Putler a map. Does he intend to march his army through Kazakhstan? We saw how well that worked in Ukraine 😂
@russellandmelindalittle7168Ай бұрын
Like your channel
@toneybud8380Ай бұрын
Any update on that ship off the coast of margate?
@billwhite1603Ай бұрын
Russia during Soviet Union moved out many people from their own country and shipped them to labor camps or Siberia. Things like that. They moved in Russians all over the soviet union. Now if a Russian lives in your country, Russia controls everyone there. The world, including China, cannot let a large nuclear power with average conventional forces, blackmail control over other countries and free peoples. That is whether they are in NATO or not. The crash and degradation of the UN really shows at times like these.
@Tech050-jb5zuАй бұрын
Cool. Uzbekistan needs stronger reforms. Proposing law enforcement and deep counterattack on Corruption. Attracting FDI from US, European and East Asian cpuntries, increasing GDP drammatically, obtaining military equipment from the West and be an ally of the West…
@fredlenz4743Ай бұрын
Uzbekistan should invade Russia now. Let's see how Russia likes a taste of its own medicine, especially as Uzbekistan is very friendly with China. Would make an interesting situation.
@curioussand1339Ай бұрын
This shows that every country should be given the means to defend their own territory, and this requires nuclear weapons or the territory of all countries having the risk of being subject to Russias imperialistic ambitions, to neutralize Russias nuclear threats
@owencallaghan8735Ай бұрын
Putin grasping at straws.
@alastairbrewster4274Ай бұрын
Can Russia fight two wars on two fronts ? What would China’s position be on this? Uzbeks are a Turkic Muslim people , I’m assuming China is not particularly pro Uzbek so would they turn a blind eye to this too , if Russia invaded ?
@brianday67Ай бұрын
I miss Konstantin. Since KZbin's stupid and senseless decision to demonetize him, I have seen no new KZbin videos from him. Does anyone know whether he is putting out videos on another platform?
@niteowl789Ай бұрын
He has one 3 days old on this very subject. Search for "Inside Russia".
@OrangoTrumpotanАй бұрын
The powerful neighbor from the north. Hmm, who is that? it can't be Russia. 🤣🤣🤣
@JoeyBlogs007Ай бұрын
You need to update the heading. "form" should be "from" 🤣🤣🤣
@AngloSaks666Ай бұрын
The Soviet Union claimed to respect and aim to maintain the languages and cultures of the non-Russian republics, which, of course, it didn't genuinely do, just making them tools for a shallow claim to diversity and inclusion, but even if it hadn't made that claim, it had no right to not do that, and those ethnic Russian soviet citizens who went there made that choice to go to what was actually another culture and nation within the Soviet Union, and for them to claim that doing so gives them the right to force their own language to gain equal status to the local language, and then to not bother to learn the local language, while also forcing the local population to learn their language, is insane and extreme colonialism of the worst order. This incident is no more than a teacher incorrectly responding to that extreme colonialist arrogance being expressed via a child. She shouldn't have reacted in such a way, of course, but that arrogance is all the same what it is. For the Russians to just double down in such arrogance is just indicative of the depths of inability to consider the context of others that they have sunk to. And that they don't understand that all their arrogant bleatings about this in the Baltics, Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistand, etc., etc., etc., is just provoking those states into reducing the role of Russian in their countries is indicative of that stupidity too. Young eastern Europeans rejected Russian in the 90s, Georgians have pretty much long rejected it too, the Baltics too doubled down in this with continued Russian interference and threats in the 2000s, Ukraine now has settled on a far more anti-Russian stance than it would have had otherwise, even Ukrainian nationals whose first language is Russian now putting Ukrainian first (this includes their president), and now the rest of the former republics will follow suit eventually, unless the sane and humane elements of Russian society at last take over and push out this supremecist narrow nonsense.
@colincampbell4261Ай бұрын
FFS - Xmas adverts already?
@simonkevnorrisАй бұрын
No adverts for me on my Kindle (thanks Android).
@BobToasty-cd2hlАй бұрын
NATO looking to.expand into Uzbekistan now by the sounds of it.
@deanfirnatine7814Ай бұрын
This is what just days or weeks after Russia threatened Kazakhstan?
@aburakadabura2Ай бұрын
America is not perfect either. But even though it sometimes strays from the right path and wavers, it is the only country that firmly positions "freedom, democracy, and humanitarianism" as the "core interests of the nation that cannot be compromised." The other great powers are dragged along uncritically, with no one able to stop them, by the arbitrary rampage of dictators who have monopolized politics for long periods of time, seizing the physical and mental assets of their citizens at will.
@charlescanton4740Ай бұрын
Ditch the Cyrillic alphabet now. Ukraine should have done that years ago.
@shirleyhaugaard9643Ай бұрын
I think that would be a shame Ukrainian Cyrillic is different from Russian Cyrillic
@JoeyBlogs007Ай бұрын
They should all be learning English.
@AngloSaks666Ай бұрын
Being independent, sovereign countries, and also in light of Russia not even being analagous to the Soviet Union (unless they admit it was just all their own pure imperialism) and these former republics supposedly having autonomy within it, then these countries have every right, and maybe even every good reason, to remove Soviet (by the Russian's own admission seemingly imperialist, supremecist, oppressive) symbolism from all of their territory. But, even in light of this, this Russian nationalist reaction is paranoid nonsense based on looking for an excuse to be even more surpremecist and controlling in its relations with these countries, because it was never even true to any extent until they continued to insist and insist on their dictating to and threatening those states. Even Berlin still maintains Soviet monuments, out of respect for the actual fighters, but these so-called nationalists respect no such thing, right now waging war on the grandchildren and great grandchildren of the millions of Ukrainians who fought with them in the Soviet armed forcesm and threatening also the other countries that were in that union and fought the Nazis together with them too. Arrogant, racist, supremecist, fascist drivel.
@chrisbremner8992Ай бұрын
This guy has a very simplistic view , Russia has risen from the Yeltsin era ashes , the bear has awoken . The UK is still upset about the Crimean war loss .
@vincen4465Ай бұрын
What a non story. Russian language teacher asks Uzbek student to speak Russian in Russian language class.Given the state of the Uzbek education system, infamous for teacher absenteeism, the surprise is that the school actually had Russian classes with a teacher. It would also be interesting to know if the teacher in question was Russian or Uzbek (or from some other ethnic group). Maria Zakharova continues to be the Russian version of a slightly unhinged Karen, albeit better paid and with more clout.
@PeterLGଈАй бұрын
The student asked the teacher why she, the teacher, wasn't speaking Russian in a Russian language class, not the other war around. The teacher overreacted and paid the price.
@FrithonorАй бұрын
Russia... 😂😂😂
@matthewmallan1995Ай бұрын
Tim, grow up bro. It's a tough world 🤣
@peterjaniceforan3080Ай бұрын
🫡🇺🇿
@qetounАй бұрын
So Tim respects Uzbek national identity...but not the UK's?
@BarrettLeonaАй бұрын
65445 Favian Dale
@keijojaanimets819Ай бұрын
Usbekistan is ex Persia?🤔
@briseboyАй бұрын
LEARN, and do NOT seek information from social site commenters.
@absolootely2571Ай бұрын
None of London's business if Edinburgh align with Russia & deploy Russian missile bases along Hadrian's wall all pointing south.
@AngloSaks666Ай бұрын
Well, for now at least, Scotland is in the UK, with its central government in London, Scottish MPs sitting in that parliament, and it became part of that union by its own king becoming king of England too. Ukraine gained independence from Moscow over 30 years ago, and was only ever under its rule by pure colonial force (though I'm not denying England's similar force in older times in relation to Scotland). And, regardless of this, Ukraine wasn't due to join NATO, and NATO wasn't too keen to let it join any time soon, and then, even on joining NATO, this doesn't mean 'missiles along the border pointing at them'. The Baltic States have long been in NATO, bordering Russia, but have no nukes at all, let alone pointing at Moscow, as is in fact the case for every single NATO country close to Russia. In fact they had all been downsizing whatever military hardware and infrastructure they had there. And the nearest nukes to Russia in NATO are in Turkey, a country with which Russia has maintained friendlier relations than with the rest of NATO, and those nukes have been there for DECADES, presenting no real threat to Russia, merely a deterrent, and provoking from the Russians none of this kind of violent, paranoid reaction. So the analogy collapses into utter irrelevance and unreality.
@jeremyhares979Ай бұрын
Another troll 🙄
@mikew.8925Ай бұрын
Just checked the map and there is no common border , other than maybe across the Caspian Sea . My question is : russia has enough problems without another war so what gives .
@chrissavage5966Ай бұрын
Remember, according to putin, russia has no borders. He seems to think he owns everything and wants to see a world map where russia covers the entire continent. Deporting russian speakers back to russia would seem like a smart move.
@justonecornetto80Ай бұрын
@@chrissavage5966 That's what I think it will come to. The Baltic States are sick and tired of their Russian diasporas behaving like they're still part of the USSR. My guess is that if things were to escalate it wouldn't be long before the pogroms start.