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@starfleetguy696 ай бұрын
ok
@dantetre6 ай бұрын
The Armchair Historian can you make video about the American's internment camps during ww2 against their own civilians? Or how the British invented them during the second Boer War?
@chloeholmes46416 ай бұрын
Unfortunately seems like the code isn't working 😢
@declangaming246 ай бұрын
Your taking the piss $1 off don't get why you don't have a advert tier you still make money from advertisements and stuff. Understand there's poor people in africa, Asia, Europe who can't afford to watch your videos.
@LadyLuvibond6 ай бұрын
@@declangaming24 Why only mention Africa, Asia, and Europe? I'm sure there's people all around the world who can't afford the subscription. Also, I doubt advertisements would bring him in much money... I'm pretty sure the history armchair guy already said that he's considering not even making these videos anymore because of how little money they make him now
@HighOnPoint4126 ай бұрын
KZbin's unneccesary censorship is going to be it's downfall
@rob68506 ай бұрын
*its But yes
@taylorlibby76426 ай бұрын
It's just going to keep getting worse before the election. After, who knows?
@taylorlibby76426 ай бұрын
@@HighOnPoint412 YT has censored me 3× so far just replying to this comment.🙄
@brennanleadbetter97086 ай бұрын
Bunch of wusses
@SteelFlesher6 ай бұрын
you're not the only one 😢@@taylorlibby7642
@arandomspaceenthusiast73046 ай бұрын
To tell you just how ridiculous the charges could get, here's how my Georgian great aunt (so 3 generations back) almost got sent to a gulag, or even worse: She owned a tractor manufacturing factory, and since you could just write an unsigned accusation letter at the time, she got accused of being an ennemy to the state because she allegedly put _plane engines_ instead of tractor engines. Fortunately, a friend of hers worked in the police and was able to see the letter before anybody else and quickly discarded it. I don't remember every detail (it is my great aunt after all), but I remember this did indeed happen. EDIT: Just talked to my mother and, like many of you pointed out, you were right, she didn't own the factory. Instead, she was chief engineer and oversaw production (from what I understood). Didn't think this would blow up, so I hadn't really checked.
@sunsolar21386 ай бұрын
She OWNS a tractor manufacturing factory? Do you realize that's already an anti-people thing? And a lawful order was ignored because of cronyism. Especially since you didn't say she wasn't innocent, especially since you know it from her and of course she told the whole truth. All those convicted from their word are not innocent but lied to.
@Namooro6 ай бұрын
@@sunsolar2138 She was probably a head of the factory, and not the owner. There was zero possibility to own something like factory in 30s since everything belonged to the People and therefore was government owned. Still doesnt change the fact of how ridiculous accusations were
@Maximilien17946 ай бұрын
@@Namooro What you say is false. Not everything was owned by the State. There were many cooperatives in the USSR, like sovkhoz and artels.
@ASlickNamedPimpback6 ай бұрын
@@sunsolar2138 this has got to be satire... no way you can be commenting this on a video literally talking about the murders of hundreds of thousands to feed one mans paranoia and be serious
@sunsolar21386 ай бұрын
@ASlickNamedPimpback no, just the stories about this man's paranoia are not serious. All lies from unreliable authors caught lying many times. And stories about hundreds of thousands dead. Horrible, we had a civil war and its aftermath, and in war people die, that's how the discovery is made
@TurtleChad16 ай бұрын
It's absolutely soul crushing to think about how many people within the Soviet Union were _murdered_ just to satiate the ego of this one megalomaniac.
@PCLprecutlion6 ай бұрын
Man I've seen you're profile for like 10 times now🤔😂, But true tho
@atomicblitz77066 ай бұрын
@Precutlion.9 yeah I see this man everywhere
@nbewarwe6 ай бұрын
Somethings never change in Russia.
@christopherchartier30176 ай бұрын
Sounds a lot like another mustache man
@l3uIletpoints6 ай бұрын
The man lived by what he said. "One death is a tragedy, a million deaths is a statistic". Absolutely crazy!
@The_whales6 ай бұрын
Meanwhile a hoi4 player: fails to manage paranoia and gets all their good generals killed, and lose the moment Barbarossa begins
@enriqueperezarce54854 ай бұрын
The Soviet Union would’ve lost if not for western support and Nazi policy in the east (basically huge racial annihilation
@ohmygodpleasehalp39844 ай бұрын
One of my buddies did this playthrough, and decided to sack all of the Navy to save his good generals. “We are losing the land war, *GET ME THE HEAD OF ANY ADMIRAL. NOW. THEY MUST SUFFER FOR THEIR INCOMPETENCE.*”
@MaximilianoAedo6 ай бұрын
This was truly by far one of Stalin's worst decisions, and it bit him in the ass hard when Nazi Germany invaded the Soviet Union.
@Maximilien17946 ай бұрын
How? Why?
@MaximilianoAedo6 ай бұрын
@@Maximilien1794 Because the purge took out a huge chunk of the Red Army's officer corps, and it affected the performance of the Red Army itself, especially when it fought Finland in the Winter War, which explained the high casualty numbers suffered by the Soviets.
@Maximilien17946 ай бұрын
@@MaximilianoAedo Is that why Zhukov failed to beat the Japanese at Khalkin Gol? Actually, he didn't. I guess the Japanese should have purged their own army as well. The Soviet purges allowed to promote young and clever officers like Zhukov. If France had purged its own army, there would have been no betrayal and old fascist officers like Huntziger (the most experienced officers of their time) would have been replaced by younger, skilled and open-minded officers like De Gaulle. This is just obvious, but keep pretending that Stalin purged his own army just to please his sadistic mind.
@TheResilient56896 ай бұрын
@@Maximilien1794He removed far too many people from the officer corps and even the lower-ranking soldiers of the Red Army. So unfortunately, when the Nazis came knocking during Operation Barbarossa, the Soviet armed forces were both unprepared and under-manned.
@manipulatortrash6 ай бұрын
@@Maximilien1794 Typical missing the forest for the trees framing. One good leader has no bearing on the overall situation.
@kban776 ай бұрын
Wtf. And how quickly people forget history.
@Anglomachian6 ай бұрын
Who’s forgotten the purges? Except maybe the Russians, given how Putin deals with things.
@smyaeer67466 ай бұрын
@@Anglomachian пиздец.... Блин, как так 😢
@stereomachine6 ай бұрын
I've seen plenty of people who remember this but attempt to justify it
@Puti-Destroyer6 ай бұрын
The Tik history has made a video about the purges , you guys should Watch it .
@smyaeer67466 ай бұрын
У нас по разному к этому относятся
@AntonPavlovich20006 ай бұрын
Rokossovsky, one of the greatest WW2 generals, was purged and put in the camp. Later, in 1940 if i'm not mistaken, they freed him as the red army personnel had doubled and they were lacking talented officers. He was beaten, lacked food etc. Later on, he would keep his total loyalty to Stalin after his death and would strongly oppose destalinization campaign.
@luanasari51616 ай бұрын
Crazy stockholm syndrome
@HappyVibes5356 ай бұрын
Also, he was an ethnic Pole, ironically enough.
@ilyasharin19765 ай бұрын
Does that not sound suspicious to you? If he was severely beaten so bad and tortured why would he be so against destalinization? Because what you just said was nonsense. What actually happened was that he was rehabilitated and found not guilty (according to the documents of his case).
@AntonPavlovich20005 ай бұрын
@@ilyasharin1976 Я знаю, что его восстановили и признали невиновным. Только сел он в 1937, а вышел в 1940. 2.5+ года он находился в местах не столь отдаленных, занималось им НКВД. Это не самое приятное времяпрепровождение.
@MikhailTukachevsky5 ай бұрын
@@ilyasharin1976Rokossowski was a fierce stalinist, and blamed the experience on the officers and not Stalin.
@xiphoid20116 ай бұрын
Just as Stalin praised Hitler's "night of long knives", Mao Zedong called Stalin a great man and copied his methods almost to the letter 30 years later.
@Mark-gg6iy6 ай бұрын
Donald Trump thinks all you mentioned are great. Trump's definition means the person was successful in their extremism and results, not wonderful people. This is public knowledge btw.
@venturatheace16 ай бұрын
and then Pol Pot after Mao
@tharealKDHD6 ай бұрын
@@venturatheace1polpot was literally supported by the CIA… he was an American dictator
@tharealKDHD6 ай бұрын
That never happened
@falconmclenny72846 ай бұрын
@@tharealKDHDyes it did. Hush child, adults are talking.
@morgant.dulaman87336 ай бұрын
Considering Lenin's means of dealing with those who opposed his revolution, I think we can safely say this ruthless "phase" was by no means new.
@natekaufman19826 ай бұрын
Lenin's regime was brutally evil, but Stalin took it to a whole new level.
@Commissar_47356 ай бұрын
considering that the french did the same during their revolution , this is not new
@justalonesoul58256 ай бұрын
@@Commissar_4735 You mean, a group of rich and powerful people manipulating the masses into taking over previous rich and powerful people? That reminds me of yet another revolution, or a lot of them, actually. Fascinating =D
@Gameprojordan6 ай бұрын
@Commissar_4735 obviously it's not new lol but the fact that this much brutality and bloodshed happened in the 20th century is ridiculous. The Russian revolution and its consequences made Nazi Germany's atrocities look like a microscopic blip in comparison
@JoaoPedro-ol7sl6 ай бұрын
@@Commissar_4735 it's not new to the world although the numbers can be, but we're talking about it being not new to the Russian communist revolution
@youngmasterzhi6 ай бұрын
Here’s an interesting Soviet tidbit: One of the creative methods of torture used by Soviet interrogators is actually feeding their defendants with tons of food! This was their way of swaying accusations of human rights violation, as they can have plausible confirmation that they are feeding their prisoners well The only catch is that all the food is very salty and there were no drinks to wash it down (except for the extremely salty soup known as balanda); the interrogators will offer the overstuffed defendant water IF they sign a confession letter, which most of them probably do after feeling too groggy from all the salty meat and bread
@haikalmiftah25296 ай бұрын
Also one of the interrogation method i remembered read somwhere (From the book "Gulag Archipelago" I think), which seems not painful yet equally horrible: The defendands not allowed to sleep for a few days, then they ordered to sit on comfortable sofa with the interrogators (Still not allowed to sleep). Not harming physical body much, but I think enough to cause phsycological breakdown.
@normieloser69696 ай бұрын
You can get a seizure if you have too much salt and die, actually. Don't know if that happened in any of those cases
@ilyasharin19765 ай бұрын
@@haikalmiftah2529 That book is bs that was written by an alcoholic.
@ilyasharin19765 ай бұрын
Another person that's read too much Gulag Archipelago nonsense...
@youngmasterzhi5 ай бұрын
@@ilyasharin1976 Actually, this one is from Danzig Baldaev, a former prison guard who documented prisoners’ life in the gulag through a series of secret drawings; he was once caught and interrogated for drawing tattoos of prisoners, but the Soviets decided to keep him, so they can easily identify Russian criminal gangs
@scottlarson15486 ай бұрын
The best book on this that I've found is "The Road to Terror: Stalin and the Self-destruction of the Bolsheviks". It's full of frightening documents that historians pulled straight out of the Kremlin from that era after the Soviet Union collapsed and they showed how Stalin temporarily reduced oppression to trick potential troublemakers into revealing themselves. They even found confessions that had blood stains on them.
@Maximilien17946 ай бұрын
Of course when Stalin reduces oppression it is "to trick potential troublemakers into revealing themselves". Even a child wouldn't accept such nonsense. Once must have gone through a lot of anticommunist propaganda to believe such idiotic conspiracy theories.
@Alfonse-dm6ht5 ай бұрын
Can't Be Joking Around When You Are Leading A Multi Ethnic Super Nation-State And Trying To Hold Everyone In Line And Trying To Do It After Incurring Negativity From The Populace
@scottlarson15485 ай бұрын
@@Alfonse-dm6ht wHAT iS wRONG wITH yOUR kEYBOARD?
@Alfonse-dm6ht5 ай бұрын
@@scottlarson1548 What The Prob
@АлександрЛюбавин-э9ъ5 ай бұрын
Both are garbage and you're a clown. And documents aren't stored in Kremlin.
@dude97x6 ай бұрын
10:50 it was tragically ironic, that many of the Finns who fell victim to the purges were from America where they had emigrated. But when the Soviet Union was created in 1922 many thousands of them decided to emigrate again, to Soviet Russia because they genuinely wanted to go and live in communist/socialist and take part in building the workers paradise society. The Kolkhoz's or farming collectives run by Finnish communities were apparently very successful but just by being Finnish they were "suspicious" and as told, great numbers of them were executed or send to gulags.
@jokodihaynes4196 ай бұрын
Stalin paid the price for his foolishness during operation Barbarossa the pudge come back to bite him
@tapultanul976 ай бұрын
Truly.
@kzm19346 ай бұрын
In the end it just meant more needless deaths, like he’d care.
@ggbb56216 ай бұрын
You know even during Barbarossa he continued his purges but eventually stopped because there were simply not enough competent military officers
@Commissar_47356 ай бұрын
he actually made sure that treason would never happen during the war
@danieltoth97426 ай бұрын
Stalin didn't pay. His people did.
@capobvious69996 ай бұрын
7:45 Yagoda was the leader of NKVD, not just a prominent communist party member. His successor, Yezhov was also purged
@rishav_killerx60116 ай бұрын
Stalin Great Purge was because his Father used to Punish him Serverly
@compassknows6 ай бұрын
Hahahaha...I know an Oversimplified reference when I see one!
@raketny_hvost6 ай бұрын
Europe came to Russia few times in XX century because they love to be punished
@natel90196 ай бұрын
I think it was because his Mother didn't breast feed him.
@macleunin6 ай бұрын
Also, “your dad beat you like a dog and now you’re evil” Epic rap battles of history, you guys should see it, thank me later.
@Drengr196 ай бұрын
Ahh a fellow man of culture
@Sweet_Pup_g6 ай бұрын
Here before the tankies start talking about all the "Good things Stalin did"
@aliakber7756 ай бұрын
Yup,stalin was so aggressive towards ethnic grops,civiilans and the army at the point other commies(or bolshevics) said to stalin into calm down and those fucking tankies say stalin is a good guy
@NKVD.Officer6 ай бұрын
heh, love the jokes
@giorgijioshvili97136 ай бұрын
but he won the war 😭
@aliakber7756 ай бұрын
B- but stalin wasnt a heavy drinkwer
@Mortarion-xt9wp6 ай бұрын
Honestly considering how thin the German army were spread and how hard pressed they were it is likely that NS-G would have lost anyway
@irishtank426 ай бұрын
Goodness this feels like such a short summary of such a deep topic.
@andrewjgrimm6 ай бұрын
12:53 This video ended rather abruptly. Should we thank KZbin for that?
@ThatsGuy-ri6ul6 ай бұрын
For the record. Purges are BAD.
@Maximilien17946 ай бұрын
Why?
@itz_ic21gaming976 ай бұрын
They are
@kingofcards96 ай бұрын
Unless you're a dictator who wants to keep power.
@Maximilien17946 ай бұрын
@@kingofcards9 Or someone who wants to avoid giving power to the Germans.
@potatosalad90856 ай бұрын
@@Maximilien1794 I think the purge actually put them closer to gaining power than anything
@Jasper1186 ай бұрын
The fact that we have to plug a censorship free alternative to KZbin on a video about Stalin would be comically ironic if it wasn’t so depressing. The censoring of history is just criminal. Keep up the excellent work!
@Mark-gg6iy6 ай бұрын
You conflate the use of some language with ideas.
@Jasper1186 ай бұрын
@@Mark-gg6iy what are you talking about?
@mrs.shootingstar-garcia47996 ай бұрын
@@Jasper118 He says that you're trying to be sound intellectual when you're yapping... That's the blud thought
@Jasper1186 ай бұрын
@@mrs.shootingstar-garcia4799 well did I say something incorrect? And what did I say that was trying to sound “intellectual” haha?
@falconmclenny72846 ай бұрын
@@Mark-gg6iyno, he didnt. Marxists really out here trying to tell you not to believe your lying ears.
@micahistory6 ай бұрын
Last time I was this early, Stalin was alive!
@MHGA2356 ай бұрын
Yes I'm alive.
@YourLocalPlushAddict6 ай бұрын
Bro is winston Churchill
@keirpatrick30456 ай бұрын
bro finally a really unique video here
@micahistory6 ай бұрын
@@keirpatrick3045 yes
@Astro_bot-m3y6 ай бұрын
@@MHGA235 Stalin i hate you because you attacked Finland
@tjal87096 ай бұрын
I just got to 9:40 on the video. In that fragment you state that there were 669.000 arrests, and whilst the screen shows the number 376.000 w/ regards to the executions, you state that there were 776.000. Tiny error there, but that is all really. Great video, outstanding quality :)
@RainbowIsAPromise6 ай бұрын
Reminiscent of when they got NATO wrong. Simple things like this is unacceptable especially when all that's on the screen is a GIANT 376,000.
@ggbb56216 ай бұрын
As a post Soviet country, 50 percent of what we learn in our schools about 20th century in our history is cruelty of Soviet politics. We suffered two periods of hunger which resulted in a loss of half of native population because local authoritarian decided to confiscate 90 percent of our cattle (and our diet is heavily based on meat) during collectivization. Our best minds (writers, poets) executed (almost entirely). We had system of labor camps, the most famous one of which is ALZHIR - Akmola (city name) camp for wives of nation's "traitors", where completely innocent wives of purge's victims had too suffer for years.
@akend44266 ай бұрын
You might want to prepare for all the edgy, moronic tankies who will undoubtedly screech about how everything you just said is “western imperialist propaganda” or other such nonsense because they can’t stand their deluded pipe dreams about the Soviet Union being hit with reality.
@melhiorlector26805 ай бұрын
очередная жертва голодомора?)
@ggbb56215 ай бұрын
@@melhiorlector2680 а что ты хочешь сказать что его не было?
@melhiorlector26805 ай бұрын
@@ggbb5621 конечно не было, был голод. И пострадали не только вы бедные и несчастные казахи с украинцами, пострадала большая часть РСФСР. Но орёте громче всех почему то, только вы. Ну и самыми древними величаете себя тоже вы) одни Москву спасли от гитлера и её же основали, Наполеона до самого Парижа гнали, а другие чёрное море ложками выкопали и вообще Иисус был украинцем)
@ggbb56214 ай бұрын
@@melhiorlector2680 может потому что погибло около 2 млн человек при населении 4 миллиона? Ну да это же всего лишь половина че париться то
@oliversherman24146 ай бұрын
It's nice of you to upload one of your Armchair TV videos here to give people a taste of the great content you post there
@5-but-3-idiots676 ай бұрын
Code "Nocensorship" is BASED
@artos94066 ай бұрын
sub russian opinion rejected
@5-but-3-idiots676 ай бұрын
@@artos9406 unfortunate, but once under the light the truth shall be revealed
@b1battledroid2876 ай бұрын
Quite interesting that they never went over this in history class, a unit on how stalins cruelty was inspired by hitler, and how that played out and made his people suffer, would be fun to learn about.
@ExtantPerson6 ай бұрын
In AP World History, this is gone over in pretty strong detail, along with Mussolini’s crimes and sometimes Francisco Franco’s depending on the teacher.
@Valpo20046 ай бұрын
In my experience history classes are very generalized because they want to cover a lot. Of course I think this only serves to hurt people's interest in the subject because a lot of the most interesting things in history are the details.
@tjanderson58926 ай бұрын
Hitlers Night of the Long Knives didn’t inspire Stalin. He had started purging his officers in the early 1930s before Hitler became Chancellor and had the chance to enact his purge of the SA in 1934. Stalin just later said he respected Hitler for taking the steps needed to solidify his power as a leader. But he had already been a murderous lunatic. That was all actually learned in HS WW2 history. Not as common anymore I guess
@Anglomachian6 ай бұрын
Every history class on this period I took mentioned the purges, if only in passing. Some went into detail.
@Gameprojordan6 ай бұрын
@@Anglomachian yeah a quick sentence about how Stalin purged some officers in the military, never went fully into detail about all the civilians murdered
@ianblake8156 ай бұрын
Stalin always checked his list twice
@avraamanysiadis81216 ай бұрын
May i add, that among the people purged by the Soviets were also Greeks. Those who found shelter from Ottoman and latter Turkish oppression in today Ukraine and Russia were purged again only a few years later as enemy's of the state simply for being Greeks (and Greece fought against communist in Ukraine in 1919) they were deported almost all of them to Kazakhstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan with thousands perishing on the way there. Only after the collapse of USSR were allowed to return with most of them preferring to come to Greece. Those people were mainly if not all of them from Pontos (north eastern part of Turkey). Thank you for well documented historical videos.
@Comrade_Blanc6 ай бұрын
My great grandfather was executed for unknown reasons. He was German but lived in a german village in Russia
@Smudgeroon746 ай бұрын
@Comrade_Blanc what was his name?
@Bowtiethesilly20236 ай бұрын
His name????
@popeo19736 ай бұрын
@@Bowtiethesilly2023 bro he just lair for likes
@Bowtiethesilly20236 ай бұрын
@@popeo1973 what
@Bowtiethesilly20236 ай бұрын
@@popeo1973 tf you talking about
@theworldwidechannel6 ай бұрын
The Armchair Historian is probably some of the best historical content you can find on KZbin
@AOT_HxH956 ай бұрын
One of the most tragic group of victims were the Russians from Harbin, Manchuria. Those that left after the Japanese takeover were targeted in the purge. Those that stayed in Harbin would eventually become victims of Unit 731. So these people had it bad either way.
@AmFuture6 ай бұрын
The fact that so many youths today actually view Stalin and communism with great pride and support is absolutely disgusting
@tapultanul976 ай бұрын
The ones supporting such things are brainwashed and easy to twist and manipulate
@Deplorable-Dingo6 ай бұрын
And they will always refute criticism with "that's not real communism"
@kenoby23306 ай бұрын
@@Deplorable-Dingo because communism never existed, it was socialism I dont expect you to understand that because you are clearly too ignorant to
@taylorlibby76426 ай бұрын
@@Deplorable-Dingo "It's never really been tried."
@rwdyeriii6 ай бұрын
That's because communists control the education systems in the Western World.
@ryanMaistry-vu2yd6 ай бұрын
Last time i was this early. Trosky didnt have an axe in his head
@Maximilien17946 ай бұрын
It was a pike axe.
@Commissar_47356 ай бұрын
4:03 Semyon Budyonny (second guy on the left) was not purged , he was one of the best general both in the civil war and ww2
@Maximilien17946 ай бұрын
Let us sing the march of Budyonny.
@Keilee-kk9py5 ай бұрын
Later, as the Great Purge continued, the NKVD came to interrogate and arrest Budyonny; Budyonny's response was to arm himself with his service Nagant M1895 revolver and call Stalin to demand he have the agents removed.Stalin complied and the event was not discussed again.
@MominEnjoyer6 ай бұрын
If I was this early in any other aspect of my life, my room would be tidy and my body in shape!
@jakederik6 ай бұрын
One of my relatives on my grandmother's side was a prison warden for Nizhny Novgorod, and was apart of the purges. It's always interesting to look upon history especially knowing family history and seeing multiple sides of a story.
@collin14016 ай бұрын
It’s interesting that Lenin didn’t want Stalin to lead Russia.
@HerrKurt6 ай бұрын
So true
@merafirewing65916 ай бұрын
Lenin was pragmatic to begin with.
@Anonymous-ht5dg6 ай бұрын
He felt that stalin would become a problem if he had that much power.
@taylorlibby76426 ай бұрын
@@collin1401 Lenin was just as bad and conducted his own purges.
@Maximilien17946 ай бұрын
Lenin did appoint Stalin.
@TheNewOrder-DaysOfConflict6 ай бұрын
Trotsky and Stalin: fighting Bukharin: you guys forgot me or what ?
@Bowtiethesilly20236 ай бұрын
Bukharin my beloved Bukharin died 😭💔
@waltergameing42085 ай бұрын
of course its from a tno pfp 💀
@OrbitalKineticbombardemnt6 ай бұрын
Got an ad for Adventure communist, the irony couldn’t be better
@caffeinatedgamer.45766 ай бұрын
That thumbnail goes so hard.
@Viper_Vic6 ай бұрын
I'd never heard of the Asharshylyk before. Everyone focuses on the Holodomor. The communists sure did love their manmade famines.
@sunsolar21386 ай бұрын
they were dying just to kill everyone. The climate has been negotiated to create a drought.
@justalonesoul58256 ай бұрын
So despite this whole video, you still havent understood that it was absolutely not about communism, but about the paranoia and megalomania of a single man? With the mass executions of everyone who basically had a spine and could make things work, succesful farmers included, everything turned to crap. It's not communism in or out of itself that made that happen. Totalitarianism is quite the opposite of communism. Stalin kept the name but emptied the concept.
@Viper_Vic6 ай бұрын
@@justalonesoul5825 That's like saying "the Holocaust had nothing to do with national socialism. Hitler was just a bad guy who did bad things." Evil ideologies attract evil people. You're fooling yourself if you think Stalin was the exception and not the rule.
@leonsclsm6 ай бұрын
@@Viper_Vic You again dont get the argument. Marx, Engels, later Lenin, Luxembourg, Bukharin and many other communists wrote their opinions on the world. Never was there stated that you have to kill every political opponent, nor do you have to force collectivize everyrhing to a point, where people would starve. Some people even became reformists, improving the lifes of millions of workers across europe. Hitlers National Socialism on the other side, did exactly what you discribed. He dreamed of an evil ideology, of forcing every other ethnicity to become subject to the german race and give up their territory for lebensraum, and at the end force everything through a great war, cleansing everything in site. In short words: National Socialism is inherently wrong, racist and genocidel, while the insanely big range of socialst/communist ideoligies did also do disgraceful things to human society, while NOT being inherently wrong. Or do you hate democracy because of the atrocities of the US? I dont think so , since it would make sense at all :)
@ronjones-69776 ай бұрын
@@justalonesoul5825I sent your name to The Fat Electrician. He's putting you at the top of HIS list.
@digameme43166 ай бұрын
You got a new AH Tv subscriber, its channels like this that need to be rid of censorship so people can gather such important knowledge
@chancegalster35096 ай бұрын
Babe wake up. Armchair historian dropped a vid on Stalins purge
@CARL_0936 ай бұрын
the backfire on this when operation barbarosa started they had luck of experienced commanders in the battle filed all generals mostly ended in the purge
@Robot_GEANT6 ай бұрын
Have fun watching everyone !
@anthonyvita8866 ай бұрын
I was actually debating subscribing to AHTV. Thank you for convincing me to get it!
@RandomGuy-xq5ku6 ай бұрын
7:50 I'm sorry but Yagoda was NOT Japanese
@nigelbagguley76064 ай бұрын
Never has the fact that the purpose of torture being to elicit false confessions rather than actual truth been more clearly delineated than Stalin's show trials.
@lolafk17386 ай бұрын
Lenin think Stalin is too soft and got too many hesitation when he deal with rivals, he would make compromises till the politcal situation cannot be solve by any means but a huge purge which is why in public eyeLenin has more soft impression than Stalin but in truth Lenin is way more decisive when it comes to political rivalry, Lenin would end any opposition in a really early stage
@Hyde_Hill5 ай бұрын
Clockwork orange and 1984 reference all in 2 frames? Nicely done.
@johnrose37996 ай бұрын
Here is your daily reminder that if trotsky won the power stugle, it would have been just as bad.
@sharky70026 ай бұрын
If I know correctly that man wanted to bring the revolution to the entire planet he would have single handily united the world against him
@endrankluvsda4loko1726 ай бұрын
Yeah, back when I was young and dumb (or rather dumber), I used to admire communism and Trotsky. Then when I hit my 20's and the thinky thinky parts of my brain started to work, I was like oh wait, those are all bad ideas and Trotsky was just as bad as the rest of them.
@johnrose37996 ай бұрын
@endrankluvsda4loko172 If you ever read what trotsky said about stain while in Mexico, he basically says that he would have just done it better or a slightly different way
@capncake88376 ай бұрын
Cool to see Armchair Historian make a video about this topic.
@didierdenice74566 ай бұрын
the Soviets beat Nazi Germany NOT thanks to Stalin... but DESPITE of Stalin ! 🤔
@TheBasedAustrianPainter6 ай бұрын
Who's staline? Do you mean Stalin?
@tbnrwolff33546 ай бұрын
World War II started because both Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union people tend to forget that both of them invaded Poland
@lohtupottu6 ай бұрын
@@TheBasedAustrianPainter That's the French way of spelling his name. It's just has to do with the orthography; Stalin would be pronounced quite differently. To provide another example, Putin's surname is written Poutine just so the pronounciation matches.
@TheBasedAustrianPainter6 ай бұрын
@@lohtupottu thanks for clearing that up, I'm bit of a grammar nazi
@taylorlibby76426 ай бұрын
@@lohtupottuSomehow I kinda prefer thinking of him as cheese curds and gravy over fried potatoes.😂🤣
@2packrm7816 ай бұрын
Thank you Chris Griffin for doing small upload & covering this topic that I haf mo idea what else was going. Plus, there's still more to Stalin's purification man-hunt of potential threats to his rule. Also, keep up the good work too🙂
@treykeith6526 ай бұрын
This Is Why I Love Democracy..
@ТигрТигр-я2я6 ай бұрын
It's far from perfect, yet, at the very least, the Democratic states don't erect walls preventing folks from escaping, as one person once said. What's more, some said states are compelled to build up walls so that some interesting people couldn't infiltrate, heh))
@sword_of_sanghelios6 ай бұрын
@@ТигрТигр-я2я europe should Monarchy excluding Russia becouse socalism worked better for them
@Game_Hero5 ай бұрын
To future contrairians hiding in the replies of this comment : Do you consider yourself in a minority opinion opposed to the status quo where you live? Have you ever been put in prison if it involved criticizing those in power? Were you ever T word into giving false confessions to crimes you didn't commit because you expressed your minority opinion? Can you put videos on KZbin showing these views without consequences? That's great, the equivalent of your minority opinion in the places you worship doesn't and isn't allowed to exist without these consequences, you're literally enjoying privileges and double-standards your equivalents against the status quo in those places don't have.
@sword_of_sanghelios5 ай бұрын
@@Game_Hero heathen i only worship god all mighty and your demoracy wants destroy christianity and i respect people like costantine the great , justnian and joan of arc queen isebella of spain charles martel and so on
@sword_of_sanghelios5 ай бұрын
@@Game_Hero bot
@mx_untitled23767 күн бұрын
3:08 Source of that quote?
@mathijsgames9926 ай бұрын
Can you upload your old yt video's on your website
@markgarrett36476 ай бұрын
And during the public viewing of Lenin's corpse a certain Nguyen Ai Quoc was so grief-stricken that he queued up so long out in the harsh icy environs of Moscow that he was nearly frostbitten and at risk of catching pneumonia. He would also later order the ruthless liquidation of the Trotskyists in his country.
@falconmclenny72846 ай бұрын
He was a quoc that bloke.
@markgarrett36476 ай бұрын
@@falconmclenny7284 That quoc was a celibate too.
@rickwong90496 ай бұрын
Beria: "Anyway im gonna spike his drink soon."
@Partizag4 ай бұрын
Проблема всей это чистки была не в том, что это само по себе плохо, для молодого и только только сформировавшегося режима, кардинально нового, на самом деле это была вынужденная мера, как с демократией, на её ранних этапах формирования. А скорее проблема в том, что некоторые люди перебарщивали с этой самой чисткой, вспомнить тот факт, что на счету и следующего лидера СССР, Л. Хрющёва, было самое наибольшее количество репрессированных людей. В то время он был ещё одним заурядным чиновником, который просто хотел сделать свою работу лучше всех, и не важно какими методами. Да, и в то время мало что поменялось со времён гражданской войны, государство только только начало формировать какую-то внятную форму правления, также было в 90-ых, мы только только что-то пытались формировать, только в 90-ых была конкретная война, а при Сталине этого не произошло, всех просто заранее тихо убрали.
@Alex-bs1iu5 ай бұрын
Stalin was a great man and a great leader, most of his actions as leader of the Soviet Union were beneficial for the Soviet state and even justified when you look at the events that unfolded around the world outside of the Soviet Union. With a world that is very hostile to your country and seeks to undermine and destroy it, then it takes a strongman to have a hardline attitude and policy in shaping his country to be as strong and mighty as possible.
@sirvonhugendong5 ай бұрын
Found another commie simp
@Maks_Oniszk5 ай бұрын
Stalin was literally a terrorist and that not even counting what he did as a leader
@johndurham61726 ай бұрын
Stalin watching people through the window 🪟 😅.
@johncrocker42096 ай бұрын
Glad to see you do a piece on this. It should be brought up as often as the holocaust.
@The-Aviating-Gamer6 ай бұрын
And thus. The dictators wrath
@reverendnon59596 ай бұрын
Навыдуманные истории о которых невозможно молчать
@ЖареныйКацап6 ай бұрын
Ви все врети небило ваини била спецабсирация никакого нападения на Украине не планируется это фейк
@danielwho62645 ай бұрын
О ниии, хароший сралин всьо делал для лудей, забирал у них всьо, но они не умирали, ведь перепис 1936 это ФИИИИИИЙК Никакова тэрора нибыла, ни писал сралин на бумагах "Увеличить расстрельные списки" и ни падписывать он их, не читая Вы чььто, пакта молатава-рибентропа нибыла, совмиснага парада в Бресте нибыла, лисивковщины(самая гениальная кампания в истории) нибыла, сралин ни знал о злой Ижов, каторый каждую неделю иму рапарт о тэрорэ писать Ничиво нибыла, я вирю, что камэнэв, зиновив и рыкаф диствитильно хотили убить сралина И галасавие 1934 в вкп тожи ФИИИИЙК(18 из 70 пережили 1937-38, но мы та знаэм, что тэрорэ нибыла)
@J_Seneca6 ай бұрын
Amazing production value, it’s crazy how much you’ve improved when compared to your older videos
@DylanGevers5 ай бұрын
Without a sponsor? Omg thank You (sarcasm)
@dudrushpowerforce5 ай бұрын
Bro made a portrait of ishowspeed and thought we wouldn't notice
@michaellynes35406 ай бұрын
Skip to 2:23
@meditation5533 ай бұрын
🤩 You saved me!
@shamsuaddinrachedi7926 ай бұрын
the soviets traded a few decades of prosperity, for an (seemingly) eternity of decline "woe unto those who trade a short period of perfection for an extremely long period of mediocrisy" someone, probably (i made it up add it to the "unknown" part of quotes)
@tigertankerer5 ай бұрын
It is sad that today many people still see Stalin as great leader, especially in Russia.
@TheTrueCaesar6 ай бұрын
Bro This man Has a Cold Face When Describing The Full Horrors Of War
@deepyamanchakraborty64004 ай бұрын
The real '1984' like society
@avg62364 ай бұрын
I mean to be fair 1984 takes place in a communist country so yeah it makes sense where the similarities come from.
@Demos_Jeff2 ай бұрын
@@avg6236I don’t think IGNSOC is communist. They kind of mix a lot of ideologies to maximize power over the people.
@KingAlbinauric20 күн бұрын
@avg6236it doesn’t lol. the entire globe functions under (extremely similar) authoritarian regimes, all employing similar methods of suppression of their own people. Orwell viewed this reality as the natural progression of a lasting Cold War between the capitalist and communist blocs
@somtochukwuobidegwu54266 ай бұрын
this is one of your best videos and is very rare to hear about Stalin and the ussr crimes and can you do a video about the Nigerian civil war and I hope KZbin doesn’t take down this video and Sorry my comment was deleted.
@Crowson-Gaming6 ай бұрын
Video actually starts at 2:33
@ghost73446 ай бұрын
Video actually starts at 0:00
@Crowson-Gaming6 ай бұрын
@@ghost7344 if ya say so lady
@kmarks972366 ай бұрын
You didn’t mention the doctors purge?
@owlyon6 ай бұрын
Stalin's great purge is something you hear referenced a lot but rarely discussed in detail. Overall it may have saved the soviet union from internal conflict...but at what cost???
@Maximilien17946 ай бұрын
If it did save the Soviet Union, it also saved the world from nazism.
@ajaysidhu4716 ай бұрын
Read a book about it then. And not pro or anti Stalin rubbish. Actual Historian's work's.
@natekaufman19825 ай бұрын
@@ajaysidhu471 the truth has an anti-Stalinist bias.
@ajaysidhu4715 ай бұрын
@@natekaufman1982 you think Getty has a bias? Well I guess he does but it's not exactly unfounded
@TomsOnUK5 ай бұрын
Really interesting video and is helping me with my A Level History
@aliakber7756 ай бұрын
6:15 is that a 1984 reference
@u2boii8786 ай бұрын
I was about to say that lol
@aliakber7756 ай бұрын
@@u2boii878 too bad hehehe :p
@Michael-fi3uu6 ай бұрын
I was looking for someone to say that.
@roberta.ferrisesq.89386 ай бұрын
Glad you’re doing a documentary I’ll watch! Also I think a lot of people would subscribe to your pay page but man times are tough out there financially. Nobody can afford fun.
@desertstorm2726 ай бұрын
How could the Red Army, weakened by Stalin's Purge resist such a force? Nice. You should cover the battle of Kursk from a soldier's POV soon.
@Maximilien17946 ай бұрын
Maybe because the purges actually strenghtened the Red Army. It's nonsensical to assume that the purges weakened the Red Army.
@richmondlandersenfells22385 ай бұрын
I think I should mention that former General Nikolai Pepeliayev of the white army was also a victim of these trials. He was the last white resistance in siberia 1923 in the arban river. Pledged his allegiance to the Union and retired from political life as a common citizen. Unfortunately that didn't saved him from suspicion and being tried either.
@jordanabraham10666 ай бұрын
9:46 776000 not 376000
@baronghede23652 күн бұрын
Merry Christmas and i appreciate the knowledge.
@eljefemaximo54205 ай бұрын
All of my comments are deleted
@lemons_of_engineering6 ай бұрын
i adore the creativity in this,recently your videos have had a lot of random stuff thrown in for visuals rather than anything original or relevant
@adelkheir6 ай бұрын
@10:20 Nice Khorne reference
@jaredchacon26456 ай бұрын
Love your vids man
@LiamSmall-ot4vz6 ай бұрын
keep up the great work
@ivannazarov72426 ай бұрын
Interestingly, there wasn't collectivization in poland but famine was at the same time as in ussr
@falconmclenny72846 ай бұрын
Interesting to people finding any reason to try and lesson stalins evil i guess.
@ivannazarov72426 ай бұрын
@@falconmclenny7284 Or just not all stailins evils are stalins evils, only a Sith deals in absolutes
@falconmclenny72846 ай бұрын
@@ivannazarov7242 that quote makes less sense here than it did in star wars mate.
@АлександрЛюбавин-э9ъ5 ай бұрын
Famine was not only in the SU and Poland at that time, but in Romania, Hungary, Yugoslavia, Czechoslovakia, Germany, the US.
@ДаниилКришнев-к5ь5 ай бұрын
Khrushchev's de-Stalinization was the decisive moment of the USSR's loss in the Cold War in the long term, as it divided the unified communist union, losing China as an ally. He just wanted to get political points by pushing all the sins of repression on Stalin, although he himself was covered in blood because he was the head of Ukraine during the purge of 1937. Also, such a concept as the Holodomor is not only unreasonable, but also stupid. Many people in Ukraine, Russia, Kazakhstan and the Caucasus suffered from the famine of 32-33, due to drought, leadership mistakes and the activities of traitors. In addition, famine in those days was a normal phenomenon not only for Russia but also for other countries. Why don't you talk about the regular famine in the colonies of France and England in those years, but only about the famine in the USSR? is it really again "you don't understand this other thing?". Your hypocrisy is just sickening, so you talk about repression in the USSR, but why don't you say that repression against communists, their supporters and trade unions in America and Europe, that the actions of Poles against the Belarusian and Ukrainian population are not much different from the actions of the Nazis? in Russia and other post-Soviet countries, Stalin is respected, despite all that he did for the country, namely: from a backward agrarian power, he built a powerful industrial power with a strong army, an educated population, an economy capable of providing almost everything necessary for the life of its inhabitants. According to official data announced by Khrushchev, about 3777680 people were affected by the repressions in 1921-1954, of which 642980 were involved in capital punishment for 33 years!!! And in 1937-38, 1340000 were repressed, and it should be borne in mind that this list also includes real criminals: terrorists, murderers, saboteurs, traitors and their accomplices. And even if we take into account that every second person is innocent, it still amounted to about 1,888,000 people for all 33 years, and for 37-38,600,000 plus or minus.
@Maks_Oniszk5 ай бұрын
Lmao get owned im not reading your text wall
@lance24656 ай бұрын
I go from great content creator to great content creator today. This is a great day for me.
@RybunZee5 ай бұрын
Не понравилось. Всё те же шаблоны, те же надуманные цифры.
@theBOGDANBOBROVICH6 ай бұрын
can you place amke a video about operation west inthe ussr
@idkandidcandwhyareyouhere6 ай бұрын
Its so sad how youtube's unnecessary censorship can damage a channel, keep up the good work man and ..... Glory to the Soviet Union!
@PCLprecutlion6 ай бұрын
*Soviet Anthem Intensifies*
@tapultanul976 ай бұрын
Internationale RUNNING
@Mark-gg6iy6 ай бұрын
It's so sad that so many people intend and attempt to spread disinformation and lies under the guise of history (see Donald Trump & the USSR).
@jaxon1913.6 ай бұрын
I hope the last bit is satire
@idkandidcandwhyareyouhere6 ай бұрын
@@jaxon1913. bro
@sontarian16346 ай бұрын
im so sorry mr armchair, i really do wish to use your website and im sure you are desperately trying to get us on their but i jus cant m'lord, i jus cant, i aint got the funds bossman, i cant keep going john ill hold em of from here, tough times gman. i jus cant. i hope you come back more fully to youtube but i do understand why you cannot. all love here.
@sama12206 ай бұрын
It’s crazy that a good honest guy making incredibly detailed animated documentaries that make learning history fun and engaging has to worry about censorship. Keep up the good work love your docs
@johnbrown85706 ай бұрын
He doesn’t have to worry about censorship. KZbin isn’t censoring any of his stuff. The algorithm just doesn’t catch this sort of amateur history stuff so it’s hard to beat other more popular types of videos. But KZbin isn’t trying to hide his stuff or make it hard for him to post such things. That’s all BS he says to get you to give him money directly on his website. It’s just not worth it because he makes so many mistakes and is basically telling you what DIDN’T happen lol. Emphasis on armchair.
@vincentgiasullo5 ай бұрын
@@johnbrown8570they’ve literally demonetized some of his videos
@hoottasshell6 ай бұрын
I'm already loving this new style of animation
@itamiyouji40576 ай бұрын
I find it interesting that after the war ended in Europe, Gen. Patton went on record saying something to the effect of, "in this war, we fought the wrong enemy."