Interesting and Humour - page 3246

 
All this squabbling around our team has created tremendous publicity. The athletes of our team who win in such conditions will be golden after the games.
 
Yuriy Zaytsev:

It is in our common dead and long buried empire, but the phantom pains do not go away. Many were young and of course the fondest memories lie in that time slot.

Sergey, you are stirring up a half-dead corpse with your questions.

A corpse is a corpse, but what clean posters, what simple untainted thoughts on them (for example "Have you had a good breakfast today?") ... And no politics or ideology behind them (there were other posters for that), even 100 years later they could be put on the wall or the refrigerator and it would still be relevant. That was 1938-1940...
 

the video seems to be a script or rather a manual for a democratic - oligarchic property expropriation

Ooh! the video didn't pass moderation - that's good to see the moderators are adequate

 
Sergey Golubev:
What happened in the Soviet Union in 1938-1940 that caused posters to force people to eat caviar, salmon, jam, vodka, pasteurised milk, etc.?
These are the posters from those days ...

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1938.
Artist Aleksandr Nikolayevich Zelensky


Caviar was very expensive. No one needed jam, everyone had their own jam. Pasteurized milk - we had to teach the people to stop buying milk from private vendors who were competing with the state, and it was also more expensive than bottled milk, and there was a lot of it on tap. And it was just propaganda... A foreigner walks by and sees posters on all sides.
 
Yuriy Zaytsev:

It is in our common dead and long buried empire, but the phantom pains do not go away. Many were young and of course the fondest memories lie in that time slot.

Sergey, you are stirring up a half-dead body with your questions. About the Olympics it is more interesting to talk about tourism and military rucksacks, TNT.

We are still unable to reach the level of a half-dead corpse by many basic indicators of economy. And there are parts of the corpse that cannot be resuscitated at all, such as civil aviation. Therefore, if previously a "half-dead corpse", what are we today?
 
Yuriy Zaytsev:

It's in our mutual dead and long buried empire, but the phantom pains don't go away. Many were young and of course the fondest memories lie in that time slot.

Sergey, you are stirring up a half-dead corpse with your questions. About the Olympics it is more interesting to talk about tourism and military backpacks, TNT.


What "corpse" are you talking about? The state has ceased to exist?

 
mihailmischek:
The still stinking corpse of the USSR
It's Sunday -- try taking a bath for once in your life.
 
Andrey F. Zelinsky:
It's Sunday -- try to take a shower at least once in your life.

read carefullyAndrey F. Zelinsky: It is inherent in any viable culture: "It was yours and now it's ours".

Asked 6 times to answer the question - Is this your life position?

 
Andrey F. Zelinsky:


What "corpse" are you talking about? The state has ceased to exist?

Well, you have to face reality, of course the USSR no longer exists. But another "fairer", democratic - oligarchic - hand-operated state has emerged. With caviar and parmesan with champagne pools ... With VIP lounges private yachts with pitchforks and their own planes. All this in parallel with pensioners on 6-10tr a month with 3-5tr of public utilities

 
Yuriy Zaytsev:

Well, you have to hand it to reality, of course the USSR no longer exists. But another "fairer", democratic - oligarchic - hand-driven one has emerged. With caviar and parmesan with champagne pools ... With VIP lounges private yachts with pitchforks and their own planes. All this in parallel with pensioners living on 6-10ks a month with 3-5k rubles in the communal service....

Continuity of Russian statehood

Old Russian state (862 - the middle of the XIII century). Novgorod was its capital till 882, then Kiev.
Russian principalities (mid-12th century - early 16th century).
The Russian state (the end of the XV century - October 22 (November 2), 1721; up to January 16, 1547 - the Grand Duchy of Moscow, then the Russian kingdom). The capital - Moscow, from 1712 - St. Petersburg.
The Russian Empire (October 22 (November 2), 1721 - September 1 (14), 1917). The capital till 1728 - St.Petersburg, from 1728 to 1732 - Moscow, from 1732 - St.Petersburg (from August 18 (31), 1914 it was called Petrograd).
Russian republic (September 1 (14), 1917 - October 25 [November 7], 1917). The capital was Petrograd.
Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic[36] (formed on 25 October [7 November] 1917, from 1922 to 1991 as part of the USSR). Capital Petrograd, from 12 March 1918, Moscow.
Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (December 30, 1922 - December 26, 1991). The capital is Moscow.
Russian Federation (renamed the RSFSR on December 25, 1991). The capital is Moscow.