GaddafiSpencer. :
It is a pity that socialism did not take root in the Soviet Union, as in Libya. It was a devastating period in the history of Russia, when the Barbarian Bolsheviks came and destroyed the centuries-old history of the state. "....The textbook role of Lenin does not correspond to reality. I saw the treasury documents of Kaiser Germany, which was at war with Russia at that time: "To allocate, under Article 6 of the Emergency Budget, first 5, then 10, then 15, then 40 million gold marks for the revolutionary network and propaganda in Russia." My father, who survived all periods of repression, recalled that Lenin's time was scarier than Stalin's. Under Lenin, they not only shot, but also called Alexander Nevsky a class enemy, Napoleon a liberator, Tchaikovsky a squishy man, Chekhov a whiner, and Tolstoy a landowner fooling around in Christ..."
N.Narochnitskaya, Doctor of Historical Sciences
Well, I don't know, I have relatives from the village of Prokshino in the Myaksinsky district of the Vologda region (myaksa remained, prokshino did not). There was my great-grandfather, Mikhail Ivanovich Rumyantsev, a military man. participated in the First World War. caught the times. and they lived very comfortably, despite the fact that they worked themselves. When the USSR came, they shot his relative for believing in God, Yakov Savelyevich Rumyantsev (also available on the Internet), they barely began to make ends meet, and their grandmother had to send half of her salary from Moscow so that people could just survive. Although they fought for the Reds, in the end they barely survived, and half of their families lost them because of the Reds. A happy life, you say?
happy childhood, there is no bazaar. Mom DREAMED OF NORMAL SHOES AND SKATES. My mother worked at the Krasny Bogatyr factory, my father was a captain of the Ministry of Internal Affairs, and at the same time they lived half-starved. at her school, she could be kicked in the back with a swing, and the teachers closed their eyes because there was a son of a bump. A happy childhood? yeah. My grandmother from the village had to write it off, otherwise they would beat me up with a crowd. When I arrived in Ryazan, I had to speak "local", otherwise they would beat me up. She came home, and her father (the founder of the military special school) said to her, "What are you talking about like cattle?"
The British and Dutch were awarded medals after the victory. Only the Russians were driven back to the camps again!! and at what price - my grandfather is a war hero (Vasily Alexandrovich Osokin, Astrakhan, 1913). after the war, he was appointed head of vocational school, he needed to buy a pipeline system for watering crops. Back then, you could only buy with cashless payments. but while all this was being processed for cashless payments, the harvest would have been ruined. as a result, I bought it for cash. as a result, 3 years of the Gulag. So much for the memory of the war heroes.
2026-06-17 07:31:10