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No bullshit, but the guy in the middle of a war, without filters, without auto tune, psychologically shaken, chest tight, still manages to sing/play better than many famous people out there.
История никогда не повторяется. Если вы начнëте копаться в истории, предпосылках и последствиях, то увидите, что одни события являются логическим продолжением предыдущих. Это применимо и к войнам. Все упомянутые вами войны имели совершенно различные причины, ход, следствия, свой контекст времени и многое другое. Но так же можно посмотреть и на сходства, которых сильно меньше чем отличий. И при таком подходе можно рассмотреть только как вы выразились "рифму", но не более.
@@wombatuser and who are those soldiers. they are Men. And if you say that they weren't a man because he was a soldier well then what was he before? well the only reasonable answer is a man. Every soldier who dies isn't just a number it is a man who had/has a life, wants, desires, relationships.
What I’m saying is that even though they are human with wants, needs and aspirations none of that matters at all because they have become such a tiny part of a massive construct that needs to function no matter what Individuals can’t exist in a war that measures death in the hundreds of thousands @@ZlXer0
We live in strange times. Every lad that has access to internet can watch people dying, crying and singing on the battlefields while sitting in chair with a beer.
I'm happy I am not in his position - respect to ppl like him and other brave souls that fight for old men sitting in chairs filling their pockets I say I'm not one of these soldiers...tho it might change very soon- today there was a letter
Son: Don't tell mom im in Bakhmut Father: Don't tell mom im in Chechnya Grandfather: Don't tell mom im in Afghanistan Great-Grandfather: Don't tell mom im in Berlin Great-Great-Grandfather: Don't tell mom im in Petrograd Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don't tell mom im in Manchuria Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don't tell mom im in Sofia Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don't tell mom im in Crimea Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don't tell mom im in Turkestan Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don't tell mom im in Paris Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don't tell mom Warsaw Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Odessa Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Prussia Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Finland Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Iran Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Sweden Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Serbia Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Riga Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Smolensk Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Livonia Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Lithuania Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Kazan Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Muscovy 2 Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Muscovy Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Kulikovo Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Tver 3 Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Tver 2 Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Tver Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Wesenberg Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Kiev Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great--Great--Great--Great-Great-Great-Great-Great--Great-Great-Great--Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Novgorod Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Cumania Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great--Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Lemnos Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Constantinople 2 Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Khazaria Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Pechennegia Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great--Great--Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in Constantinople Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great--Great--Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great--Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Great-Grandfather: Don’t tell mom I’m in other cavemans cave
It’s nice to see videos like this. It’s a good reminder that soldiers are humans, no matter what side they fight for. Most of these guys are in their late teens, early twenties. They have families, friends, and lives. No matter who you believe is right or wrong, just remember; we have the privilege of sitting back and watching this war unfold. Others are not as lucky, and so be thankful it’s not your son, or brother, father, husband or boyfriend out there. Hope he makes it home safe, and we all should hope this war will end soon.
The interesting thing is that you need a reminder that soldiers are people too. You didn’t mean just soldiers, but Russian soldiers, right? It already looks like “Russians are people too” - almost like “Jews are people too.”
Coming from a veteran, keep in mind, you may not agree with the politics of a conflict, but the people that are fighting it on the ground are largely just normal folk, brothers, fathers, cousins, boyfriends, husbands...
@@brysonkuervers2570 For a lot of people enlistment into the military is a way to advance in life, there's a reason a large portion of enlisted soldiers come from impoverished backgrounds, and in countries with dictators you'll usually find forced conscription, they don't have a choice.
@@kenny187ful Not to mention that in these countries with restricted informations, propaganda and censorship is more likely to make them and their society as a whole, see the war as a rightous one.
Честно говоря, не понимаю что тут прекрасного. Это трагедия для наших русского и украинского народов. А всё благодаря империалистическому западу, но ничего, победа будет за нами. Работайте парни!
What really hits hard is the fact that you dont know if this dude is still alive or not. Its crazy to think about that he might be dead and we still watch him playing this wonderful song on youtube…
My God, if I was his mother and I heard him singing this. It'd be heartbreaking hearing your son sing it, even if you can't see him you'd still know it's your baby boy. No one tell her.
It reminds me of the story of the soldier who was having video call with his brother and mother during a desperate fight and he knew he wouldn’t make it. They made a movie about it: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-IsUjLpwrkRI.htmlsi=M1NCDb1ysuLwEJ8l
What would you understand, this Ukrainian city was destroyed by soldiers of the Russian Federation, and it was the Russian Federation that started the war, began to kill peaceful people and children, and this soldier understands very well that he forgot in Ukraine
No filter, coloured video, the ominous scenery, artillery, raw footage, i do wish i could speak with the man behind the guitar one day if he is still here, this is recorded history
I feel like it’s (unintentionally) poetic of how bland everything is besides the guitar he’s holding. Everything is lost of color and destroyed, his guitar is the only bright, vibrant object in this world
The fact this video is not color edited and the guitar is the only colorful thing in this scenario gives vibes from the Girl in the red jacket in Shindlers List - but this time its real wtf
Война вынуждает делать страшные вещи. Война это всегда про убийство и разрушения. Это меняет людей. Музыка должна напоминать кем он был и кем он должен оставаться.
@@thetau4866 the meaning is this guy should’ve stayed home, not looking to be a "hero" by bringing death and destruction upon others in order to steal their land.
@@JohnnyCBCS he was ordered to do this by people in places of power higher than him. He can't just run away or say no, either, as his family will be punished if he does.
@@thetau4866 give it a rest, dude. About 700 thousand people have left Russia in order to avoid going to war, many others have bribed their way out of being conscripted. A few have even intentionally surrendered right after being deployed. This guy knows what he's doing and he’s doing the dark work fully voluntarily.
@pukism he is definitely not a coward like you who would abandon his country in a war that could define its future. He would rather die with honor than see his country fail.
@@consultgeospatial7390He is a war criminal who participates in an illegal invasion of another sovereign state. He travelled to another country to murder families and destroy their homes. All of the destruction surrounding him was caused by him and his comrades. It is honorable and patriotic to defend your country when it is attacked. That is why the Ukrainian soldiers are heroes. But invading another country that didn't attack you in any way is neither patriotic nor honorable. It is villainous. That is why the Russian soldiers are evil. The Russian military is the Wehrmacht of our time. History will remember these men only as villains, as the brutal goons of a mad dictator.
@@pukism you think he's got a choice, you think he can simply surrender, because you presume he's a coward like you. but unlike you, he's a real soldier, not some keyboard warrior like you judging people they know nothing about.
The first version of this Russian sing was written almost 40 years ago. It was about the combat action in Afghanistan in the 1980s. In this sing a soldier writes the mail to his sister. Then this sing was rewritten during war in Chechnya. Now some words were change for this war. You may find these variants typing "ты только маме не говори".
when my father returned in 1947, with only one leg, injured in 1945 in Adolfs big fight, I was a little child and knew nothing about war. During my life I learned: war never ends ! In my brain and in the stories of my father was something that overcomes: that he was saved once on the battlefield by Russian soldiers, once by one Russian farmer, once by the Medical Service . Why? Those 4 years during all fights he learned the Russian language, was interested in Russian Historie , visites all churches and buildings and tought his 5 children, to accept every nation .... it is the best I learned in my life. Peace to all people.Peace to this Russian soldier.
@@bartomiejgrzeszykowski1161 Could have been Romania or Germans allies at the time too. But considering he was saved by Russians twice, I doubt he's in the Axis powers. (if he was, he'd be captured. that means the chances of both happening is considerably low) Edit: The above was just my hypothesis to not leave out possibilities, the person himself later talked about who his father was.
войны никогда не остановятся пока существует человечество, а жизнь продолжается какая бы она не была, перетекая в сердца наших потомков которые продолжат говорить нашими голосами
@@vonami17 нормальная Москва переводит деньги нашим, русским, ребятам, плетёт маскировочные сети и помогает с гуманитарной помощью🇷🇺❤️. Х.йню не неси, «масквич»))
@@vvddiihh8853 а потом эта «нормальная москва» получает пирожки с мышьяком от других «нормальных москвичей». а честно говоря - понять где ваша «нормальная москва» за 28 лет жизни в Москве я так и не смог🤔 ну, бегают там @лкаши с криками «россия для русских».. ну и бегают…)
Я вспомнила, когда в Москве прошли серии террактов со взрывами домом, то когда я входила в метро, в автобус и смотрела на людей, то думала, как вы все мне дороги! И тут при просмотре этого видео, такое же чувство охватывает. Все эти солдаты свои, родные и любимые. Да благословит вас Господь!
@@Laurel22 Путин бессмысленно посылает этих людей на смерть, не заботясь об их жизни. Для него они ничего не значат, в то время как для нас они - отцы, братья и друзья. Мы живем в таком взаимосвязанном мире, что люди не должны умирать из-за советской ностальгии. СССР больше нет, пусть так и будет. Слава Украине
Ukrainian old copral : "Hey sniper, what are the Russians doing?" Sniper: “Some Russian dude is singing an Afghan song, remade as Bakhmut.” Old copral: “don’t touch him, this is my song, I was there too!!!
There's something so surreal about this video. The soldier sitting alone in a bombed-out hellscape, the way everything is gray except his ukelele, the gunshots and shelling in the background, and yet he sits up there and sings...
I suppose every war is technically stupid, but this one is not pointless atleast. Its the turning point in worlds history where countries in the world are not kneeling infront of America anymore. If it goes in the way the russians want in 50 years you could see a global economical change where China Russia India etc are the strongest countries and America Britain and Germany are not
@@zeropoint11guzman48 I said, I seems, reading the comments. Some peoples saw that on TikTok apparently. I wish it's a lie 😪 Anyway he is a symbol of all the soldiers who already died just before and after this song. Tic tac, one two three.. And fuckbthe ukrainiens or the Americans who said "it's a good news ". He could be ukrainien, I would be very sad too for him.
Różnica pomiędzy zachodem a Rosją jest taka, że my tutaj mówimy dlaczego młodzi mężczyźni giną za czyjeś interesy a tam w Rosji ludzie płaczą i wołają do swoich "wojowników" wracajcie żywi. 😂
In a war, country gives cannons, rich people give Horses, while fathers give their sons, after war, country is taking cannons, rich people take horses, while fathers are trying to find their sons graves.
@@noobgamer-dz8mk Wrongly attributed to Stalin, actual quote is from a german anti-war play during ww1 mocking the French Generals that goes something like "why one death is a tragedy, yes, but a hundred thousand deaths is but a statistic"
Yeah I am pretty sure Stalin said, “If only one man dies of hunger, that is a tragedy. If millions die, that’s only statistics.” Which was referring to the Ukrainian farmers and people starving.
@@albertkkim Do some research. So many quotes are wrongly attributed to Stalin, especially during to cold war, to paint the image of a evil dictator. About the Ukrainian farmers and people starving, I assume you are talking about the Holodomor. First things first, it was by no means a man made famine. This image is painted by Ukrainian nationalists, but in reality it was due to a combination of factors, such as the fact that the USSR at that point in time did not have a fully developed agricultural system, relying mainly on grain, which inevitably caused famine when their harvests failed. In addition, kulaks destroyed their crops and machines and killed their livestock due to collectivisation, which further compounded the issue. Important to note that the grain quotas for the Ukrainian SSR was lowerd by 60 percent, if I remembered correctly.
0:53 in case you didnt know “tourist” here refers to a Wagner fighter because Wagners are called like that since theyve travelled to many exotic locations such as Syria, Libya, Mali, CAR etc
Yeah well guess what maybe the Russian leadership and their people should have thought twice before supporting a completely unwarranted invasion of a sovereign nation.
As an aspiring American soldier, I hope I never have to go up againts my Russian friends, our rivalry has been going on for far too long, its time to recognize each other as humans and settle things like real men.
Only Putin is responsible for the war in Ukraine. He is the war bastard this brave soldier sings about. But you Americans should keep your mouth closed. We all remember Vietnam and Irak.
Well considering Bakhmut is now Russia's idea of "liberated" (A smoldering rubble heap akin to the surface of the moon) I would say he probably doesn't have much to fear up there.
@@user-tj3km3nv2hпроблема в том то что бахмут это город в украине а нью йорк это в америке а вот америка имеет ооооооооочень много техники еще хрен до нее доберешься аедь нет у нее не дружелюбных соседей так что если и будет война между америкой и россие то это будет ядерка и вот это пиздец
Grandfather > Just don't tell mom that i'm going to Afghanistan. Father > Just don't tell mom that i'm going to Chechnya. Son > Just don't tell mom that i'm going to Bakhmut. No one deserves to die like this.
@@TheDanileronof you got forced to go to war and had your friends die I think you would have thought of it as a depressing situation no matter what side you were on
@@axelkilander3079 How can you force thousand of armed men to do anything? Seriously what is wrong with you people. How do you even imagine this? Do you think there is a comissar with a gun standing behind them at all times or what. No one can force military to do shit, you can convince them, bribe them, maybe add some propoganda on top for bigger motivation. But FORCING? Yeah, try giving men guns, tanks and artillary and then force them how exactly?
@@xeno5725 Not really, Black Tulip is Antonov An-22 transport plane which frequently flew dead or rarely, seriously injured soldiers, slim chance hes alive, very slim tho
War is an absolutely terrible thing. May this man still be alive, reunited with his brother and mom. Rest in peace to the man's fallen brothers and friends themselves.
seeing not only the Ukraine's side really opens my eyes, Ukraine and the Russian soldiers want the war to end but Putin and those political pigs keep it going. It sucks seeing the misdirected hate towards the average Russian
@@chancelofi1413 Explain how ? Brain rot ! Russia unilateraly declared war in Ukraine, just like Georgia. Only this time we punched back. Get your head out of your ass.
Yeah, and I'm pretty sure the main reason the Russians went into Ukraine was to take out all the NATO/US missiles on the outskirts of Kiev that was planted there with an obvious purpose. It's quite similar to the Cuban Missile Crisis.@@chancelofi1413
I'm Jewish, and yeah I would. This is a song which I've always understood to be expressing despair at being a soldier fighting for an unworthy cause. Not all SS members were evil, and I would respect any that felt and expressed despair at being forced by their government and those around them to do their evil jobs.@@silaud8809
@@silaud8809 it would. for us asian, german did nothing wrong to us. the one who did it to us are france, uk, netherland, spain etc. if you can praise those countries and no hatred towards their soldiers to respect our centuries of suffering, i don't see why it is wrong to feel empathy to SS soldier singing about how he cursed the war and longing for going back home.
I'm a soldier its something only a soldier understands. but seeing as both us didnt serve in WW2 here is a quote from someome who did. @silaud8809 "I’ve thought about this often. That man and I might’ve been good friends, we might’ve had a lot in common. He might’ve liked to fish, he might’ve liked to hunt. You never know, you know. Of course, they were doing what they were supposed to do and I was trying to do what I was supposed to do. But, under different circumstances, we might’ve been good friends." Darrell ‘Shifty’ Powers on men in the German army. (via octobones)
I was a South Korean Air Force soldier until a few months ago. Now, fortunately, I am back in society intact, but I still have nightmares about the military. The conscription has more than just the deprivation of freedom. Under the guise of ”for motherland(조국을 위하여),“ many people have to perform unwanted missions and are sometimes even pushed to death. Not only I, but in reality, a large number of soldiers have been on the verge of dying or have already lost their lives. Other people who have nothing to do with the military do not even know who died for what. Although I have not been pushed to the same battlefield as that Russian soldier, I completely understand at least some of the pain he is going through. I hope this hellish war ends soon. May there be peace for all the souls whose freedom and lives have been taken away🙏🏻
@@Avical-up6of Korea is in a ceasefire and has never ended the war, and some soldiers move to conflict zones abroad to perform their duties. And military service is usually dangerous in and of itself. They routinely carry out drills and operations for the purpose of winning wars.
@@Avical-up6of officially speaking North and South Korea are still at 'war' and there were a number of skirmishes and incidents both recently and in the past that keep tensions high.
Slavs killing slavs, it shouldnt be like that. Stay strong, stay alive. Do not let politicians ruin your life. I wish you can go back home safe. 🇵🇱 Greetings, remember whatever our politicians say it is not every people opinion.
Мне 26, я из России. Каждый раз, когда были сложные времена в жизни, тяжёлые болезни, расставания и тд, говорил себе, что главное, что не война... Мирного неба всем над головой.. Надеюсь, что больше изменений этой песни мы не услышим.
Greetings from a brotherly slavic country of Montenegro ,I feel the same that this brother vs brother war needs to stop and that we all unite .For peace and prosperity!!!
@@ToxinFN5490 it’s a long time ago i didn’t savne the link in my notes or something, im just saying what i can remember seeing about him/this video, so no i can’t provide you with a link sadly.
It is sad to see young men play the songs of their fathers who fought in the same hellish conditions. Stay safe, boys, and pray for peace. 🇷🇺🇺🇲 Love from a Chuvash American.
Remove that first rag on which a piece of shit is painted, and be kind, if you are such an ardent American, figure out who attacked whom and who is defending his home, be healthy.
@@jimboslicereal and what did you say for a rag, I didn't understand? and what book are you talking about, if you say so then you need more specifics, weren't you taught that?
@@studentyayou are part of the problem; badly informed with a tenuous grip on reality. The US provoked this conflict and the lives of every Russian and Ukrainian that dies sit squarely on the shoulders of the neoconservatives who made this war inevitable starting in 2008.
heartbreaking that this song has to keep coming back.. doesn't matter who's right and who's wrong, I wish I could see a world from which war was eradicated
this is probably one of the realest videos i have seen from the war, a man singing and playing music on a balcony while you hear the fait sounds of gun fire and mortar shelling (idk if it's a mortar). we all probably think of war as this cool concept, especially after tiktok edits started being made of war, but this, shows how brutal it is, and how dark everything is in reality, with only the guitar having any sort of color what so ever, was is hell.
Afghanistan, Chechenya and now the Russo Ukrainian war. I'm 100% sure when Russia and America are fighting over Mars, Russian soldiers will make another rendition of this song again.
Stars are falling in Gorgonum dawn sky, Just don't tell mom I'm on Mars! Me and guys are attacking the starship again, It feels like the Olympus Mons are shooting at us, the Nix fortress.
Не смущает, что все эти войны велись либо недалеко от России, либо на границах России? Лично я уверен, что эти войны будут продолжаться до тех пор, пока война не начнется в самих США. Возможно, что только поняв ужасы войны, США прекратят разжигать войны в других странах.
0:54 That send some real...Swallowing dust vibes. (For people who don't know: Black Tulip: Nickname given to the Antonov An-12 planes during Soviet-Afghan war , they received these nicknames because they were often used to transport bodies, so if a comrade returned home in a "black tulip" he is probably dead.)
Black Tulips is also a group of Ukrainian volunteers who return their fallen countrymen back to their homes for a proper burial. One 17 year old kid from Sloviansk was killed when he stepped on a mine not too long ago while doing such. All because of RuSSia. This is Putins fault and all RuSSians who approve of this mess. Don't get it twisted RuSSky boys.
I don't think Russians feel it anywhere near as much the Ukrainians do, it is their countrymen's corpses among that rubble and it is their countrymen's homes that is that rubble
Хотелось бы увидеть хотя-бы через 2-3 года как тот-же солдат сидит на этом-же балконе и поет эту-же песню, но вокруг все отстроено, мирное небо, ездят машины, жизнь цветет. Только так мы увидим, что все войны рано или поздно заканчиваются и наступает мирная жизнь.
Так и будет. Мариуполь меньше чем за год, новый отстроили. И Бахмут так же отстроим, как только референдум о присоединении пройдёт - сразу в новый город деньги рекой потекут!!
Спасибо, солдат, за видеописьмо, оно, конечно, не для слабонервных. Берегите себя! Низкий поклон защитникам страны! Возвращайтесь с победой домой, здесь вас любят и ждут.
Я не могу поверить, насколько остальные мои соотечественники могут быть слепы к бедственному положению русского народа и жителей Донецка. Пропаганда отравила их разум, и они не знают, что говорят. (Это было переведено с помощью Google Translate, поэтому некоторые вещи могут потеряться при переводе)@@Patriccist
It's one of the most beautiful live solo musical performances I've ever seen. It's incredible that he did it in such a stressful and dire area. There are always flowers under the debris. Everyone should have the right to return to their own home.
This hits hard. You often don't really think about how war is actually like, espacially when playing war videogames, but then, you might stumble upon a video like this, that makes you realise it.
Действительно, после увиденных мною множества видео с СВО и понимая что это происходит сейчас и относительно близко, документальные ролики бомбёжек блокадного Ленинграда заиграли абсолютно новыми красками, и только сейчас я действительно осознал, о каких ужасах войны мне рассказывал Дед... очень жаль что я был так слеп и глуп, хотя я уверен, что даже сейчас я много чего не вижу и не понимаю..
@@user-vf5gq1sz4s очень многого - ты назвал "ад" - "сво", это СВО пришло в дом к мирным жителям, на самом деле те кто для тебя герои - занимались очень низкими и подлыми деяниями. Уж много чего осталось под пластом войны, забыты, потеряны... на всегда, без права на справедливость.
@@L-A-O-S низкими и подлыми делами занимались те, кто бомбил Донецк и убивал людей за, то что они говорят на русском (либо на любом другом языке, отличного от их). В мире много боли, смерти и крови проливается каждый день, просто это не так сильно раздувается. Я уверен что ты не знаешь сколько переворотов в европейских, азиатских и африканских странах устроило США.
@@L-A-O-SJustice doesn't really exist in this world, it's a sad truth many don't realize. Vices exist upon all of man, and so long as one is consumed by greed or lust for power shall the rest pay the price.
Yes, I think a major aspect of it is the collapse of the West... though all the innocent men's lives even more so. As some have said, using them to 'fight until the last Ukrainian." Ths is the reality, a sad truth.