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Why Russia cannot become a democracy 

CaspianReport
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The story of how the #Russian #government evolved also explains why it cannot become a #democratic state in its current territorial configuration.
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21 ноя 2022

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Комментарии : 5 тыс.   
@CaspianReport
@CaspianReport Год назад
Special thanks to War Thunder for sponsoring this video. Click the link and claim your bonuses: playwt.link/caspianreport
@DonSuperbe
@DonSuperbe Год назад
Ever had that quickly any Comments?
@thelazy0ne
@thelazy0ne Год назад
Lol ... The actual first comment, 12 h before being uploaded. Einstein is protesting.
@DonSuperbe
@DonSuperbe Год назад
@@thelazy0ne stop bombarding me with facts, reality and logic. My opinion is already set in stone!
@borkovitch5227
@borkovitch5227 Год назад
Gaijin is not gonna like this video being the one sponsored by them lol russian bias and all that
@djbabbotstown
@djbabbotstown Год назад
What a joke. The US is rigging elections and Russia has fair ones. This channel has to be propaganda.
@Leeeeegion
@Leeeeegion Год назад
A Belgium a year keeps the doctor away.
@John3.36
@John3.36 Год назад
*keeps the Chinese away.
@tellyboy17
@tellyboy17 Год назад
Until you hit the "Belgium" that turns out to be particularly bad for your health.
@omgitzangrygaming7904
@omgitzangrygaming7904 Год назад
@@John3.36 mongols*
@AeneasGemini
@AeneasGemini Год назад
@@omgitzangrygaming7904 yes, but also those two sort of became the same
@NihilSineDeo09
@NihilSineDeo09 Год назад
Haha, that was hilarious
@4sat564
@4sat564 Год назад
Yeah, Yeltsin was so democratic that he shot the parlament with tanks when they didn't obey him.
@clintcowan9424
@clintcowan9424 Год назад
Lol
@AnriAnro
@AnriAnro Год назад
ur cringe
@arturincloud9892
@arturincloud9892 Год назад
Agree. But Americans do not know Russian history
@tetelmaaan
@tetelmaaan Год назад
But this parlament wasn't democratic and it tried to recover Soviet union. It is more correct to say that to non-democratic branchs fought for the power at this moment
@4sat564
@4sat564 Год назад
@@tetelmaaan they didn't try to restore Soviet Union. You confuses Black October of 1993 with GKChP of 1991. In the October of 1993 the Congress of People's Deputies impeached Yeltsin and they had constitutional right to do this. But Yeltsin didn't care about following the constitution. If they prevailed, Russia wouldn't have such president oriented organisation now.
@crocve
@crocve Год назад
Geographical determinism alone does not explain this. There are both big and small countries which are liberal-democracies, and there are big and small countries which are not. If a country is a democracy or not is determined by various number of factors.
@Mikidy
@Mikidy Год назад
Eh, it's a complex topic but I think the Mongol invasion definitely changed the geopolitics of what is now Russia forever. Ever since then, authoritarianism has been the only sole leadership path that anyone vying for power has to follow. I do think geography played a roll into Russian authoritarianism, but you are also correct in stating that geography is not sole determining factor in this regard.
@TheGraemi
@TheGraemi Год назад
I agree. Geographic may be a reason for the past. But in our digital and global time it is a lot less so.
@MrAkaacer
@MrAkaacer Год назад
@@TheGraemi People keep saying this, but the world is not informed or the people have made different or better choices as far as I can see. The modern world is not anymore liberal then the world of yester year. If you don't understand that geographic is still plays a part in politics then you're not listening hard enough. The US is a huge country and is arguably the most connected country in the world, yet geography still plays a major part in politics.
@TheGraemi
@TheGraemi Год назад
@@MrAkaacer I din't say anything about liberal. Just that if people seek knowledge they can find it. But of course how and what you seek makes the difference.😉 His argument was geographic is the reason why Russia can't be a democracy. My argument is that the people are not ready. Of course I didn't state that directly.
@MrAkaacer
@MrAkaacer Год назад
@@TheGraemi Maybe I jumped the gun but you said "But in our digital and global time it is a lot less so" which implies that knowledge is easier to obtain. I guess I took the next step to infer you meant people would become more liberal as they obtain knowledge, as you made this comment "Geographic may be a reason for the past. But in our digital and global time it is a lot less so". I guess I'm use to people defining conservative as "being ignorant and therefore stuck in the past" and defining liberals as "informed and therefore open to change". Back on topic, it has less to do with Russians not being ready and more to do with Russia's geography and the geopolitics that go with this. The US was mainly settled by Western Europeans, dominated by British settlers, so it was easier to create a new democratic nation. Russia is huge encompassing many different ethnicities each claiming 100s of years of existence. Britain, France, Germany, Spain formed democracies due to Roman and Greek empires giving them a cultural commonality that united the different tribes within those nations, but they still had many wars before they became the democracies we know of today.
@Cecil_Augus
@Cecil_Augus Год назад
The "one Belgium a year" meme will never die
@Napoleon-Blownaparte
@Napoleon-Blownaparte 2 месяца назад
I'm from Belgium and I don't get it
@ke_mbo
@ke_mbo Год назад
Geographical determinism is one way to explain Russia. Another would be failure to set up functional social institutions. Truth is, as always, somewhere in between.
@user-ym2ne1zg1b
@user-ym2ne1zg1b Год назад
another way is world-system theory
@TheWebsOfCorruptionNeverFail
Another theory is foreign economic sabotage and funding of separatism while "friendly" rulers are in charge and outright hostility otherwise.
@Charlesputnam-bn9zy
@Charlesputnam-bn9zy Год назад
It's above all a matter of mentality.
@ilFrancotti
@ilFrancotti Год назад
"Geographical determinism" doesn't exist, it's propaganda sigla. That failure to set up those institutions is tied to both Russia's geographical characteristics and those of the social groups (peoples) living within and around those lands. It's an analysis, not some sort of inevitable destiny.
@jak00bspyr72
@jak00bspyr72 Год назад
Failure to set up functional social institutions is coused by geography.
@artbasss
@artbasss Год назад
One correction Shirvan. Ivan The Terrible’s initiative was called “oprichnyna”, “oprichnik” is a person that served in it.
@Anerammos2
@Anerammos2 Год назад
*Oprichnina
@blackdubz
@blackdubz Год назад
@TDVL Production I spit my drink out 😂😂
@artbasss
@artbasss Год назад
@@Anerammos2 nope, for it to be read correctly, not as “oprichNAINA”, because an English speaker will instinctively read “i” in an open syllable as “ai”, there’s got to be the letter “y”.
@greywolf7422
@greywolf7422 Год назад
More like western democracy has failed to adapt to russia, our democracy may be touted as libertarian, but it also has autocratic roots, as in monarchy and in the case of france, dictatorships, our democracy gives little in terms of communication between the highest offices and the lowest economic class, much like during the days of monarchy, it requires alot of trust, and effort on the part of the governing officials to find the pulse of the nation, among every region, state, city and borough. But as the present state of government officials indicates, its a system thats riddled with inefficiencies and flaws. With Russia having origins with even more autocratic, corrupt and incompetent influences, in the form of Muscovy, Novgorod, and their old masters the Golden Horde, there has never been any administrative social mechanism that generates any semblance of expected competence on the administrative side, and with the population having both a stake and trust in the governing institutions, this is why Lenins revolution failed its purpose. Hell lenin probably took the ideas used to supress minorities, and subconsciously just transferred that cultural influence onto what he perceived as the bourgeoisie, even his infamously described Kulaks. Therefore any democratic system would have to be developed with the cooperation of both the society and with the governing body being conscious of its own autocratic nature, and be able to apply reforms adequately, largely this has not been successful, with the old influences of the old Novogrodian Oligarchy plaguing Russia today. Maybe Russia could look in places like Iraq, where revolutionaries have taken a more decentralized approach to democracy, a system that is much older than our present democratic systems, with each village being able to set its own rules and customs, this however changed with the arrival of the British which forced an inefficient centralized system onto the population.
@BiharyGabor
@BiharyGabor Год назад
@@artbasss Nope, the correct English spelling is Oprichnina. The letter "y" is not used for what you are suggesting here, partly because "i" and "y" are normally pronounced the same way in such a position. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oprichnina
@Papin_Demokrat
@Papin_Demokrat Год назад
You can use geographical characteristics of any country to prove why it’s couldn’t be a democracy. Russia is not a democracy for many other reasons than it’s geography
@hectorzero8545
@hectorzero8545 4 месяца назад
Mostly because of how toxic it's been in the west.
@hectorzero8545
@hectorzero8545 4 месяца назад
Also even if there's other factors, a major reason is still it's geography and ethnic past. Geography has a lot to do with history. Look at the geographic realities of Europe and it predicts all of the wars.
@singular9
@singular9 Год назад
Russia never became capitalist. It was capitalized by the west when the USSR fell. Even Sachs (from goldman sachs) who ran the transition admitted to exploiting it and turning it into an anarchy.
@SwampKryakwa
@SwampKryakwa Год назад
Russia is one of the most properly-capitalistic of all the countries rn, especially compared to the Europe. And it's a clear example why pure capitalism is nothing but a death sequence for a country that tries to stand on it's own
@olenachko6801
@olenachko6801 Год назад
russia is a capitalist oligarchy with a specific twist where oligarchs and the government are tied up to the point there autocracy has been built. russia doesn’t have any elite conflict, that’s why it doesn’t seem democratic (in bourgeoise way). all the social goods that russia has - free medicine, for ex, is just ussr’s heritage.
@SciFiMangaGamesAnime
@SciFiMangaGamesAnime Год назад
@@olenachko6801 There is no free medicine at this point, its a joke, optimized to save as much money as possible, not human lives and 100% not their quality of life.
@NuLiForm
@NuLiForm 3 дня назад
YES!
@barracuda6900
@barracuda6900 Год назад
One correction - not all of Moscow's expansion in the medieval period was through soft power. The Novgorod Republic (an example of a possible democratic Russian State, in ages past) was conquered by force at the hands of Ivan III of Moscow.
@finnicpatriot6399
@finnicpatriot6399 Год назад
Seem to have forgotten about the conquest of the Finnic tribes, too. Merya, Meshchera and the Muroma were through soft power, but the Erzya, Moksha and Mari were through conquest.
@hrsmp
@hrsmp Год назад
@@finnicpatriot6399 that's why Merya language dissapeared completely by XVIII century and Mari language is alive and well now. Some of the Mari people also are the last pagans of europe (meaning continuous religious tradition, not reviwed neoaganism), fun fact.
@CaspianReport
@CaspianReport Год назад
Novgorod was crushed after they tried expelling Moscow's soft power. Muscovy's influence and northern expansion had cut off Novgorod's market share in the fur trade, allowing the Muscovites to gain leverage. After roughly a century of Moscow's soft power, Novgorod rebelled and failed. It's a bit similar to Kazan's fate. First soft power, then hard power.
@barracuda6900
@barracuda6900 Год назад
@@CaspianReport typical of how any empire works - a combination of both the hard and the soft.
@Schinshikss
@Schinshikss Год назад
Moreover, Siberia was initially colonized not under the Czar's whims, but the merchants' initiative to get rich through Siberian fur trade, led by the Stroganov family. Later the Czars realized his possession of such territories but had never truly learned how he got them, and therefore used it as a convenient dumping ground. It's not won through hard power either (except for Outer Manchuria).
@happyelephant5384
@happyelephant5384 Год назад
Imagine 200 years ago Caspian looks at France and says: "France has always been absolutist monarchy. It can't be anything else because it has so many enemies: England, Spanin, Austria, Prussia. They from all sides. Only monarch can save France, it can never be democracy"
@95Bartlett
@95Bartlett Год назад
Yeah I’m not a fan of this geographical determinism that Caspian seems to adhere to.
@HouseOfAlastrian
@HouseOfAlastrian Год назад
France's initial experience with democracy was an absolute mess and led to the Reign of Terror. Robespierre was a little too trigger happy with those guillotines. Eventually Napoleon became dictator, then Emperor. France then would proceed to cycle between monarchies, republics and empires before they finally managed to hammer down a stable republic. The current French republic is its fifth iteration. Russia could possibly be a stable democracy some day... but right now it's on a shaky foundation... just like the First French Republic had been. The only way I see Russia finally settling into a stable democratic country is for it to cycle between oligarchic dictatorship and the next iteration of democracy. Long story short, I'm not expecting it to happen in my lifetime if it would even happen at all.
@memisemyself
@memisemyself Год назад
There is a difference. France, at that time and even now, didn't exist as long as Russia, it's borders were mostly formed by mountain ranges and major rivers, it didn't include as many ethnic minorities and many of it's enemies were still divided or were separated from France by one or more countries, giving it a buffer zone. Also, it's major enemies were busy expanding or protecting empires.
@cthoadmin7458
@cthoadmin7458 Год назад
Despots always use an excuse like that to cling to power. "I may be bad, but the alternatives are worse, we can't afford democracy, it would weaken us... etc...".
@ilFrancotti
@ilFrancotti Год назад
He would be right. Even now France is a monarchy, not based on some fancy royal bloodline but rather on an electoral choice. An electoral monarchy.
@patrickazzarella6729
@patrickazzarella6729 Год назад
Always found it pretty cool how just like in the U.S. the construction of railroads in Russia brought along with it large populations and nessecary boomtowns all across Siberia and Asia to Vladivostok following the transsiberian railroad bringing Russians from Europe to East Asia just like it brought Americans from the East Coast to the West of America
@Silver_Prussian
@Silver_Prussian Год назад
Thr difference is most of siberia was already empty while america was not
@greywolf7577
@greywolf7577 Год назад
@@Silver_Prussian Siberia was not empty. There were many native peoples there before.
@Silver_Prussian
@Silver_Prussian Год назад
@@greywolf7577 nope it was mostly empty check an ethnic map of the place and see where russians live and where the minorities do.
@Aeg0r
@Aeg0r Год назад
@@greywolf7577 How many was them? 100k? Look at the size of Siberia lmfao, it was pretty much empty, aswell as it is now...
@Geoe423
@Geoe423 Год назад
@@Silver_Prussian Siberia wasn’t empty
@scottthomas8607
@scottthomas8607 Год назад
"If Russia is sealed to despotism, then let It have democracy, for it gives every person the right to be his own oppressor." Very well said.
@ericsuarez834
@ericsuarez834 Год назад
That's the stupidest thing someone can say
@lilestojkovicii6618
@lilestojkovicii6618 2 месяца назад
Democracy cult of thought is cancerous
@bobg9
@bobg9 Год назад
"soft power and annexation" ivan the III literally burned novgorod to the ground
@user-ym2ne1zg1b
@user-ym2ne1zg1b Год назад
It was the IVth, bucko
@bobg9
@bobg9 Год назад
@@user-ym2ne1zg1b oops ;)
@greywolf7422
@greywolf7422 Год назад
More like western democracy has failed to adapt to russia, our democracy may be touted as libertarian, but it also has autocratic roots, as in monarchy and in the case of france, dictatorships, our democracy gives little in terms of communication between the highest offices and the lowest economic class, much like during the days of monarchy, it requires alot of trust, and effort on the part of the governing officials to find the pulse of the nation, among every region, state, city and borough. But as the present state of government officials indicates, its a system thats riddled with inefficiencies and flaws. With Russia having origins with even more autocratic, corrupt and incompetent influences, in the form of Muscovy, Novgorod, and their old masters the Golden Horde, there has never been any administrative social mechanism that generates any semblance of expected competence on the administrative side, and with the population having both a stake and trust in the governing institutions, this is why Lenins revolution failed its purpose. Hell lenin probably took the ideas used to supress minorities, and subconsciously just transferred that cultural influence onto what he perceived as the bourgeoisie, even his infamously described Kulaks. Therefore any democratic system would have to be developed with the cooperation of both the society and with the governing body being conscious of its own autocratic nature, and be able to apply reforms adequately, largely this has not been successful, with the old influences of the old Novogrodian Oligarchy plaguing Russia today. Maybe Russia could look in places like Iraq, where revolutionaries have taken a more decentralized approach to democracy, a system that is much older than our present democratic systems, with each village being able to set its own rules and customs, this however changed with the arrival of the British which forced an inefficient centralized system onto the population.
@BadBame962
@BadBame962 Год назад
Alexander I literally burned Moscow to the ground
@johnssmith4005
@johnssmith4005 Год назад
@@user-ym2ne1zg1b How about you find another name other than Ivan 😄
@just1it1moko
@just1it1moko Год назад
I always liked the detail that the Oprichnik were the strongest units for killing civillians in Age Of Empires 3.
@UninstallingWindows
@UninstallingWindows Год назад
I bet in the next Civilization game, there is gonna be a "Great Leader" named Putin, which can reduce the population in all neighboring cities by half.
@egor_2gor_3gor
@egor_2gor_3gor Год назад
That's crazy, I'm ☠️, civilians ☠️ too
@just1it1moko
@just1it1moko Год назад
@@egor_2gor_3gor F
@mayakstudios7292
@mayakstudios7292 Год назад
Хотя число казненных при Иване Грозном на самом деле невысокое, в основном были жертвами новгородцы
@nobodycares2164
@nobodycares2164 Год назад
yeah. Ivan the "terrible" killed like 20 000 people for 20 years - WHAT A CRIME. An ordinary king in Europe killing 100,000 per day. Who cares. Thats how fascist propaganda works.
@markayzenshtadt7200
@markayzenshtadt7200 Год назад
The main problem of Russia is that it never stopped being an empire, so people still tend to think in that way.
@mikhailshishin5701
@mikhailshishin5701 Год назад
As a Russian I agree 100%. Over time, other European countries/states developed social institutions and other things to raise economic/social equality while Russia always seemed to lag behind in that regard. A good video I’d recommend that explains this well is the origins of Russian authoritarianism, here’s the link: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-f8ZqBLcIvw0.html
@manferni
@manferni Год назад
That's basically how first world nations see themselves.
@andriysalystyi660
@andriysalystyi660 Год назад
True
@elena__sh
@elena__sh Год назад
No, Russian people don’t think this way, the government doesn’t ask people what they think anymore, it fakes any data Putin needs to stay in power.
@user-vc2ku6hl1k
@user-vc2ku6hl1k 7 месяцев назад
Well, it's your problem, not Russia's.
@jermasus
@jermasus Год назад
The irony of this being sponsored by gaijin
@boboblacksheep5003
@boboblacksheep5003 Год назад
Hey Shirvan, I have a suggestion. It would be awesome if you could use a different projection for the Arctic region it would be really lovely. It would be much easier to estimate distances and areas and not suffer from the scaling effects of Mercator projection.
@shrimperlincs3395
@shrimperlincs3395 Год назад
90% of people have never seen a 'real' projection of the globe. Russia is so long and skinny in real life.
@NullHand
@NullHand Год назад
@@shrimperlincs3395 But the rest of us 10%'ers are heavily over-represented on this channel. I vote Waterman Butterfly...
@djcoopes7569
@djcoopes7569 Год назад
@@shrimperlincs3395 90% of people don't live in the USA, so your wrong mate
@rcvu2509
@rcvu2509 Год назад
@@djcoopes7569 britfag identified
@leeswecho
@leeswecho Год назад
I'm confused why Shirvan even used a projection at all for this video. His other videos have done just fine using a true global "viewed from space" rendering, he is clearly capable of making those.
@zachemny
@zachemny Год назад
There is no such thing as predetermined political regime, as most politoligists say. And in Russia's history there were many decisions (such as Yeltsin's constitution or Chechen or Afganistan wars) that could be made differently and could lead to a completely different results. So the situation is not defined only by 1 or 2 major factors, such as country's geography and ethnic composition
@greggreg2027
@greggreg2027 Год назад
Doesnt the same apply to USA? And every other nation bigger than a breadbox?
@matijastanivukovic8744
@matijastanivukovic8744 Год назад
No, the same doesn't apply to the US since it has two oceans separating it form the rest of the world a thus protecting it. Canada I a lly of the US and Mexico is corrupted and unable to challenge US. This makes the US very safe and you also must consider history of the both nation. The US was never invaded by the Mongols which ravaged and pillaged the whole nation.
@eltecnico9541
@eltecnico9541 Год назад
@@matijastanivukovic8744 Mexicans are not enemies of the United States, they have never invaded their territory, you have
@eltecnico9541
@eltecnico9541 Год назад
@@matijastanivukovic8744 The Mexicans are allies of the United States and have condemned the war in Ukraine, have supported many United States policies, and the commercial alliance has strengthened. Saying that Mexico is an enemy of the United States is like saying that France is an enemy of Germany.
@user-bc7ws1gb9w
@user-bc7ws1gb9w Год назад
@@eltecnico9541 What about California and Texas. Whose territories are these before the USA?
@user-bc7ws1gb9w
@user-bc7ws1gb9w Год назад
@@eltecnico9541 Why is there no Indian state in the USA?
@levoGAMES
@levoGAMES Год назад
Governing Russia is like playing on nightmare difficulty.
@user-db5zc1nf4b
@user-db5zc1nf4b Год назад
Hello from Russia, glory to Putin
@egor_2gor_3gor
@egor_2gor_3gor Год назад
@@user-db5zc1nf4b🤨👎 I am from Russia
@desmantiss
@desmantiss Год назад
Yep live here is the same. If you can survive here, you can win anywhere :D Hello from Russia :D
@saulgoodman7858
@saulgoodman7858 Год назад
@@egor_2gor_3gor you want that p*ssy in prison to govern you instead? The one who cries to his wife?
@justacat2
@justacat2 Год назад
Governing russia on all eras is extremly difficult against mongols against turks against germans and austrians against commies against poles against germans with almost all of europe at their back against japanese against westerners against afghans with help from the west and muslims countries against chechens with helps from muslims countries against ukrainians with NATO equipment and so on...
@hugiefresh379
@hugiefresh379 Год назад
"Most Russians don't care whether they are ruled by fascists or communists or even Martians as long as they can buy six kinds of sausage in the store and lots of cheap vodka."--Alexander Lebed.
@chelovek7689
@chelovek7689 Год назад
9:38 Chechnya announced its withdrawal from the RSFSR even before there were tanks in Moscow in 1991.
@DerHammerSpricht
@DerHammerSpricht Год назад
1:14, I disagree that geography DETERMINES the character/virtues of a people, as I think an individual's educated choice overpowers their conditioning every time if the opportunity is given, but geography definitely has a strong influence, MUCH stronger than most people realize, especially individualists.
@basedstreamingatcozy-dot-t7126
@basedstreamingatcozy-dot-t7126 11 месяцев назад
The idea that individual choice overpowers everything else is wrong, because your individual choice is largely determined by factors outside your control, such as genetics, and your environment
@dirkpill-basher5350
@dirkpill-basher5350 Год назад
I'm a great fan of your videos, but I have to disagree with you on this one. I think you may be overreacted when assessing the demand for sovereignty in Russia's autonomous republics and territories. With the exception of some of the Caucasus republics, Russians still make up a majority of citizens within the Eastern territories and even amongst the indigenous populations, Independence remains low. You also try to use Russia's history of expansion and size as proof that Russia cannot transition to democracy. I also disagree with this, although geography and size can play a role in impacting a countries adminstration, federalisation and de-centralisation can address many of the problems associated with this. For evidence of this just observe countries like the United States and Australia, two countries that have a history of conquest, and governing over large and geographically diverse countries yet have evolved into entirely different countries than Russia. The true problem in Russia's democracy comes not from its size or georaphy, but rather the development of its institutions and governance. A dismantling of Russia would not guarantee that democracy succeeds, but rather the creation and reinforcement of democratic institutions and safeguards.
@rolyars
@rolyars Год назад
What also played a role is that after the collapse of the Soviet Union, the West rather had an oligarchy providing them with cheap commodities than a democracy that would think about the Russian people. This was the essence of the so-called "shock therapy". Similar things happened in Latin America as well as some Asian / Mid East countries where democraties were overthrown and dictators were installed who were willing to facilitate the West's neoliberal project by providing cheap commodities and labor.
@AV-rr2zp
@AV-rr2zp Год назад
@@rolyars i disagree with the comparison with Latin America. Russian collapse required a different approach by the west, and Russia was never a democracy in the first place. In fact, id argue the opposite: the west was very much interested in Russia becoming a democracy. If Russia did, the west could save billions in military spending in Europe, gain a nuclear-capable ally and focus on China. However, the west did not want to expend their resources to make this a reality. They'd rather confortably deal with a naturally formed russian oligarchy (thus reaping economic benefits). They willfully ignored the early signs of trouble: 90s wars in Moldova, Abkhasia and Chechnya, and hoped that the oligarchy will not seek territorial expansion. They obviously did not foreshadow the comeback of former security apparatus and Russian revanchism. Oh well...
@rolyars
@rolyars Год назад
@@AV-rr2zp I don't think we disagree much. I agree the most important thing for the West was that Russia was no longer a threat and also that they'd become a provider of cheap commodities in exchange for freshly printed dollars. However, democracy doesn't necessarily mean Russia wouldn't be a threat so this was of secondary importance, integration in the neoliberal system was seen as the most important as they believed this would also provide safety.
@misterae6430
@misterae6430 Год назад
He mentioned that the known history of Russia with its regional breakout events is hold as a reference point and this reasoning has been used and abused to cancel out further democracy and incentivized despotism.
@jerrybi8400
@jerrybi8400 Год назад
Caspian didn't mention what he should have. Russia can not be a Democracy simply because the centre of power resides in Moscow, and Moscow only. And as you can see the geography; it does play a role and a major one at that because none of the political centers lie outside of Moscow central or Saint petersburg. You have understand the dynamics of power and the strings, the elites reside in Moscow. As long as the Elite class (the oligarchy, it always exists in a society no matter democratic or authoritarian backed by the 'Iron Law of Oligarchy') continues to rule and flourish which it will continue to do so, Democratic institutions can never exist. Extra Information is that Democracy itself is ruled by the elites. So a democracy is itself a farce.
@playtf2
@playtf2 Год назад
3:20 You know man, you are the best when it comes to pronunciation. As a russian I appreciate the effort. You make mistakes but you come so close, I haven't seen anybody do that. Usually people don't even try but you -- hats off, man, wow.
@Luksoropoulos
@Luksoropoulos Год назад
I also find it generally so ignorant if people say this usual 'Sorry for butchering the names' and feel disposed of any effort. There are so many tools on the internet to research pronunciation. It doesn't need to be perfect, I'm totally fine if people just use their own phonemic system (because it can be hard to produce sounds or regard phonemes which don't exist in the own language) but at least try to mirror the original with it
@stardustbilermam1736
@stardustbilermam1736 Год назад
Teach us
@ESC_jackqulen
@ESC_jackqulen Год назад
The RU-vidr Shivan is from Azerbaijan so I'm certain he speaks fluent Russian
@glacialimpala
@glacialimpala Год назад
I'm not sure why you think those who don't come close to good pronunciation 'didn't put in the effort', as if that's how language learning works. They just never learned Russian or some other Slavic language.
@Luksoropoulos
@Luksoropoulos Год назад
@@glacialimpala You can easily research pronunciation on Wiktionary or various dictionaries. It is not necessary to know a language to do this research
@Loothansa
@Loothansa Год назад
The closing statement is powerful. Very impressive script!
@mk1fourwinds62
@mk1fourwinds62 Год назад
I look to your videos for your thorough research and excellent perspective. Thank you. I hope you are able to keep up your work!
@princekyros
@princekyros Год назад
I don't disagree that Russia in it's current form can't become a democracy, but I heavily disagree that it's because of geography. Geographic determinism is a very silly notion that disregards much more important variables like history, culture, human agency and etc. If geographic determinism was the case, we would never have had civil wars between ideologies (north and south korea, east and west germany, communist, democratic and nationalist china, spain and etc) nor would the form of a state change so long as it's geography didn't (literally most of the entire world).
@princekyros
@princekyros Год назад
The reason why Russia can't be a democracy at this time is because something like 70 to 80 percent of the population is apolitical. They have no idea what the Kremlin is doing or how it works and they don't care to find out. They vote whatever their tv tells them to vote and get on with their lives. Politics never intrudes in their private lives. There are no debates, no coherent ideologies, no plurality at all in politics. This is in contrast to the soviet times where communist politics and ideology penetrated everything in daily life with no room for other types of thought. Both of these approaches create easily corraled sheep that is not conductive towards democratisation.
@RemusCroft
@RemusCroft Год назад
Why not? Different geographic zones inside one country lead to different economy, political views, habits, etc. Thus leading to disagreements including civil conflicts.
@Contentrist
@Contentrist Год назад
ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-tzAcuVuk-2Q.html
@princekyros
@princekyros Год назад
@@RemusCroft it's not my burden to prove a negative. But I'll give an extreme example. Switzerland is one of the most successful democracies and economies on the planet. Afghanistan has a near-identical geography. Why the tremendous difference?
@jhwheuer
@jhwheuer Год назад
Geography is the nucleus of ethnic differences… I don’t think it’s geography, it’s ethnicity that will cause the disintegration of Russia… and good riddance.
@nenenindonu
@nenenindonu Год назад
Context : Russia's still an empire
@nnvist
@nnvist Год назад
More like shadow of past empire.
@you-know-who5657
@you-know-who5657 Год назад
always has been and probably always will be
@arolemaprarath6615
@arolemaprarath6615 Год назад
Using that logic then majority of today's countries are empires
@-secondjesus-3100
@-secondjesus-3100 Год назад
What means empire ? Any multinational state is empire ?
@Moons1167
@Moons1167 Год назад
Context : Russia's still a shitole*
@emmnttvideogamemusic6021
@emmnttvideogamemusic6021 Год назад
Your pronunciation of Russian words is on point, well done!
@alfiz9943
@alfiz9943 Год назад
No it's accurate, but very fun to listen native words with english accent, well done :)
@boyvol6428
@boyvol6428 Год назад
Mostly on point.
@marysartr
@marysartr Год назад
Not rly and I'm Russian
@alfiz9943
@alfiz9943 Год назад
@@marysartr чел, я про его акцент, его произношение отличается от русского (по потому что по английски русские названия произносятся по-другому), но то как слова измены звучит прикольно.
@Chaldon-hl6yk
@Chaldon-hl6yk Год назад
@@alfiz9943 наоборот он пытается произносить русские названия с англиским акцентом
@HorusHeresist
@HorusHeresist Год назад
Why Russia cannot become Western* democracy - correct headline
@paulallen2680
@paulallen2680 4 месяца назад
I don’t see the difference? Democracy is democracy, doesn’t matter if “Western” is put in front of it
@jmusic587
@jmusic587 4 месяца назад
@@paulallen2680 Well china is a democracy since anyone can join CCP and it already has 90 million members. Even Capitalistic billioner Jack Ma is member of CCP. And every member of CCP votes for higher-ups. But West calls China a dictatorship. On the other side in countries like UK and Germany, people vote for parties, not candidates, and these parties choose higher-ups, and its also democracy. But the West thinks its more democratic than China. West called Xi Jinping dictator, but Angela Merkel was longer chancellor of Germany than Xi general secretary of CCP. Russia is also a democracy, since Putin has 60-80% of approval rating according independent data centers, that mean he is quite popular to be elected.
@Bdog40
@Bdog40 2 месяца назад
What western democracy are you talking about? Liberal democracy? Direct democracy? Athenian style democracy? Or is it the current Russian style sovereign democracy?
@jmusic587
@jmusic587 2 месяца назад
@@Bdog40 He mean American puppet democracy
@drpepper3838
@drpepper3838 Год назад
Funfact: the modern Russian flag was created after tsar Peter the great visited the Dutch republic in the late 17th century. He was so impressed by what he saw that he took the colours of the Dutch flag, creating the Russian one.
@GreenRatel
@GreenRatel Год назад
Dumb myth. It comes from the colors of muscovys coat of arms
@drpepper3838
@drpepper3838 Год назад
@JUMAYUMMA Two accounts of the flag's origin connect it to the tricolour used by the Dutch Republic (the flag of the Netherlands).[1][2] The earliest mention of the flag occurs during the reign of Alexis I, in 1668, and is related to the construction of the first Russian naval ship, the frigate Oryol. According to one source, the ship's Dutch lead engineer Butler faced the need for the flag, and issued a request to the Boyar Duma, to "ask His Royal Majesty as to which (as is the custom among other nations) flag shall be raised on the ship". The official response merely indicated that, as such issue is as yet unprecedented, even though the land forces do use (apparently different) flags, the tsar ordered that his (Butler's) opinion be sought about the matter, asking specifically as to the custom existing in his country.[3]
@drpepper3838
@drpepper3838 Год назад
@@GreenRatel A different account traces the origins of the Russian flag to tsar Peter the Great's visits to Arkhangelsk in 1693 and 1694. Peter was keenly interested in shipbuilding in the European style, different from the barges ordinarily used in Russia at the time. In 1693, Peter had ordered a Dutch-built frigate from Amsterdam. In 1694 when it arrived, the Dutch red, white, and blue banner flew from its stern.[4] Peter decided to model Russia's naval flag after that banner by assigning meaning and reordering the colours.
@comradestalin9444
@comradestalin9444 Год назад
@@drpepper3838 I am Russian, and while he definitely took inspiration from you people it wasn’t made just on that. Peter The Great was fascinated by the west and wanted to reform Russia, but above all he was a proud and strong Russian nationalist
@drpepper3838
@drpepper3838 Год назад
@Comrade Stalin he implemented beard tax lol. Because in the west it was the norm that you were clean shaven
@deusexaethera
@deusexaethera Год назад
Germany also tried growing by one Belgium per year. It didn't end well for them either.
@KillerofWestoids
@KillerofWestoids Год назад
Germany was neutered and became an US puppet state.
@entropino9928
@entropino9928 Год назад
Second try with soft power ended quite well.
@cakapcakep241
@cakapcakep241 Год назад
Well, they do control Europe today together with France with their industry and economy. Both country are pretty much the Diodarchy of Euro.
@adityasinghjadoun6675
@adityasinghjadoun6675 Год назад
So did the Japanese empire haha
@SkyRiver1
@SkyRiver1 Год назад
More like one Belgium per month -- for a while anyway.
@umniareport7385
@umniareport7385 Год назад
I was shocked from childhood that the will of the government is felt by the Russian people like things like the weather or epidemics. Something random and by definition uncontrollable. This is especially true for outlying provinces. It is only among my generation of zoomers that interest in politics begins to awaken, while our parents implicitly believe everything they say on TV, without requiring any proof. What is the study of the issue if both the government and the front line feel like another planet?
@Unknown-fh6ge
@Unknown-fh6ge Год назад
Your parents were not born that way either, they were broken over the years. All protests were brutally put down. And it will be no different with you. You protest, the police beat you up, you protest again and get beaten up again. Until you eventually give in. People who are too dangerous will be arrested or sent directly to the front. Every generation believes at the beginning that they are different and can change something. Until the authoritarian Regieme or the dictatorship shows them their limits with violence. And puts them in their place, and so long until you are broken at some point and no resistance.
@umniareport7385
@umniareport7385 Год назад
@@Unknown-fh6ge Sadly, this is true. Mostly. In terms of mentality that has developed under such conditions, I am no exception. I am a weeaboo-homebody, my biggest rally in my life is a rally for the ecology of my small town, and my biggest protest is my plans to leave for Kazakhstan and wait for the better times. Most of my friends took part in the protests tho and everyone was even lucky not to be arrested or expelled from the university, but it’s kind of not to say that they drastically changed the situation in the world.
@zionistcat1807
@zionistcat1807 Год назад
Is any "civilized" country any different? As far as i know everybody silently accepts government decisions in EU, USA etc.
@dantisit
@dantisit Год назад
in the West, everyone believes in television...
@MrSergeRF
@MrSergeRF Год назад
I'm from Russia and I'm just shocked by this propaganda. Our history is not as politicized and one-sided as it is served to you, and we do not have such a lack of freedom here that you are talking about. This video is pure lies. How did democracy end in the Capitol in America? What happens if you throw a bottle at a policeman anywhere in the world? In Russia, you probably won't even be put in jail for such things. Of course, no one will pat on the head. But personally, I would like the ambulance to get there if my mother gets sick, and not run into a herd of students who decided to express their will to the government. At the same time, no one disperses rallies if they do not interfere with anyone. So don't teach us democracy.
@cosmopolitanbay9508
@cosmopolitanbay9508 Год назад
Why should Russia become a Western style democracy anyway ? The premise is entirely wrong.
@RedXlV
@RedXlV 5 месяцев назад
The better question is, why should Russia exist?
@mayakovske
@mayakovske 3 месяца назад
@@RedXlV Because such nation exists.
@RedXlV
@RedXlV 3 месяца назад
@@mayakovske Russia is an empire.
@oldencreek6587
@oldencreek6587 3 месяца назад
@@RedXlV Just like USA. 😄
@mayakovske
@mayakovske 3 месяца назад
@@RedXlV modern Russia? Oof
@deyanpetrov4447
@deyanpetrov4447 Год назад
The statement that democracy is determined by geography is silly. What about North vs South Korea or West vs East Germany during the Cold War. Or even Ukraine vs Russia currently. Neighbouring territories with vastly different systems. It's determined by causality like everything else. But just because things have led to something bad doesn't mean we should justify the bad thing or not try to change it.
@harshjain3122
@harshjain3122 Год назад
Like seeing Russia get democracy and dividing into 10 pieces? Then china trying to exert influence in 8 of those pieces, which would be worse off without the Russian centralised system? (Do you know how food and resources reach the far East corners of Russia?) Ya, no thanks mate. Change is possible, definitely. But not now, also, while trying to change the present and shape the future, the past will be there to make you remember why it's the way it is.
@Netbase2000
@Netbase2000 Год назад
You can't really compare these systems though. Well you can but it's no good one.
@acctsys
@acctsys Год назад
Tradition and culture created political incentives detrimental to the common man. Unless Russians learn to love liberty and grant others liberty, it will stay the same.
@dennisgichohi5392
@dennisgichohi5392 Год назад
It's not comparing systems.....it's that geography isn't a major factor
@tomblaise
@tomblaise Год назад
It’s easy to compare relatively small nations under the influence and pressure from a larger, wealthier and more powerful democracy. South Korea and West Germany were effectively puppet states of the United States, which ensured they developed governments in line with their overlords values. Russia is a country large and powerful enough to largely self determine, and developing your own institutions is always much more difficult than having them imposed on you by force.
@MiguelLopez-yc2rh
@MiguelLopez-yc2rh Год назад
I would add that Russia never subordinated its geopolitical interests to the ones of the US, which inevitably pushes him against the US and its allies more than encouraging their leaders to collaborate with them in mutual benefit. US still sees Russia as the main heir of the USSR so in order to keep their current hegemonic status, US will directly or indirectly try to avoid that Russia become again a strong political, economic and military power in international affairs . Even if Russia becomes a full democracy, US will never tolerate that Europe fell more under russian influence than under theirs and probably will support and finance nationalist movements inside russian territory in order to destabilize it from the inside.
@anathemebouffon5983
@anathemebouffon5983 Год назад
In South America, even if you flop on banana skin, it's probably US fault.
@Ozymandias1
@Ozymandias1 Год назад
​@@anathemebouffon5983 the US still follows the Monroe Doctrine. South America is theirs and every leader on the subcontinent who does not conform will be overthrown or that will at least be tried.
@anathemebouffon5983
@anathemebouffon5983 Год назад
@@Ozymandias1 yes and no. US meddled and meddle in South America for sure, but: 1. latinos use to blame everything bad that happen to them on US while lot's of bad stuff that happen to them comes from retarded ideas and even more retarded implementation 2. US is empire and empires opress people, but US as empire is quite chilled. viewing US as big bad baddie that strikes at everyone and destabilises everything while talking to someone, who lives in eastern Europe, close to Russia that used to genocide people in millions and makes everything that is possible to do it again is bad joke. when russians talk that "there's no such thing like ukrainian nationality and it has no right to exist" they iterally mean it.
@comradestalin9444
@comradestalin9444 Год назад
@@anathemebouffon5983 What he’s saying is right though, America has done it in Chechyna and has directly supported independence movements within Russia to make things worst
@timmyturner327
@timmyturner327 Год назад
@@comradestalin9444 If this is true, Putin funding Texas separist movements (lol) is just returning the favor.
@jaymata1218
@jaymata1218 Год назад
Can't wait for your coverage of BRICS
@ivankadagidze7074
@ivankadagidze7074 Год назад
Is there any way I could get a list of sources for this video?
@magnvss
@magnvss Год назад
This is also why the changed the proportion of shared taxes so that the regional administrations relied way more heavily on the federal government rather than controlling their fair share of the riches they produce: its a way of political control over the regions that even when incredibly productive as in what is exploited from their land, their locals see little of merely provide the workforce. This also explains why mainly Moscow and Saint Petersburg are pristine first-world looking cities while the rest of the country is a mess and sometimes incredibly decayed and poor: it's by design, like having a prisoner ill fed so he never gets strength or ideas to rebel. But on doing so, the country is also condemned to corruption and poverty, fearing that making people self sustainable would give them bad ideas, trying to concentrate on the state the distribution of money, etc. It's a huge jail where both the prisoners and the guards are trapped together and neither trust each other, the weak are fxxxx or killed and only the "strong men" can rule via intimidation.
@DamnSmoker
@DamnSmoker Год назад
well-put. the sad bit is that there's no light at the end of the tunnel for us in Russia. and boy does that thought hurt.
@DinushaIshan
@DinushaIshan Год назад
stability in russia is good than breaking russia apart because if you look at breakups of soviet and balkans there will be bloodbaths all around because most of these minorities dont like each other
@williewonka6694
@williewonka6694 Год назад
Basically, like a colonial empire, where the colonies are internal, yet ethnically different from Russians. The oblasts provide more to the Federal government than they receive, and contribute more cannon fodder than ethnic Russians.
@JaKingScomez
@JaKingScomez Год назад
So dramatic
@JaKingScomez
@JaKingScomez Год назад
Not even entirely true
@chickenbuttermasala8458
@chickenbuttermasala8458 Год назад
I do like your videos But if a country like India can make democracy work then so can Russia It's all about the will of the people and elites Democracy requires work
@harshjain3122
@harshjain3122 Год назад
Lmao mate. India is a democracy because of Hinduism. It promotes shit like cultural Sovereignty and diversity. That's why polycultural societies can sit down and form democracies. Does the Indian state assimilate muslims which have a different set of values directly taken from middle East? No it can't. Infact, 3 nations emerged out of British raj to get dEMocRaCy here(which btw, gets nothing done and we often get shitty administrations and a lot of bureaucracy) Does it harm the fabric of democracy all while making India look bad on the world stage? Yes. So no, modern India is a bad example.
@jerrybi8400
@jerrybi8400 Год назад
Democracy in big countries is a farce. The elites are the actual political decision-makers, Elections have little to no result in a society where the state is influenced and political parties lobbied by corporations. The US is the best example, India is not far away from that fate.
@UnknownUser-pf9rk
@UnknownUser-pf9rk Год назад
Not as long as they all hail the zar denying the effect of bad politics on their living standards.
@Ufthak
@Ufthak Год назад
Underrated comment. Democracy indeed requires A LOT of hard work from EVERYONE, and that’s exactly why so many, especially in the East, are comfortable within their authoritarian or totalitarian comfort zones, no matter how miserable they might be.
@greywolf7422
@greywolf7422 Год назад
More like western democracy has failed to adapt to russia, our democracy may be touted as libertarian, but it also has autocratic roots, as in monarchy and in the case of france, dictatorships, our democracy gives little in terms of communication between the highest offices and the lowest economic class, much like during the days of monarchy, it requires alot of trust, and effort on the part of the governing officials to find the pulse of the nation, among every region, state, city and borough. But as the present state of government officials indicates, its a system thats riddled with inefficiencies and flaws. With Russia having origins with even more autocratic, corrupt and incompetent influences, in the form of Muscovy, Novgorod, and their old masters the Golden Horde, there has never been any administrative social mechanism that generates any semblance of expected competence on the administrative side, and with the population having both a stake and trust in the governing institutions, this is why Lenins revolution failed its purpose. Hell lenin probably took the ideas used to supress minorities, and subconsciously just transferred that cultural influence onto what he perceived as the bourgeoisie, even his infamously described Kulaks. Therefore any democratic system would have to be developed with the cooperation of both the society and with the governing body being conscious of its own autocratic nature, and be able to apply reforms adequately, largely this has not been successful, with the old influences of the old Novogrodian Oligarchy plaguing Russia today. Maybe Russia could look in places like Iraq, where revolutionaries have taken a more decentralized approach to democracy, a system that is much older than our present democratic systems, with each village being able to set its own rules and customs, this however changed with the arrival of the British which forced an inefficient centralized system onto the population.
@ButthurtImmigrant
@ButthurtImmigrant Год назад
I love your intro music, please never ever change it!
@specialiseesi6746
@specialiseesi6746 Год назад
Fascinating! What a History lesson. Thanks a lot.
@mvajuru7620
@mvajuru7620 Год назад
That end line was brilliant writing. great work
@qefewfwdcwdc
@qefewfwdcwdc Год назад
one of his dmbest videos by far
@wadysawkostrzewski8557
@wadysawkostrzewski8557 Год назад
I would disagree with statement that lack of democracy is caused by geography. like ancient Greeks could include different minorieties or likewise ancient Rome while was Republic. there numerous examples of former similar to Russia entieties proof that you can create prosperious one
@UnholyWrath3277
@UnholyWrath3277 Год назад
Rome is a poor choice. The republic only worked while it was roughly contained to italy and small other areas. The moment it became to large to manage it stagnated leading to the triumverates and eventually that led to a centralized empire. A republic never couldve managed the problems of the mid to late roman empire. Greece as well even with minorities is less then 1/1000th the size of russia. Even rome at its height was less then half the size of russia. The only thing that would give a possible chance is modern communication technology but historically the U.S is the only republic thats worked at that size and its not like itll last indefinitely
@lm_b5080
@lm_b5080 Год назад
the USA is maybe a better option. its a massive country with varying interests & concerns. federalism works well to keep the American Empire in tact
@ivantrapic6209
@ivantrapic6209 Год назад
Both example were slave states with slave economy so don't be fooled by the name republic or origin of the word democracy. Wright to vote was just for ruling elites not the right for all above 18 years of age which is the case now. Geography is not excuse for not having democracy just your examples are not good.
@deyanpetrov4447
@deyanpetrov4447 Год назад
Exactly. What about North vs South Korea or West vs East Germany during the Cold War. Or even Ukraine vs Russia currently. Neighbouring territories with vastly different systems. The statement that democracy is caused by geography is silly.
@secrets.295
@secrets.295 Год назад
@@deyanpetrov4447 It is caused by geography. Rome and Greece is not a great example because only the ruling elite can vote. Not like today where millions can vote and millions can march on the streets. Rome also started to crumble once it got too big. Democracy doesn't work when there are too many different ethnicities in a country. Even America is crumbling. And I would argue America itself isn't totally democratic. It seems like these days, if you are white, especially if you are a white man, your voice doesn't matter. Just look at their politics today. It is scary
@markhorton8578
@markhorton8578 Год назад
An excellent summary analysis.
@zildjiandrummer1
@zildjiandrummer1 Год назад
very high quality as usual, every time I see a new video I click as fast as possible
@icreatedanaccountforthis1852
Geography may have a role to play, but I don't think it's as important as made out there. I think there's a lot to be said about the institutions and their corresponding institutional cultures that have successfully perpetuated themselves across different forms of government are a key determining factor to Russia's paucity of democracy.
@user-zk1rv2je2s
@user-zk1rv2je2s Год назад
I just want to say something from my side. I and a lot of people was raised up with respect of our complex history and elders always says respect every culture, every nation in our big country. We travel around the country to learn the history of minorities. Just respect people and don't be an asshole - main rule after all. It's a big shame that people interest in our culture was rised after certain events that I can't even talk about if I don't want to go to jail. Talk to people and be people. This is the only way for our planet to have something good.
@icreatedanaccountforthis1852
@@user-zk1rv2je2s Thank you so much for sharing this. I've always had a deep respect, interest, and admiration for Russia culture (well I guess it would be cultures) and history. I know there's a difference between what the people want and government does.
@DawnSkyStudios
@DawnSkyStudios Год назад
@@user-zk1rv2je2s greetings from Russia and peace ✌️
@user-zk1rv2je2s
@user-zk1rv2je2s Год назад
@@DawnSkyStudios thats right, my man!
@Vkusniashka1234
@Vkusniashka1234 Год назад
You are exaggerating, because in essence Russia is very homogeneous. Life in Rostov on the Don is no different from life in Vladivostok or Khabarovsk. There are virtually no dialects in the Russian language people from Krasnodar easily and with all the subtleties of the language will understand people from Petropavlovsk-Kamchatsky. Even the remotest regions of the country are linked by kinship ties. And as for the national minorities, they are extremely small. And in many national republics in Russia, the majority of citizens are Russians. So I think you are wrong, and democracy in Russia is possible, and if Russia takes this path, it will be a very influential player on the world stage.
@fedorku
@fedorku Год назад
I am from Russia, I live in Russia and I studied our history with all the regimes and emperors, I know a lot about our culture. And I state that this video is a collection of oversimplified one-sided arguments that was beautifully presented to prove an idea which has no theoretical value at all. Of cause country which history goes back to 9th century will be generous on historic examples of all kind of wars, emperors and regimes(same as The Roman Empire for example). Democracy in its various forms is possible everywhere, cause it is a concept, not a set of rules.
@onlywson
@onlywson Год назад
The main issue here is that many of the regions that belong to the Ruzzian Emp... i mean federation wants to leave. If they want to become autonomous why stop them? Its the same with Ukraine. Just dont impose your bullshit imperial mindset on people that wants liberty.
@forkeke
@forkeke Год назад
Yeah, I do not agree with this overgeneralized conclusion at all. But maybe in a softer version: there is no easy way for Russia towards democracy.
@menotfunnyclips8982
@menotfunnyclips8982 Год назад
lol impossible with different value ethnicity and different social value and social compast and geography like china and india what happen is like you asking civil war to erupt in russia it is impossible other hand etnic dont value women other value gays and spread social value to each other(your are bassicaly asking competition(bad thing about competition is in every competition always there is winner and loser(and every loser is always have right to manipulative)) between social value different etnic and different social view different way of life and different future)
@user-ym2ne1zg1b
@user-ym2ne1zg1b Год назад
@@onlywson how is the economical independence of Tatarstan or Yakutia feasible...for those very regions? Have you ever looked at their economical structure or just their geography?
@catadoxas
@catadoxas Год назад
sadly... caspian report has devolved from once being my fav youtube channel out there into largely such content. its kind of tragic
@nhennessy6434
@nhennessy6434 Год назад
Best argument ever for breaking it into a hundred pieces.
@MRRookie232
@MRRookie232 Год назад
Going by this logic, forming a one world government will never be feasible. Russia has many failings which have made democracy impossible, it’s not all down to geographic constraints. Examples include their economic model, lack of a strong middle class, and inability to create a national identity which goes beyond ethnic and religious lines. EDIT: great production and research as always
@davidmackie3497
@davidmackie3497 Год назад
Earth as a whole has a clear and defensible boundary. So that geography would favor a one-world government. :-D But, I agree with your other points.
@benismann
@benismann 4 месяца назад
>EDIT: great production and research as always why did u add that
@sechernbiw3321
@sechernbiw3321 Год назад
I think an additional cause is the severe trauma of subjection of the Rus states to the Golden Horde, Muscovy's survival as a powerful vassal because of its status as the Golden Horde's unwaveringly loyal favorite vassal and tax enforcer among the Rus states, which is what allowed it to absorb the other Rus states, and the integration of the Muscovite and Russian nobility with the nobility of the Golden Horde both before and after Muscovy freed itself from the Golden Horde's domination. Under these circumstances, it was almost inevitable that Muscovy would be autocratic, that it would be obsessed with achieving invincibility through expansion and empire, and that it would quickly turn to overwhelming force in response to the slightest resistance from surrounding peoples, following the Mongol model of empire that Muscovy had the most direct experience and understanding of, and which Muscovy had in fact already been actively participating in successfully enforcing against the rest of the Rus since the 1200s.
@HigherMorality
@HigherMorality Год назад
There was never integration of any "nobility" (savage tribal chieftains). Russian royals never intermixing with any primitive mongoloid nomadic savages. But this would be too disgusting to imagine to a Russian person on any level of the social hierarchy. The Muscovite model of imperialism has nothing to do with any stone age savages who never even had a administration, concept of statehood or even a basic language or a numerical system. What the hell are you writing?
@sechernbiw3321
@sechernbiw3321 Год назад
​@@HigherMorality Unfortunately your statement is *very* badly informed. In the first place the Golden Horde were not remotely "stone age savages who never even had a administration, concept of statehood or even a basic language or a numerical system." To begin with, the Golden Horde were not only extremely firmly in the iron age, but operated siege engines which required skill in geometry, precise force calculations and skill in engineering, minted their own coins which were imprinted with writing sometimes in multiple languages and scripts, and were among the most technologically advanced empires on the face of the planet at the time (1242-1466). This was an empire which very much had a language and a writing system (their own, which they invented the script for, still used in Mongolia today), a formal administration, published extensive written decrees and diplomatic correspondence as well as comprehensive, systematic and high-quality written history documents, had vast walled cities such as Sarai and Sarai Berqe (a city with a prosperous population of 600,000), with wide, well organized streets, vast libraries and gigantic markets, a very clear concept of statehood, not only had a numerical system but in fact conducted periodic censuses of the whole population not only of their own territory but also of all of the territory of their vassals, and based their (formalized and consistent) taxation rates on the populations recorded in the censuses. In fact, Muscovy adopted the Golden Horde's taxation system and continued to collect in the same way after the end of their domination by the Golden Horde. Even the Russian word for money, Деньги, among many others, is of Golden Horde origin. The Russian postal service was based on the Golden Horde model, as well as the Russian laws concerning Church immunity from taxation, so much so that translated Mongol documents were still being directly used by men of the Church in the 1600s as a model of how they and the Church should be treated by the Russian state. This was an empire with an extremely competent and well-ordered army numbering in the hundreds of thousands which was able to execute simultaneous coordinated attacks hundreds of kilometers apart, as part of a single written war strategy decided by a central administration and coordinated using by far the fastest and most professionalized postal service that had ever existed in history up to that point. Basically, nothing you say about the Golden Horde is even remotely accurate. You seem to be describing a stone age tribe of parts of what are now the Russian Far East or the Siberian Federal District and such groups indeed existed and were conquered by Russia without being incorporated into the nobility in any way, but the Golden Horde has nothing to do with these groups, and the Golden Horde was indeed incorporated into the Russian nobility and royalty. Yury of Moscow married princess Konchaka an ethnic Mongol princess of the Golden Horde and sister of Uzbeg Khan. Gleb Vasil'kovich, prince of Beloozero and briefly of Rostov, also married a princess of the Golden Horde named Feodora Sartakovna, daughter of Sartak Khan and granddaughter of Batu Khan. This was all before the end of the Mongol yoke, and is not only extremely well documented, but was not even considered controversial at the time within the Rus states, since the Golden Horde was fine during this period with these princesses converting to Orthodox Christianity as part of a marriage alliance. After 1313 this did partially change due to the Golden Horde converting to Islam, but non-muslim nobility and royalty within the Horde could still become Orthodox Christians in the right circumstances if they had previously followed Shamanism or Buddhism, and some did. Likewise, after the end of the Golden Horde's domination of the Rus, the nobility and royalty of the Golden Horde did indeed continue to assimilate into the Muscovite aristocracy. They did so by converting to Orthodox Christianity, taking Russian names, marrying Russian aristocracy, entering into service to grand princes and culturally assimilating. Despite their assimilation, these nobles continued to openly and proudly claim Mongol descent. Among these nobles were the princes of Ryazan and the Gudonov, Saburov, Zernov and Veliaminov noble clans who all claimed descent from the Golden Horde prince Zachary Chet, an Orthodox Mongol prince whose descendants include Tsaritsa Irina Godunova (wife of Tsar Feodor I Ivanovitch, who reigned 1584-1598), Tsar Boris Godunov (reigned 1598-1605), and Saint Solomonia Saburova, wife of Grand Prince of Moscow Vasili III (reigned 1505-1533).
@HigherMorality
@HigherMorality Год назад
@@sechernbiw3321 Listen, every single wrote you just wrote is contradicted by both historical sources and archaeological findings (or a lack thereof). No authentic historical Russian chronicle even mentions the word "mongol" until the 18th century. There was never any empire that was built by unintelligent nomadic tribal savages that just magically disappeared without anything leaving behind. There aren't even any mongoloid skeletal remains anywhere near Russia/eastern Europe. Not a single noble/royal claimed to be descendant of mongoloid savages. Again, you are clearly getting this pseudohistorical garbage from wikipedia or some equally useless source that's completely contradicted by both authentic historical sources and archaeology. This is why there isn't a single portrait of any Russian aristocrats looking anything other than 100% pure white people. DNA tests conducted on both descendants of aristocratic families and regular Russian alike both show that there isn't even a microscopic drop of any mongoloid genetic contamination. The mongolians never had any written language or a numerical system. This is why they use the Russian alphabet and everything in mongolia that is resemblant of a civilization/functional state was brought over by Russians. As a matter of fact, even though Russian people encountered many savage tribes during expeditions/conquests, the Russian people who encountered mongolians were shocked by their level of primitiveness. The mongolians were had a lower level of societal development even compared to pygmies. Lastly, the word "dengi" is entirely Indo-European. For example, Tanga (Tajik), Dangi (Old Persian), etc. The mongolians themselves never had the word "dengi" in any of their dialects. Again, there isn't a single mongolian loanword in the Russian language and even the ethnonym "mongol" doesn't appear in any written works until the 18th century. Go search up what I'm telling you here and you will see for yourself.
@RobBCactive
@RobBCactive Год назад
At least someone noticed the submission to the Mongols is what formed the brutal personalised authoritarianism, creating a cycle of chaos, rebirth, repression and collapse. It was 1480 when Muskovy achieved independence. Note the Mongols apparently understood soft power while later in this silly video "grass" is blamed for a complete inability to do diplomacy. The fundamental flaw is assuming the conclusion in the premise, then ignoring technological changes from steppe horsemen. It even points out Russia has never seriously tried rule of law and democracy. Gorbachev's USSR was already collapsing and Yeltsin was too weak to deal with corruption and asset stripping for personal gain by Yeltsin, KGB and others with access to hard currency was simply a more lucrative version of the party boss favour system under communism.
@HigherMorality
@HigherMorality Год назад
Absolute BOZOS. One should really not write about historical subjects when you have a developmental disability.
@alexeykir4055
@alexeykir4055 Год назад
She was rich not only in fur. Wax, hemp, linen, cloth are also the main types of goods for export to Europe. According to some of them, the Russian state was a monopoly.
@greywolf7577
@greywolf7577 Год назад
These days, Russia is sometimes described as a gas station that has territory.
@CrawfordDSmith
@CrawfordDSmith Год назад
Thank you for your presentation , I watched all of it .
@AronAroniteOnlineTV
@AronAroniteOnlineTV Год назад
Ok we would like to know why America or Europe is yet to have any democracy next.
@davebowman9000
@davebowman9000 Год назад
As ever, your ending phrases are a work of beauty in themselves
@qefewfwdcwdc
@qefewfwdcwdc Год назад
one of his dmbest videos by far
@victornderu143
@victornderu143 Год назад
I see DRC Congo being defined by it's large geography and has more than 200 ethnic groups in the same way. Without wealth or force, the country has remained divided and run by war lord's controlling small sections of the large county.
@lm_b5080
@lm_b5080 Год назад
have you read Dancing in the glory of monsters? Really put the DRC into perspective for me
@victornderu143
@victornderu143 Год назад
@@lm_b5080 I will be looking for that one.
@lindokuhlehlatshwayo9215
@lindokuhlehlatshwayo9215 Год назад
Chinese system of governance would work perfectly for DRC
@David-bh5le
@David-bh5le Год назад
Do not forget the horrors of the 90s and shock therapy. Referring to the era as democratic is incorrect.
@furryfinance1580
@furryfinance1580 Год назад
When your youTube recommendations were disappointing you so you decide to search for CaspianReport and find out he uploaded yet another high-quality video just one minute ago!
@majuscule8883
@majuscule8883 Год назад
That's because RU-vid didn't like some of his analysis, he is from Azerbaijan, same for Al-Jazeera, they delete your subscription because some of the position they have and they are from an Arab country, Qatar. I had a hard time searching Caspian report after losing my subscription. Some subscriptions disappear while others stay. CNN is never gone,same for Disney and bbc6.
@scifitoilet
@scifitoilet Год назад
the history element of the vid was nice, but this assertion is bold and dubious. The United States and Canada are also very large with many ethnic groups who operate essentially autonomously. If you look at the history of the US and Canada, it is rooted in a monarchy of England and colonialism that was enforced with violence. Yet... somehow the US and Canada made it work. I dont see why the reasons presented disqualify Russia from becoming a democracy in the future.
@HeadsFullOfEyeballs
@HeadsFullOfEyeballs Год назад
The big difference is that the US and Canada aren't bordered by resentful-to-hostile neighbours. Their historical security concerns are completely different from Russia's. They didn't need to keep a tight grip on their remotest regions at all times because what were those regions going to do, drop into the sea?
@feydrautha2644
@feydrautha2644 Год назад
He is iranian he loves ruzzia 🤣
@daveandersson126
@daveandersson126 Год назад
@@HeadsFullOfEyeballs oh, we WERE bordered by hostile neighbors (here in the US). Canada invaded us once or twice way back when And we ourselves attacked, conquered, and annexed big chunks of Mexico way back when Massive Asian empires vis a vis the Mongols or Ottomans though? Not so much. Logistics worked in our favor there But our histories are steeped in war and bloodshed too If I had to hazard a guess, I'd say our newness and isolation from Eurasia made it easier for us to settle down after the fights, and realize sooner rather than later the value of cooperation to meet needs and goals Now my Canadian friends complain they basically live in America but with better healthcare Seems when a place has a population that can trace back roots many thousands of years, the more entrenched the disagreements get
@harshjain3122
@harshjain3122 Год назад
@@daveandersson126 you are surrounded by ocean on both sides and weak arse neighbours which were taken care of during the inception of ur state itself. The US is an exception and a very recent occurrence with a history of just 200~ years. Also, you choose who can immigrate into your nation today. That's the talent drain for other countries while illegal immigrants from southern america are an 'issue' in America, all while black neighbourhood* still are acutely poor and deep in drugs and debt(it's not the fault of the American state here tho) so I don't believe it's a great example. What I do believe is, cultures which are compatible and polycultural, having a similar set of values can definitely work together in democracy and make it work better than authoritarian nations infact. Also, it takes a specific set of values for democracy to work anywhere in the first place. No, you can't democratise most of middle east when their mentality itself is inclined towards a despotic regime. What you mentioned can work in places like EU(albeit with problems, but it's the best example) and a collective East Asia with Japan, korea, Taiwan working together(given they can let go of their historical bitter feelings) Edit: Spelling mistakes
@Bagginsess
@Bagginsess Год назад
@@harshjain3122 first off America is a republic not a democracy. Second America, Canada, and Mexico all had incredibly violent births, simply reading history on the wars between the natives, themselves, and their colonial parents will show they were all quite brutal. America has weak enemies because America crushed its nearby enemies long ago and then through innovative industry and science became the world's strongest country.
@merrymac3785
@merrymac3785 Год назад
Really helpful video. Well done.
@chaosXP3RT
@chaosXP3RT Год назад
I'm not saying by any means that the USA, UK, Canada and Australia are perfect, but I think a truly federal democracy is the way to go for Russia. I don't have the time to spell it all out since I was watching this before work, but the biggest concern for Russia with a federal democracy is to be less ethnic-central. Some countries like Indonesia are even building a new capital so that it is physically more central to everyone in the country. Russia building a new capital near the Urals, or Caspian Sea might be a good idea, while all it's autonomous regions, federal cities, oblasts, etc. are reorganized into a more appropriate federation of states, like the USA, Canada, UK or Australia. I know this can be scary since the last sovereign federation was the USSR, which fell apart largely on ethnic lines, but I believe the strength of Federal Democracies isn't just common history and language, but also recognition that smaller parts together are stronger together. Russia would also hugely benefit from connecting and developing it's interior. Russia has so many natural resources and so much land, that it should be largely self-sufficient at least in basic needs. Yet I'm have, at least, seen articles now of Russia asking for train parts, vehicle parts and critical infrastructure parts from India. It won't be easy, and by no means should it copy the West exactly, but if Russia has the chance, I think it should take the chance to form a better Federation and true Democracy.
@e.s.6275
@e.s.6275 Год назад
Very naive.
@camelofsiberia962
@camelofsiberia962 Год назад
very nice take I agree
@pedrob3953
@pedrob3953 Год назад
Political systems are the product of the evolution of societies through history. They're not picked off a supermarket shelf.
@ljuc
@ljuc Год назад
Federal democracy should be the only acceptable democracy. Anything else is dog sh*t.
@joriankell1983
@joriankell1983 Год назад
True democracy is two wolves and a sheep voting on what's for dinner.
@AG-ig8uf
@AG-ig8uf Год назад
Quite a few historical errors. Unification of Russian principalities wasn't peaceful. Moscow conducted very brutal wars against Vlodimir and Novgorod and Ugoric tribes. It also got token of ruler of rus lands and military assistance from Golden Horde, whose rulers fatally thought it would be easier to collect taxes and control the vast area through single Moscow principality. Ironically, Moscow Czars got their initial legitimization from Golden Horde Khan.
@HigherMorality
@HigherMorality Год назад
Moscow Czars didn't need to get legitimacy to rule from any stone age tribal confederations that were on the level of wild chimpanzees. The myths about the so called "golden horde" have been long since refuted. No authentic historical chronicles even mention it until the mid 16th century. However, it this tribal entity was mentioned, it was described as nothing but savage and entirely irrelevant to the far superior Russian kingdoms.
@Ozymandias1
@Ozymandias1 Год назад
Everything was settled by wars in those days there was not much diplomacy going on.
@comradestalin9444
@comradestalin9444 Год назад
What you are saying is nonsense, we didn’t get a Czar till very very later on. We also threw the Mongolian yoke off ourselves, with our own Princes unless you’ve forgotten
@user-jq4ej7pf9o
@user-jq4ej7pf9o Год назад
> Moscow Czars got their initial legitimisation from Golden Hord Yeah, BEFORE the independence
@valkyrie9553
@valkyrie9553 Год назад
Mongol Khans legitimise Russian tsar? In your wet dreams! Russia was an orthodox Christian country from the 9th century and took over term “tsar” or Caesar from the Byzantium - shortly after Constantinople (Byzantium) fell to the Ottomans.
@mcanderson0
@mcanderson0 Год назад
man you are really good at dropping an incredibly insightful, applicable comment/proverb/statement at the end of each essay. Some are well known, but many are very unique and clever! Always great content, buddy! Cheers from Texas.
@benismann
@benismann 4 месяца назад
Quite a shitty insight that assumes geography to be very deterministic. And sure, it was, but with advancements in technologies (i'll just say planes exist now) it becomes less and less of an obstacle to anything
@hikikomori8150
@hikikomori8150 Год назад
Entertaining, please do a vid why US cant be/become democracy. Thank you
@sommmeguy
@sommmeguy Год назад
You might be interested in looking at Canada or Australia. Canada is vast with mountains and rugged geography. Canada was formed by two separate nations and is ethnically diverse. It supplanted an Indigenous population. In addition, it is neighbours with USA (once threatened to be taken over by US). Australia is a continent with a desert in the middle! Also a nation of immigrants with an indigenous population. If these place can be a democracy, so can Russia. History is about choices.
@ryancappo
@ryancappo Год назад
It would be interesting to see if wiping out or taking over the land of the indigenous population is required for Democracy then. I never knew there were non-white Russians until a few years ago, or that the USSR didn't wipe out any non-Russian language being spoken or taught.
@prashanthb6521
@prashanthb6521 Год назад
This piece is among the best in all of Caspian Report, and I have watched them all.
@CPTE5069
@CPTE5069 Год назад
While geographic determinism can play a role in explaining the past and present, It is also important to examine how social and political systems evolve in a nation like russia
@AL-lh2ht
@AL-lh2ht Год назад
Good example is with south america.
@Yuri77711
@Yuri77711 Год назад
Or in case of russia how they didn't. Democracy will never work in russia precicely because it's already a democracy, just not in a sense we think. Majority of russians want to be lead by a strongman because historically they never knew better and they want to humiliate their neigbours because historically their own existence was/is humiliating. A western democrat leader will be rejected by russian society for being too alien.
@GospodinJean
@GospodinJean Год назад
And switzerland
@HGWaze
@HGWaze Год назад
This video argues for geographic determinism, but it draws just as much from historical contingency and culture as it does from geography.
@The_Crazy_Monkey75
@The_Crazy_Monkey75 Год назад
Great video! Very good assessment...
@131alexa
@131alexa Год назад
5:33 Moving the chess pieces: very appropriate
@465maltbie
@465maltbie Год назад
Thank you, hard to put so much history in a short time but I think you did it well. Charles
@qefewfwdcwdc
@qefewfwdcwdc Год назад
one of his dmbest videos by far
@desmantiss
@desmantiss Год назад
nope, they started from Horde time. But they lost somewhere 800 years of history behind :D
@danielrivera9788
@danielrivera9788 Год назад
Wow… I had no idea… What a journey through the centuries. Thank you for this video. I love the classical background music haha
@5folhas
@5folhas 11 месяцев назад
Just checking, but did you do a partnership with the channel Dois Níveis so they could translate this video of yours?
@randyflores2489
@randyflores2489 Год назад
dude your content is beautifully obsessive lol. the way you explain situations is really informative, the graphics are frikkin awesome, and you always put the cherry on top with your final sentence. every video, a cool final sentence. please, keep these vids coming!
@qefewfwdcwdc
@qefewfwdcwdc Год назад
one of his dmbest videos by far
@nwahally
@nwahally Год назад
Geodeterminism is a hell of a drug. Often I find your input reasonable or at least a point of view worth having heard. The historical perspective is fine. The conclusions you are drawing from that into the contemporary era, is pretty much indefensible. The vast majority of relevant historians, political scientists and geographers alike will throw this out with contempt. Sorry, CR. Not a passing grade on this one.
@user-fg8ux8zo6w
@user-fg8ux8zo6w Год назад
"the shape of the Russian skull leaves no capacity for democracy" - Shirvan
@user-ym2ne1zg1b
@user-ym2ne1zg1b Год назад
finally...a good comment.
@DanielSantos-pg4sg
@DanielSantos-pg4sg Год назад
Totally true. Geography is only 'unforgiving' so far. I would say culture and scale would matter as much or more to a democracy being possible or not. The argument that democracy is not an effective form of government in a given context can really be used at any scale of government, and has been used in a wide variety of situations. It is also the main argument within far right / radical parties in western countries that want to change parliamentary regimes into presidential ones, and we know very well what is their final goal. You either have values that you wish to enforce, that you want to build upon collectively, or you don't. Putin doesn't, as a dictator, so Russia doesn't as a county. For now at least.
@quandmeme9970
@quandmeme9970 Год назад
This is why it will collapse to 20 or more republics. Ethnic Russians will have their own european size country with 50 mln inhibitants. The end of imperialism and no more threat to East and Central Europe.
@elephantman2112
@elephantman2112 Год назад
The geography is relevant. But there wasn't nearly enough here on foreign interference, which seems to be one of Moscow's main concerns.
@AynenMakino
@AynenMakino Год назад
"The right to be your own oppressor", that's a beautiful line!
@MatoVuc
@MatoVuc Год назад
It more than some people get. Ask any half way intelligent person in Eastern Europe if they feel like their government listens more to them or to "Western partners" and then watch their demoralised blank stare.
@paul1979uk2000
@paul1979uk2000 Год назад
I always get the impression that the country is too big and too centralized in why democracy doesn't work there but democracy is proven to deliver good living standards by listening to the people. I think Russia would need to devolve more powers to the regional governments in the country if they want things to really get better, that seems unlikely under the current government, the alternative is that Russia breaks up into smaller countries, that's a possibility, especially when you look at the standard of living in Russia, it's quite poor, most of which is centred around Moscow and St Petersburg where the quality drops off a lot in other regions, then when you take into account the oil, gas, coal and other natural resources Russia uses to prop up the economy, Russia's economy is doing really poor, even before the war started, after all, with that kind of natural resources, Russia should be doing better and it begs the question of how much worse Russia would be if no one wants its resources. So Putin likes to think Russia is doing well, truth is, most countries would love to have the natural resources that Russia has and in better hands, the economy would be doing a lot better and being as Putin been in power for 2 decades, it's clear he's done a poor job and this is all before the war in Ukraine even started, now it's much worse for Russia. In any case, democracy can work on any size country, but the government at the top needs to give enough powers to the lower governments, a bit like how the EU does with its members or how the US does with its states, if you try and centralize too much power, performance on the economy is usually worse, it also means more mistakes can happen as we're seeing in China with it's zero Covid policy.
@republica7337
@republica7337 Год назад
Paul, I disagree. Sputin has done amazingly well for himself and his entourage. On a serious note, democracy has never been given a chance to flourish in Russia. It's geographic hugeness should not be a hindrance. Representative government of some form. Why does India with it's population succeed as a democracy? Why can't China? Why can't Russia!
@qqqq-rc1dk
@qqqq-rc1dk Год назад
only for some reason the poorest countries are precisely democratic like Burundi. Those who do not live on the periphery of the world economy live well, and in the 90s it became clear what place the United States, the beneficiary of the world economy, wants to give to Russia (in democratic Russia, the standard of living would be on a par with the Balts, i.e. poor, and Russia will be robbed by more "democratic" states
@krishthakar6661
@krishthakar6661 7 месяцев назад
@@republica7337 As an Indian i must say we have the same democracy as Russians do , its just Insanely corrupt yeah President or PM doesnt have insane powers but its Cr@p system. We would've reached heights that china reached if our government focused on important field. Unlike Russia who focused on Military if not economy , India hasn't focused on anything not even Manufacturing ! Democracy means nothing its bs , China shows it kind of has better standards of living but common people are still poor {at least above poverty line} Only thing that seems real to me , THE TRUTH its all about Geography and Economy , and Indian Geography is bad for resources but good for civilisation
@user-rl8hf8kt1r
@user-rl8hf8kt1r 6 месяцев назад
​@@republica7337 India is very oppressive of minorities just like China in the Kashmir regions etc..,.and India despite its huge human and natural resources and great location is a very poor country with poor Living standards compared to China or Russia
@arbendit4348
@arbendit4348 6 месяцев назад
Putin has completely revitalized Russia from a post Soviet failed state into a global power once again. You say Russia is poorer than the west but it has been since before Putin came to power. So your argument seems to hold little water in reality. When we look at what he has done for the country we see that Russia is in reality doing very well compared to it's pre-Putin starting position.
@darrylcheeseman6849
@darrylcheeseman6849 Год назад
Like Loki said, “you were born to be ruled”. It’s sad, but it reflects the history of Russia.
@definitelydaniel69420
@definitelydaniel69420 Год назад
Doesn't have to be the future though
@johnssmith4005
@johnssmith4005 Год назад
Its true some people are way better under command than them making the rules
@fmilan1
@fmilan1 Год назад
I have a challenge for you: as a Brazilian, explain to me, how the Brazilian geography defines its state and culture. I will evaluate your answer based on my knowledge of the country.
@jimmyjones8676
@jimmyjones8676 Год назад
Was it's suitability for plantations pretty much the defining feature for the first few centuries of the country?
@fmilan1
@fmilan1 Год назад
@@jimmyjones8676 It depends, on the north yes. On the south no.
@happyelephant5384
@happyelephant5384 Год назад
Look, your geography changes! While you were dictatorship, your geography was inappropriate for democracy, then your geography became democracy-friendly and you have become democracy!
@ianlinares333
@ianlinares333 Год назад
@@jimmyjones8676 non-navegable rivers, hills separating the coast and innerland, no strong neighbors, and excessive amount of land per capta
@DanielMorenoTV
@DanielMorenoTV Год назад
Ok boomer, hope he gets a C plus on your exam lmao
@dragonfly4441
@dragonfly4441 Год назад
Special thanks to War Thunder, World of Tanks, Square Space, Raid: Shadow Legends, Audible, Manscaped, Brilliant and many, many different VPNs for sponsoring our continued education. I'm not even being sarcastic. So many youtube videoes are sponsored by less than a dozen sponsors.
@ferminromero2602
@ferminromero2602 Год назад
Accurate and true. Excellent video for education and analysis!
@belizarius_997
@belizarius_997 Год назад
Best geopolitical channel on YT. Thank you very much for your excellent insights and quality content!
@hristijankjosevski
@hristijankjosevski Год назад
You can also try Zeihan on Geopolitics
@peternguyen7207
@peternguyen7207 Год назад
Minus the fact that he hates Armenians and supports the Armenian Genocide because he's a turk
@shishlinsv
@shishlinsv Год назад
But geopolitics is pseudoscience. Is it a compliment or sarcasm? I don't get it🤔
@qefewfwdcwdc
@qefewfwdcwdc Год назад
one of his dmbest videos by far
@eurobonapartiste
@eurobonapartiste Год назад
Shirvan you never let us down. Thank you for your great work.
@qefewfwdcwdc
@qefewfwdcwdc Год назад
one of his dmbest videos by far
@eurobonapartiste
@eurobonapartiste Год назад
​@@qefewfwdcwdc Well you can disagree with his analysis, but you would have at least to make the argument for your case. Just saying it is dumb without giving any reasons why you think that doesn't provide anything to the debate and is intellectually lazy. But I guess your account name speaks for itself.
@stassalo8157
@stassalo8157 Год назад
Well done. Good maps. Simple but correct
@Nn-3
@Nn-3 Год назад
Geography and minority cultures have little to do with authoritarianism. Indonesia, Canada, the US, Australia, and India are all counterexamples to this. It also doesn't help when you consider authoritarianism in smaller, more homogenous countries.
@Godzillamonstrosity
@Godzillamonstrosity Год назад
Also depends on how you define authoritarianism lol. Very strange to see people throw around vague terms like "authoritarianism" and "liberty", "democracy", "freedom" etc as if they all have uniform meanings. Yes there are journalists and political activists routinely dead or imprisoned in Russia but you could say the same thing about India or Indonesia or Sri Lanka or Philippines or even Colombia. Does this mean that India, Indonesia, Philippines, Colombia are not democracies? Yes, the army was sent in to forcibly keep Chechnya from seceding but you could say the exact same thing about Punjab, Mizoram, Assam, Nagaland, Kashmir (India), West Papua and Aceh (Indonesia), Southern Philippines (Philippines) and many other democratic countries in the world like Northern Ireland (UK), the Basque majority parts of Northern Spain, North and East Sri Lanka etc
@Godzillamonstrosity
@Godzillamonstrosity Год назад
@@Nn-3 As I said, assassinations of political opposition leaders and journalists happened well before Putin even came to power and even under Yeltsin. This is also not unique at all to Russia. Even in Ukraine, many journalists and political activists get assassinated all the time. So is Ukraine not a democracy. The Philippines and Colombia are generally seemed to be some of the most dangerous places to operate as a journalist or activist as so many of them have been imprisoned or assassinated. So is the Philippines and Colombia no longer democracies too? And annexing territory has nothing to do with democracy or authoritarianism. Israel has annexed the East Jerusalem in 1980, Golan Heights, and considered annexing parts of the West Bank in 2020 as well. So is Israel not a democracy? And what is so wrong about bringing teachers in lol? And there have also been laws in many Eastern European countries banning protests in support of the war. So is Latvia, Slovakia, Czechia now authoritarian too? There is no clear definition as to what makes a country democratic or authoritarian.
@MikelosM
@MikelosM Год назад
The US obviously has never been perfect in truly honoring the concept of "one person, one vote" and "all are created equal", *but my god* : if there's any nation on the face of the planet that has for generations been comprised of more people, cultures, languages and religions meshing together and forming a "melting pot" (or "a salad", depending on how you look at it and/or what terms you prefer), then I'd love to hear it. And this is the country that made representative democracy the modern-day norm! The end of European colonialism resulted in drawing random lines throughout former colonies in Africa and the Middle East that shoved varying cultures together without a means to unite them and basically said "you're on your own". Shortly afterward - observing what transpired elsewhere - other "experiments" (especially in Europe) did the opposite: carving up tiny swathes of territory to balkanize groups in order to prevent tensions in the hopes that not providing and sustaining a unifying purpose would be a non-issue. Neither worked! The reality is that *it is possible* to create a representative democracy in a nation-state like Russia, but it does require a strong unifying national identity and purpose. The notion that it has to be outright authoritarianism and centralized brutality, however, is nothing more than a myth and a cop-out. If one were to argue that any single region of the US had anything in common with any other prior to a generation ago, they would more or less show themselves to be completely ignorant of the nation's history - and yet its identity, culture, economy and government endured! Russia went through a decade of economic change (i.e. turmoil) that happened to coincide with a complete change of government style, and a lot of people drew the conclusion that they were connected. Had Russia opened its markets under typical Soviet rule, it would have suffered the same pain. Had Russia became truly democratic without opening its markets to the world, the status quo from an economic standpoint would have likely continued regardless. People who hate on the Russia of the 1990s fail to realize that it was two simultaneous but independent changes that caused maximum chaos to the nation, resulting in many people being willing to accept a historically-status quo government after a few years.
@Godzillamonstrosity
@Godzillamonstrosity Год назад
@@MikelosM Firstly, Russia even in the 1990s was barely democratic. It was an oligarchy that sold off it's publicly owned enterprises to oligarchs. If you think shelling your own Parliament using troops and the President dissolving the Parliament after the President gets impeached by the Parliament is very democratic, then Russia was very democratic during the 1990s. The 90s was just a horrible period for Russia from every possible angle imaginable - major economic turmoil due to the free market shock therapy, extreme political instability, skyrocketing crime and poverty rates, shrinking middle class, sharp reduction of life expectancy. I agree with you that Russia can easily be a democracy within its existing borders. I don't know what this host is even talking about.
@zeronim1965
@zeronim1965 Год назад
@@Godzillamonstrosity "So is Ukraine not a democracy." Goverment of USA said yes, so yes Ukraine is a democracy... And doing everything for american democracy.
@cz1589
@cz1589 Год назад
A break-up was not inevitable, but now it seems irreversible. As someone said: the state can not survive without the people. We can only hope that the people will survive without the state. I expect at least four different nations to emerge from this collapsing empire.
@basedtrucker
@basedtrucker Год назад
yes because russia is totally collapsing much like they shot a missile into poland, Russia as a state and people are known to struggle for their pride something the west has become incapable of doing. id wager america will bulkanize before russia collapses.
@tellyboy17
@tellyboy17 Год назад
It's a real people's prison, I'm sure many of those peoples are desperate to get out of the misery of being part of the Russian empire.
@Skotobazina-Dota2
@Skotobazina-Dota2 Год назад
Hello, are you from Russia ?
@daniellarson3068
@daniellarson3068 Год назад
@@tellyboy17 It's all they know. They have been told that what they have is good. Sometimes, you have to know something else to want to change.
@Skotobazina-Dota2
@Skotobazina-Dota2 Год назад
@@tellyboy17 get out and what next ? Be a small piece of land with no money, medicine and other social goods, army and nuclear shield and have high potential of absorbing by nearby countries ? "I am sure" - it is interesting to read comments of people who have a little clue in some fields and they still make statements, like they undetstand anything
@rafiqjennings5262
@rafiqjennings5262 Год назад
Can Azerbaijan become a democracy? Can Ukraine become a democracy? I looked at the Democracy Index 2021 report from EIU - and neither your country of Azerbaijan nor Ukraine are a democracy. Ukraine ranks #86 as a “Hybrid Regime”. Azerbaijan ranks #141 as “Authoritarian” - which is 17 points below Russia, which ranks #124 as “Authoritarian” too. I know it would be risky for you to do the same analysis of Azerbaijan (but not for Ukraine, only with a possible risk of censorship - which is not a democratic thing to do). And also, I know it’s trendy to bash Russia as this evil dictatorship. However, with your country’s democracy rating, you are “throwing stones from a glass house”.
@MrSeekerOfPeace
@MrSeekerOfPeace Год назад
Ukrainians are pretty ill informed with massive amounts of western propaganda.
@wallachia4797
@wallachia4797 Год назад
Shirvan never praised Azerbaijan though, nor did he say that being a dictatorship is bad.
@valkyrie9553
@valkyrie9553 Год назад
Exactly. What does democracy mean in this sense? Being subservient to americas? Then no, of course you shouldn’t expect Russia to be “democratic” any time soon.
@isyraf9989
@isyraf9989 Год назад
rus states aka eastern slavics countries were not democratic
@nicolasconsuegra9114
@nicolasconsuegra9114 Год назад
Does anybody know the name of the ending music?
@coldlogik9159
@coldlogik9159 Год назад
While there was a certain effort made to link Russia's territory to its political instability, it doesn't make a lot of sense. Firstly, there are some countries in the world that are encompassing different ethnic groups that do not have the problem of separatism nor dictatorship. Germany (at this point in time) is a prime example - it is a federal republic, and Germans themselves often joke about their federal states being whole other countries. And I'm not counting the US as a second example, since, well, the indigenous people there were genocided - since the US is a "melting pot" for multiple cultures, I'm regarding the vast majority of their people as belonging to the same ethnicity. Secondly, the video strongly suggests that the various instruments of the Russian political power were needed to keep the various republics, territories etc. from splitting up, forming their own governments which could then be democratic. I disagree with that. There's a lot of culture surrounding cowboys and indians fighting, but there is no pendant to it in Russian history. I would love to have heard more about the oppression of minorities that was mentioned briefly in this video, but the lack of detail leads me to believe there isn't a lot to these mentions. The deportations were a measure to provide an economic push to those regions, and if you insist on deportations being an integral part of russification, then you also should admit that the russian government tried to germanize Russia by inviting Germans to live along the Volga river. In that regard, even the visualizations in the video are misleading - the icons of people moving into far regions should've been integrated into the icons representing the indigenous population. Which quite neatly introduces the third and final point - this video seems to be pushing an agenda of decolonization of Russia. And I really mean "pushing" as in "making false claims to justify a certain outcome to a group of as-of-yet indifferent people". Sadly, this is the current trend in all of western media, with the U.S. Helsinki commission already appointing people to governors of the states Russia will shatter into (www.csce.gov/international-impact/events/decolonizing-russia).
@al1sa920
@al1sa920 11 месяцев назад
West never oppressed ethnic groups because they were just genociding them
@MrSupernova111
@MrSupernova111 Год назад
Phenomenal video! I feel that this video could have easily been twice as long! You should do an updated or second part to this video with more detail. Cheers!
@qefewfwdcwdc
@qefewfwdcwdc Год назад
one of his dmbest videos by far
@Tiago-
@Tiago- Год назад
Trick answer: it can be MULTIPLE democracies.
@onvawynog4696
@onvawynog4696 Год назад
Its balkan time
@user-ij8ef2ck4u
@user-ij8ef2ck4u Год назад
It can, but it no doubt will have a devastating effect on economy (for a while, at least) and on security (some wars are inevitable to happen). A lot of the states that would "appear" if Russia desintegrates, would be land-locked or double-land-locked. And those states usually end up conquered by neighbours - that's just historical fact.
@carlrodalegrado4104
@carlrodalegrado4104 Год назад
Japan: Sengoku Jidai!!!!!
@adamc2378
@adamc2378 Год назад
Question: what do you now do with over 3,000 former Russian nukes that now find themselves in a multiple new countries with not so stable and well-funded governments?
@ernestous
@ernestous Год назад
Based
@nbarrett100
@nbarrett100 Год назад
How is India a democracy? Huge country with a huge amount of poverty? How do you think young Russian liberals feel when they see this kind of reductive fatalism?
@ihateandreykrasnokutsky
@ihateandreykrasnokutsky Год назад
It means that the larger a country, the less democratic it should be, but we don't see such correlation. There are small and very authoritarian countries, and large and democratic.
@NorthCitySider
@NorthCitySider Год назад
Great video but I would like to point out that the map only shows the expansion of Russia into its current borders over time, but Russia was simultaneously expanding into Central Asia and Eastern Europe. The full story is missing. In fact it was not Siberia that was hardest to subdue because it had a very low population density. Rather it was the Caucasus and Central Asia which saw the most brutal conquest and oppression. The Islamic populations of these areas strongly rejected control by a non-Muslim power and were hard to assimilate. Ukraine also experienced intense Russification as it fell into the hands of the Russian empire.
@NorthCitySider
@NorthCitySider Год назад
@TacticalMoonstone exactly!
@alexandervaltsev6937
@alexandervaltsev6937 Год назад
What was Ukraine called in 16-18 centuries? Part of Poland, no? Not a separate country in any way
@NorthCitySider
@NorthCitySider Год назад
@TacticalMoonstone Russia has been horrible to its minorities…so far they’ve been shockingly loyal all things considered but they are always thrown into the meat grinder when a new war starts in Europe. Wars they have nothing to do with. But the reality is that the ethnic minorities in most of Russia are too scattered and small in number to really rebel. Chechnya is the Achilles heel though…it’s a fantasy with Kadyrov in power but a reignited Chechen insurgency could bring Russia to its knees.
@NorthCitySider
@NorthCitySider Год назад
@@alexandervaltsev6937 mostly part of Poland yes. The inhabitants were known as Ruthenians then. Their identity was distinct from the Poles however. After the Cossack rebellion they started referring to themselves as Ukrainians.
@alexandervaltsev6937
@alexandervaltsev6937 Год назад
@TacticalMoonstone not arguing that. My point is Ukraine wasn’t there 300 years ago. So let’s not make up a country just because it fits the current narrative
@Redactedredacted5837
@Redactedredacted5837 Год назад
It shouldn't be "geographic determinism", but rather "geography has a variable but not an insignificant influence on the development of a society and of a state.
@elena__sh
@elena__sh Год назад
The tragedy of Russia is that the institutions did not have a chance to establish in the 90s and 00s because of the corrupt elites. In the 2010s the society was ready to become the true democracy, the middle class was demanding changes, but Putin had all the powers unrestrained. Believe me, the Russians are no different from any average europeans, but we've been kept as slaves or hostages by our own government for centuries. If you see that there is nothing you can do and want to save your life, you adapt in a peculiar way to the cruelty of the political system.
@mrobocop1666
@mrobocop1666 Год назад
You living in Moscow or other big city that's why you call Russians aren't different from other Europeans. This is where your delusion comes. You absolutely not familiar with majority of our compatriots and how they live and think
@FomaHSE
@FomaHSE Год назад
@@mrobocop1666 and what`s wrong with Russians who live in small cities?
@Dimension_Freund
@Dimension_Freund Год назад
@@mrobocop1666 I live in Orenburg, this is the very edge of Europe, and I fully agree with @elenash7711
@eltecnico9541
@eltecnico9541 Год назад
There are two Russias, the one of the big cities and close in the European mentality and the deep Russia that forgotten by the Russian Slavs, in this deep Russia of small towns they have a mentality far removed from the average Europeans and the Russians of Asian ethnic groups
@eltecnico9541
@eltecnico9541 Год назад
Russia has broken any relationship with the West and Europe, Russia's future is with China, India and other Asian countries
@Frothuss2
@Frothuss2 Год назад
У нас в России говорят - "Начали за здравие, а закончили за упокой". Вот прямо про этот ролик :)
@HopeRock425
@HopeRock425 Год назад
Если закончили за упокой, то зачем войну в Украине начали?
@Frothuss2
@Frothuss2 Год назад
@@HopeRock425 потому что капитализм он про войну и прочие переделы собственности, а не про демократию - уж американцам ли это не знать :)
@HopeRock425
@HopeRock425 Год назад
@@Frothuss2 причём здесь капитализм и демократія. Ви Русские не из-за этого напали.
@ketone4444
@ketone4444 Год назад
@@HopeRock425 Поплачь , зaебалi себя оправдывать
@HopeRock425
@HopeRock425 Год назад
@@ketone4444 зачем мне плакать. Україна победит, Путин умрёт, а Россия развалится.
@JohnDoe-vi1im
@JohnDoe-vi1im Год назад
Much more informative than any other channel or tv station, as usual. Thumbs up!
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