How we lived in the USSR. How they lived in the USSR. life in the Soviet Union How we used to be friends in Soviet times

30s
katrinkuv:
Yes, living people who remember the 30s are unlikely to be written here. But I remember what my grandmother told me, then my aunt confirmed it.
They lived then on Krasnoselskaya, in the house where Utyosov lived. The house was from the railroad. My grandfather worked there. Well, I don’t think it’s necessary to talk about what 37 is. They took everyone around! I don’t know why, maybe that’s why, but my grandfather didn’t work. And every day I went skating in Sokolniki. Grandmother said that the "funnel" was expected every night. The bag of belongings stood by the door, waiting to be arrested. Kaganovich warned. (honestly, I don’t know these relationships, my grandfather wasn’t even 30 at that time, why Kaganovich was close to this “boy” - my grandfather - I don’t know, but my aunt prays for him, says that he saved his grandfather’s life, which means and me, my father was already born at 44) and "sent" the family of my father's parents to Kaluga. Something like that…
I have many more memories of life in Moscow from my ancestors.

50s
laisr:
Life was not raspberry. Father returned from 4 years of German captivity at the end of the war. He was met in the village by a hungry wife and two children. And I was born in 46. To feed the family, the father with the same hungry five fellow villagers stole a bag of wheat during sowing. Someone pawned, a search at the father. Accomplices, more cunning, advised the father to take over everything, otherwise, they say, they would put everyone in a group for 25 years. Father served 5 years. With my current mind, I'm joking, Hitler held him for four years, well, but Stalin could not give less, so he put me in jail for five years. In the 1950s, I didn’t eat enough bread, which is probably why today I eat everything with bread, even pasta, sometimes I joke to my friends about this, that I even eat bread with bread!

***
In my second year (1962) in Ufa in a department store, absolutely by chance, by luck, I bought Japanese nylon swimming trunks! Then ours were rag with two laces on the side for tying on the thigh. The Japanese ones were shaped like shorts, beautiful, vertically striped, tight. I wore them for a very long time, they are still lying around somewhere with me. Here is the memory of my student life!

60s
yuryper, "about the shortage of bread":
somewhere in 63 or 64 in Moscow, flour was distributed through house administrations, according to the number of registered ones. It wasn't in the stores. In the summer we went to Sukhumi, it turned out that white bread is only for locals, on cards.
In Moscow, bread did not disappear, but the variety characteristic of the early 60s gradually decreased, and by the early 70s this difference became very noticeable.

70s
sitki:
Early 70s, my mother-in-law is a single mother, Krasnoe Selo, pay 90 rubles.
Every (!) year I took my son to the sea. Yes, a savage; yes, sometimes they brought canned food with them and ate them for the whole month. But now my husband tells me about those trips with rapture. This is his childhood.
What cleaning lady can now take a child to the seaside for a month?

pumbalicho (8-10 years):
For some reason, the 70s stuck in my memory ... Those were good years. And not only economically (I suspect that abundance was not everywhere. But I still can’t forget the shop windows of that time), but also some kind of special cohesion or something ... I remember that they reported the death of three Soviet cosmonauts- no one ordered, but people really sobbed in the streets ...

matsea:
We walked in the yards for 4-5 years alone. I was 8 years old (early 70s) when a schoolgirl was killed in the Udelny park next door. The children continued to walk alone as well. Well, such was life.

80s
matsea (born 1964):
I remember well the expectation of the first spring salad (I am 64 years old). There were no fruits in winter. In autumn, apples are plentiful and inexpensive. By November, they are sold in brown spots and expensive. By January they are gone. If you're lucky, you can catch Moroccan oranges on occasion. Infrequently. Peter, winter darkness, beriberi. And shoot at night tomatoes with sour cream, so red. And here is March and happiness - they threw out hydroponic cucumbers. Long ones, dark green, like crocodiles. Three pieces in a kilogram, a kilo in one hand. Enough - not enough? Enough! We stood for about forty minutes, brought. Salad with onions, eggs, and hydroponic cucumbers - hooray, spring has come! Well, everything, now you can safely wait for the tomatoes. It's not until June.

mans626262:
the leading engineer in the late 70s and early 80s had a salary of 180 rubles - this is me personally at the research institute.

michel62 (born 1962):
In 1982 I went to Donetsk by bus for sausage and butter from Rostov-on-Don. Mom at the watch factory organized these trips. To Donetsk, to Voroshilovograd.
***
Struck!
When I arrived as a young specialist in the Penza region and, working as a road foreman, wandered around the villages, maintaining local roads, I saw so many different imported clothes in the village shops that it took my breath away. I bought shoes and a coat for my wife there ... The villagers looked at me like I was crazy. You know, it's impressive when there are galoshes and Italian shoes on the same counter, and a sweatshirt and a Finnish coat hang on a clothes hanger nearby ... It was simply impossible to buy something from clothes in Rostov. The queues have been busy since the evening. Everything is just from under the floor or by pull. I have a feeling that if jeans or something like that were freely sold during the USSR, then there would be no perestroika and subsequent collapse.
***
Born in 1962 in Rostov-on-Don
Of course, the USSR for me is childhood, youth, growing up, the first child ...
I look now at how my son (16 years old) lives and it seems to me that we were happier in childhood. Even if I didn’t travel abroad with my parents and the first jeans were bought for me when I was in my first year at the institute. But everything was somehow richer. This is my personal opinion and I'm not going to argue with anyone. I remember how, already working, the party organizer asked me at a reporting meeting (he worked as the chief engineer of one communal sharaga): "How did you M.M. reorganize? ..." dining "demagogue")? What did I need to rebuild in myself if I, a young guy, worked conscientiously and wear and tear? ... In the family, when I was a boy, there was a sack of food. Food was in the first place. But my father altered my clothes from his own. By the way, my father was the head of the enterprise, but there was no chic in our house. But my father’s attitude towards the USSR was this: "If they told me - an officer of the Soviet army - shoot yourself for Stalin - I silently pulled I would have shot myself with a gun ... ". I remember in the year 72-74 there was a rumor along the street that they were selling pepsicol .... I stood in line for two hours and scored two shopping bags ... I still swear when I remember how her home. Memories of the pioneer camps are very warm. Every summer, three shifts to different camps. Vacation at home was only five days st-ten before September 1st....
And while working, he adapted, like everyone else, to be able to take his wife to a barbecue on the left bank of the Don on weekends and go on vacation in the summer. Now I have a vacation for a maximum of a week, if I'm lucky ... I remember how my mother came from a business trip to Moscow. We met her with the whole family. Poor - how she pearled all these bags of sausage and oranges ....
I also remember the Diet store, where my mother and I went when she was picking me up from the kindergarten. She bought three hundred grams of sausage (certainly not Moscow and not serverat) doctoral or amateur and asked to cut a little for me. And there was a bread shop nearby, where we bought FRESH bread. Here I was, chewing a sausage sandwich. I have never seen such a taste of sausage and bread. Of course, delicacies were always in short supply, but parents got them for the holidays. I remember the queues for carpets, dishes and clothes ... I lived right next to the department store "Solnyshko" and I remember it all well. The queue was occupied since the evening and the crowd was hustling all night (I lived on the second floor and it all happened under our balcony). I remember the store "Ocean" on Semashko, where carp and sturgeon swam in the aquarium. And then the same "Ocean", where there was nothing except for briquettes of shrimp and some kind of crap like seaweed. I remember coupons for vodka and oil. But this is already at the end of the USSR. But I worked in the road organization and "spun". (just don't say that because of people like me we have bad roads). Who wanted to live, then spinning. Everything was both good and bad. Now, of course, remember the good. The bad is forgotten. I forgot that I did not have a tape recorder as a child. But I remember New Year's gifts from the Christmas tree in DC. The queues for beer are forgotten, but its taste and the fact that it turned sour in a day and not in a month are remembered. With a smile, I remember how I was driving home from work in a crowded bus, holding a plastic bag with beer in my hand above my head, and there were many like me ... Everything was - both bad and good. You can argue about this time until the carrot spell, but it was and is remembered with a smile.

nord100:
I remember my first business trip to Vilnius. It was around 1982. He was shocked by what he saw abroad. Then I got coffee in beans, for a whole year in advance.
In those same years, I visited Moldova for the first time, where I was struck by the abundance of imports in stores. And the books! I have not seen so many scarce books since childhood!
I still remember my trip to Kuibyshev in the late 80s. In the evening I checked into a hotel and decided to buy food for dinner at the grocery store. Nothing came of it - I didn’t have local coupons ...
I remember many things about those years, but mostly with warmth. After all, it was youth :)

Second half of the 80s
Frauenheld2:
I remember that I was engaged in fartsovka, just somewhere in the 89-90s)
You go there - "Kaugumi, chungam", but because you're ashamed - sometimes it's just, you ask the time, in Russian, of course. But foreigners do not understand, and give something - sweets, chewing gum, pens. Now it seems - trifles, but at school I went godfather to the king with these colored pens, and for chewing gum (!), Classmates just didn’t kiss their feet.

alyk99:
Secondary school No. 1 in Zvenigorod near Moscow. I am 10 years old (1986), there is some kind of meeting in the assembly hall. The director broadcasts: "We vote. Who is for?"
We all raise our hands as one. "Who against?" Two lonely hands of some high school students are raised. The director starts shouting: "How can you? Hooligans! Get out of the hall! Shame on the school!"
In the evening, I tell the story to my mother and add from myself that the high school students behaved shamefully. "Why?" she asks. "Maybe they had a different opinion. What's so shameful?" I remember very well that it was at that moment that I first understood what it was like to be one of the dumb sheep in the herd.


Childhood memories of the USSR
roosich (was 10 years old in 1988):
Something the stories of this lady, who rode abroad, about the absence of bread in the USSR (apparently, we are not talking about the 20-30s, but about the 70-80s) do not inspire confidence.
My childhood was in the 80s. I was born and still live all my life in a small town near Moscow. With my parents (with my father, to be more precise), we often went to Moscow on weekends. But not for food, like supposedly the rest of the USSR, but just for a walk - VDNKh, Gorky Park, museums, exhibitions, etc. And there was enough food in our local stores. Of course, there was no such abundance on the shelves as it is now, but no one went hungry. Of course, they can object to me here that a small, but a town near Moscow is far from the same thing as an equally small town, but somewhere in a remote province .... But the majority still did not live as hermits in distant villages. The deficit became quite active only in 1988.
Continuing the store theme now about manufactured goods. I remember somewhere in the middle of the 80s - in our local department store I saw TVs, refrigerators, and washing machines, and players (cassette recorders only began to appear in the late 80s), and radios, and clothes with shoes, and stationery ... with a small roubles) this household appliance was quite expensive. I remember our first color TV - a hefty and heavy Rubin, bought only in 1987, cost well for 300 rubles.
***
But if we compare it with today, then the most radical difference from that time is people. Then, too, of course, different people could meet in life, but now - man is a wolf to man. Today's parents are afraid to let their children go alone to walk even in the neighboring yard, but then they were not afraid to let us go. And not only in the next yard. And until late at night.
***
The USSR of the 88th model is no longer the same country as it was back in 83-85. Although it would seem that only a few years have passed, the differences were already quite striking.
***
So I'm saying that the general shortage of everything and everyone with absolutely empty counters and kilometer-long queues for them with coupons and cards came only at the very end of the 80s! And the author /meaning the author of the vg_saveliev project) apparently thinks that under the USSR people lived like in the Stone Age, and when the Democrats came, happiness immediately came. But the Russian people did not believe this happiness and began to die out at 1 million a year.
***
Yes, I still remember in the 88th year we went on vacation with my aunt and her son (i.e. my cousin) to the village to her relatives somewhere on the border of the Moscow and Tula regions. The village was alive. There was work in the village. And a lot of hardworking middle-aged people, and a lot of children .... I think now in most of these rural places only a few old people are left, but summer residents have appeared.


General impressions and reasoning
lamois (born 1956):
Tell me, do memories have to be negative? Judging by the posted - yes, you started just such a selection.
And if I write that I am happy that I was born in 1956 and saw many difficulties, but also a lot of happiness, as at any time. My parents are teachers, they opened a secondary school in a virgin village. People were sincere in their enthusiasm and unfeigned love for each other. I do not regret that those times have passed, everything ends sooner or later. But I will never throw a stone at the history of my country. And you don't hesitate.
They write how they hated school rulers, but I remember the fun and exciting game Zarnitsa, hiking, songs with a guitar. Each person has his childhood and youth and they are good at any time. And now it is infinitely difficult for many, the current difficulties are not much easier, but for many more difficult than then. For the majority, the loss of cultural identity is a greater tragedy than the then shortage of sausages for some especially hungry, although it was precisely that there were no hungry then, but now they are. But I don't trust people who remember their childhood with hatred or regret. These are unfortunate people, and they are always biased, just like you, in fact.
I am sure that you will never publish my opinion on your own.

vit_r
Well, queues, well, shortage.
A person with a backpack, coming to any village, to any village, and even to any town, could find shelter and lodging for the night. They gave keys to an acquaintance of acquaintances and left them in an apartment where money and crystal lie on a shelf.
And to compare. I know those who now do not have enough money for bread. The ceiling has gone up. But not for everyone. The population has shrunk and oil prices have skyrocketed. The Union fell apart when there was no longer enough oil to import goods and export communism. And the party and economic bosses then lived abruptly than the current oligarchs.
The only problem with the union was that there was no way out. It's true.

chimkentec:
No, the party and economic bosses then did not live abruptly than the current oligarchs. Party and economic bosses were just as inaccessible to what was consumer goods for most people in developed countries.
***
...my grandfather was the "economic boss", the head of YuzhKazGlavSnab, an organization that was engaged in the supply of three Kazakhstani regions.
But he, just like all the other townspeople, could not buy normal coffee, he could not repair the TV for half a year (there were no necessary spare parts). He had to convert his own built bathhouse into a barn.
He had a dream - he wanted to grow a lawn in the country. And even the seeds of lawn grass, he managed to get. But he could not get the simplest electric lawn mower - someone decided that Soviet citizens did not need lawn mowers.

There will also be a rubric "Without an exact designation of time" and "Discussions". Until these materials fit.
There are a lot of stories without a clear indication of time and age. Try to be specific about the timing.

Many still feel nostalgia for the Soviet Union. Those who lived in this vast country remember their carefree childhood, songs around the campfire, pioneer days, affordable prices, and a caring state. And those who were born later listen to the dreary stories of older comrades or relatives and imagine how it used to be good. Not like now...

Did Soviet citizens glow with happiness like that? Or were there more disadvantages in the life of the builders of communism? We are unlikely to ever come to an unambiguous conclusion, because there will always be both supporters of the Soviet Union and those who casually call this huge empire Sovkom.

Today's editorial "So simple!" He will tell about the USSR in the words of eyewitnesses - those who have felt all the comfort of living in the Land of Soviets. These people knew that the Soviet is not always of high quality, and food and clothing should be "extracted".

How they lived in the USSR

“I was born in 1977 in a relatively wealthy St. Petersburg. I remember how my parents were embarrassed to make friends with the unlucky neighbor Vasya, but they did it, because he worked in a grocery store. Uncle Vasya was always dirty and often drunk, but he could get decent meat. And my parents had to somehow feed me and my sister.”

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“I am from 1980. I remember that at the age of 8 I had only green sandals from shoes, which did not fit any outfit, because I didn’t have any other green things. But I walked in sandals and did not dare to ask. And winter boots! You go to school in the snow - your feet get wet in an instant. Neither I nor the other guys had spare shoes. And so they walked with wet feet.

« Food products in the USSR- a separate story. The lines for bread stretched such that they stood for an hour and a half. The meat waited even longer. If “Hercules” was thrown on the counter, then the parents bought it in boxes in reserve. In general, vodka was sold only by coupons.

About the last point, very amusing stories are told. Some cunning people applied to the registry office to get coupons for vodka. The application was later withdrawn, but the alcohol remained. By the way, alcoholic beverages were in great short supply. Therefore, even non-drinkers tried to get alcohol - it was possible to exchange it profitably for something.

©DepositPhotos

“They say that in the USSR everything was the most natural and useful. Aha! There were blue hens on the counters, apparently starved to death and abused. There was also milk with sour cream by weight. Fortunately, my grandmother knew the store manager, so we got milk before it was diluted with water. And getting sour cream was considered a great success at all.

“Mom was sometimes sent on business trips to Moscow, and she brought everything she could get from there. I remember how one day she locked those damn bags, slid down dressed on the floor and quietly cried from fatigue ... "

“If someone managed to go abroad or even to a large neighboring city, then they brought home as much food as they could. Sausage, fruit, butter, cheese…”

©DepositPhotos

There are many such stories about life in the USSR. And yet there are people who deny that there was a shortage. They say that the shelves were really empty, but everyone had everything at home. For they knew how to get ...

Indeed, today it is simple: I wanted it - I bought it. Too casual and uninteresting. But before, you had to get any thing, standing in lines, or buying from under the counter from black marketers, risking not only money, but sometimes your own freedom. That's where the romance was!

What do you remember about life in the Soviet Union? Was it really better to live than now?

Dreams of people taking better care of nature. In the future, he plans to engage in the protection of wild animals, environmental protection and other useful things that will improve the condition of the planet. Bogdan believes that such work makes more sense than any other! He wants to one day return to Finland, which struck him with crystal clear lakes and friendly people. I would also like to come to St. Petersburg for a long time in order to get to know the city better. Bogdan is an energetic and cheerful footballer. Our editor's favorite book, after reading which he began to write articles, is Martin Eden by Jack London.

Over the seven decades of its existence, the USSR drank a lot of hardship, but there were times in the history of the Soviet Union that the citizens of the USSR remembered as happy.

Brezhnev stagnation

Despite the negative name of the era, people remember this time with good nostalgia. The dawn of stagnation came in the 1970s. It was a time of stability - there were no major upheavals. The stagnation coincided with the improvement of relations between the US and the USSR - a threat nuclear war faded into the background. This period is also associated with the establishment of relative economic prosperity, which affected the well-being of Soviet citizens as well. In 1980, the USSR took first place in Europe and second in the world in terms of industrial production and Agriculture. Besides, Soviet Union became the only self-sufficient country in the world that could develop solely thanks to its own natural resources.

It was at the end of the 1960s - the beginning of the 1980s that the peak of the achievements of the Soviet Union in science, space, education, culture and sports fell. But the main thing was that for the first time in the history of the USSR people felt that the state was taking care of them.
The apogee of the era was Moscow Olympic Games, which took place in 1980, and its symbol (and a bad omen) is the Olympic Bear flying away in balloons at the closing ceremony of the Olympics.

Thaw

The forerunner of this era was the death of Stalin in March 1953. The government of the USSR closed several fabricated cases and thus stopped a new wave of repressions. However, the speech of the First Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU Nikita Khrushchev at the 20th Congress of the CPSU, in which he debunked the cult of Stalin, can be considered the real beginning of the “thaw”. After that, the country breathed more freely, a period of relative democracy began, in which citizens were not afraid to go to jail for telling a political anecdote. During this period, there was an upsurge in Soviet culture, from which the ideological shackles were removed. It was during the “Khrushchev thaw” that the talents of poets Robert Rozhdestvensky, Andrei Voznesensky, Bella Akhmadulina, writers Viktor Astafiev and Alexander Solzhenitsyn, theater directors Oleg Efremov and Galina Volchek, film directors Eldar Ryazanov, Marlen Khutsiev, Leonid Gaidai were revealed.

Publicity

Now it is customary to scold Mikhail Gorbachev, but the period 1989 to 1991 can be called a standard in terms of democracy. Probably no country, even the most liberal, had such a level of freedom of speech as the Soviet Union in its last years of its existence - the leaders of the USSR were criticized both from high tribunes and at millions of rallies. In the era of glasnost, a Soviet person was literally bombarded with such a volume of revelations about the history of the country in which he lives, which in a matter of months devalued the cult October revolution, Lenin, the Communist Party, Brezhnev and other leaders of the USSR. People sensed that turning times were coming and looked to the future with enthusiasm. Alas, times have come even more difficult.

On the eve of the Stalinist terror

“Life has become better, comrades. Life has become more fun. And when life is fun, the work is argued ... ". These words were uttered by Joseph Stalin in 1935 at the First All-Union Conference of Workers and Workers - Stakhanovites. Later, Stalin was accused of cynicism, but there was some truth in the statement of the leader, whose cult was just beginning to take shape. After the industrialization carried out in the USSR, by the mid-1930s, the standard of living of citizens improved markedly: wages increased, the rationing system for food was canceled, and the assortment of goods in stores increased markedly. Cheerful mood was supported by the Soviet cinema: for example, the comedy "Jolly Fellows" with Leonid Utyosov was filmed in the best traditions of Hollywood. However, the "fun life" ended in 1937, with the onset of mass repressions.

Wave of enthusiasm after the Civil War

After the end of the Civil War and the restoration of the country, Soviet Russia was swept by a wave of enthusiasm. The Bolsheviks announced that they were open to all advanced ideas, from psychoanalysis to industrial design. It was during this period that the dawn of the Soviet avant-garde in art, architecture and theater falls. Rumors flew to Europe and America that the Bolsheviks were not so bloodthirsty, and most importantly very advanced. Emigrants began to return to the country, as well as creative people and scientists from all over the world to come to realize their ideas. For them, the USSR became a real creative incubator, an experimental laboratory.
True, not all ideas were supported by the Bolsheviks: for example, representatives of the most radical areas of psychoanalysis found support in Soviet Russia, and at the same time the whole world of Russian philosophy was forcibly expelled from the country. Most of all at this time, the Orthodox Church was unlucky, on which cruel persecution and repression were unleashed. True, the bulk of the citizens of the USSR supported this campaign against religion. "Everything old had to die in order to reveal the dear new."

"Internal emigration" in the late 1960s

In 1964, Nikita Khrushchev was removed from the post of First Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU thanks to an organized conspiracy of his "party comrades." With his displacement, the "thaw" also ended. Many were waiting for the restoration of Stalinism, but it never happened. Although it was now impossible to talk about mass Stalinist repressions in public. During this period, when all social informal life froze, a new trend arose, which eventually embraced millions of people - the “movement of hikers”. Instead of relaxing in the Black Sea resorts, Soviet intellectuals packed their backpacks and went on long hikes - conquering mountain peaks, descending into caves, exploring unknown places in the taiga. It was probably the most romantic time in the history of the USSR. The geologist has become a "cult" profession, and mountaineering has become a "cult" sport. In just a few years, the USSR has become the largest number of people with a category in sports tourism. AT major cities there was practically no family in which there was no tent, kayak and camping kettle. So, the Soviet intelligentsia found, in “singing to the guitar by the fire in the wilderness” its ecological niche, where there was no pressure from countless communist slogans that had long lost their meaning, hung on almost all the buildings of the Soviet Union.

“We were lucky that our childhood and youth ended before the government bought FREEDOM from young people in exchange for roller skates, mobile phones, star factories and cool crackers (by the way, soft for some reason) ... With her own general consent ... For her own (seemingly) good…” is a fragment from a text called “Generation 76-82”. Those who are now somewhere in their thirties reprint it with great pleasure on the pages of their Internet diaries. He became a kind of manifesto of the generation.

The attitude towards life in the USSR changed from a sharply negative to a sharply positive one. Per recent times the Internet has a lot of resources dedicated to everyday life in the Soviet Union.

Unbelievable but true: the sidewalk has an asphalt ramp for wheelchairs. Even now you rarely see this in Moscow


At that time (as far as photographs and films can tell) all the girls wore knee-length skirts. And there were practically no perverts. An amazing thing.

Beautiful pointer bus stop. And the pictogram of the trolleybus is the same in St. Petersburg today. There was also a tram sign - the letter "T" in a circle.

All over the world, the consumption of various branded drinks was growing, and we had everything from the boiler. This, by the way, is not so bad. And, most likely, humanity will come to this again. All foreign ultra-left and green movements would be delighted to know that in the USSR you had to go for sour cream with your own can. Any jar could be handed over, the sausage was wrapped in paper, and they went to the store with their string bag. The most progressive supermarkets in the world today at the checkout offer to choose between a paper or plastic bag. The most environmentally responsible classes are returning the earthenware yogurt pot to the store.

And before, there was no habit at all to sell containers with the product.

Kharkov, 1924. Tea room. He drank and left. No Lipton bottled.


Moscow, 1959. Khrushchev and Nixon (then Vice President) at the Pepsi booth at the American National Exhibition in Sokolniki. On the same day there was a famous dispute in the kitchen. In America, this dispute has received wide coverage, we have not. Nixon talked about how cool it was to have a dishwasher, how much stuff there was in supermarkets.

All this was filmed on color videotape (supertechnology at the time). It is believed that Nixon performed so well at this meeting that it helped him become one of the presidential candidates the following year (and 10 years later, president).

In the 60s, a terrible fashion for any machine guns went. The whole world then dreamed of robots, we dreamed of automatic trading. The idea, in a sense, failed due to the fact that it did not take into account Soviet reality. Say, when a potato vending machine pours you rotten potatoes, no one wants to use it. Still, when there is an opportunity to rummage through an earthy container, finding some relatively strong vegetables, there is not only hope for a delicious dinner, but a training in fighting qualities. The only machines that survived were those that dispensed a product of the same quality - for the sale of soda. Still sometimes there were vending machines for the sale of sunflower oil. Only soda survived.

1961st. VDNH. Still, before the start of the fight against excesses, we did not lag behind the West in graphic and aesthetic development.

In 1972, the Pepsi company agreed with the Soviet government that Pepsi would be bottled "from concentrate and using PepsiCo technology", and in return the USSR would be able to export Stolichnaya vodka.

1974th. Some boarding house for foreigners. Polka dots "Globe" top right. I still have such a jar unopened - I keep thinking: will it explode or not? Just in case, I keep it wrapped in a bag away from books. It’s also scary to open it - what if I suffocate?

From the very right edge, next to the scales, you can see a cone for selling juice. Empty, really. There was no habit in the USSR to drink juice from the refrigerator, no one was chic. The saleswoman opened a three-liter jar, poured it into a cone. And from there - in glasses. As a child, I still found such cones in our vegetable shop on Shokalsky Drive. When I was drinking my favorite apple juice from such a cone, some thief stole my Kama bike from the store's dressing room, I will never forget.

1982 Selection of alcohol in the dining car of the Trans-Siberian train. For some reason, many foreigners have a fixed idea - to travel along the Trans-Siberian Railway. Apparently, the idea that you can not get out of a moving train for a week seems magical to them.

Please note that abundance is apparent. No exquisite dry red wines, which today, even in an ordinary tent, at least 50 types are sold. No XO and VSOP. However, even ten years after this picture was taken, the author was quite satisfied with Agdam port wine.


1983 The worm of consumerism has settled in the naive and pure souls of the Russians. True, the bottle, young man, must be returned to whom she said. I drank, enjoyed the warm, return the container. They will take her back to the factory.


In stores, Pinocchio or Bell was usually on sale. "Baikal" or "Tarhun" was also not always sold. And when Pepsi was exhibited in some supermarket, it was taken as a reserve - for a birthday, for example, to be displayed later.

1987th. An aunt sells greens in a dairy store window. Cashiers are visible behind the glass. The very ones that had to come well prepared - to know all the prices, the quantity of goods and the department numbers.


1987th. Volgograd. In the American archive, this photo is accompanied by a comment of the century: "A woman on a street in Volgograd sells some sort of liquid for the invalids of the Great Patriotic War (the Soviet name for World War II)." Apparently, at the same time in 87, they translated the inscription from the barrel, when there was no one else to ask that WWII invalids were served out of turn. By the way, these inscriptions are the only documentary recognition that there are queues in the USSR.


By the way, in those days there was no struggle between merchandisers, there were no POS materials, no one hung wobblers on the shelves. No one would have thought of giving away free samples. If the store was given a beach ball with the Pepsi logo, he considered it an honor. And exhibited in the window sincerely and for nothing.

1990th. Pepsi vending machine in the subway. Rare copy. Here are the machines that are on the right, they met everywhere in the center - they sold the newspapers Pravda, Izvestia, Moskovskiye Novosti. By the way, all soda machines (and slot machines too) always had the inscription “Please! Do not omit commemorative and bent coins. It is understandable with bent ones, but commemorative coins cannot be omitted, because they differed from other coins of the same denomination in weight and sometimes in size.


1991st. Veteran drinks soda with syrup. Someone had already scratched the Depeche Moda logo on the middle machine. Glasses were always shared. You come up, wash it in the machine itself, then put it under the nozzle. Fastidious aesthetes carried folding glasses with them, which had the peculiarity of folding in the process. The photo is good because all the details are characteristic and recognizable. And a payphone half-box, and a Zaporozhets headlight.


Until 1991, American photographers followed the same routes. Almost every photo can be identified - this is on Tverskaya, this is on Herzen, this is near the Bolshoi Theater, this is from the Moscow Hotel. And then everything became possible.

Recent history.

1992 near Kyiv. This is no longer the USSR, just by the way I had to. A dude poses for an American photographer, voting with a bottle of vodka to trade it for gasoline. It seems to me that the photographer himself issued the bottles. However, a bottle of vodka has long been a kind of currency. But in the mid-nineties, all plumbers suddenly stopped taking bottles as payment, because there were no fools left - vodka is sold everywhere, and you know how much it costs. So everything has gone to the money. Today, a bottle is given only to a doctor and a teacher, and even then with cognac.


With food in the late USSR, everything was pretty bad. The chance to buy something tasty in a regular store was close to zero. Queues lined up for tasty treats. Delicious food could be given "in order" - there was a whole system of "order tables", which were actually centers for the distribution of goods for their own. In the order table, he could count on tasty things: a veteran (moderately), a writer (not bad), a party worker (also not bad).

Residents of closed cities in general, by Soviet standards, rolled around like cheese in butter in Christ's bosom. But they were very bored in the cities and they were restricted to travel abroad. However, almost all of them were restricted to travel abroad.

Life was good for those who could be of some help. Let's say the director of the Wanda store was a very respected person. Super VIP by recent standards. And the butcher was respected. And the head of the department in Detsky Mir was respected. And even a cashier at the Leningradsky railway station. All of them could "get" something. Acquaintance with them was called "connections" and "ties". The director of the grocery was reasonably confident that his children would go to a good university.

1975 year. Bakery. I felt that the cuts on the loaves were made by hand (now the robot is already sawing).

1975 year. Sheremetyevo-1. Here, by the way, not much has changed. In the cafe you could find chocolate, beer, sausages with peas. Sandwiches did not exist, there could be a sandwich, which was a piece of white bread, at one end of which there was a spoonful of red caviar, and at the other - one round of butter, which everyone pushed and trampled under the caviar with a fork as best they could.


Bread shops were of two types. The first one is with a counter. Behind the saleswoman, there were loaves and loaves in containers. The freshness of bread was determined in the process of questioning those who had already bought bread or in a dialogue with the saleswoman:

- For 25 a fresh loaf?

— Normal.

Or, if the buyer did not cause rejection:

- Delivered at night.

The second type of bakery is self-service. Here, loaders rolled up containers to special openings, on the other side of which there was a trading floor. There were no saleswomen, only cashiers. It was cool because you could poke the bread with your finger. Of course, it was not allowed to touch the bread; for this, special forks or spoons were hung on uneven ropes. The spoons were still back and forth, and it was unrealistic to determine the freshness with a fork. Therefore, each took a hypocritical device in his hands and gently turned his finger to check in the usual way how well it was pressed. It's not clear through the spoon.

Fortunately, there was no individual packaging of bread.

Better a loaf that someone gently touched with a finger than tasteless gutta-percha. Yes, and it was always possible, after checking the softness with your hands, to take a loaf from the back row, which no one had yet reached.

1991st. Soon there will be consumer protection, which, together with care, will kill the taste. Halves and quarters were prepared from the technical side. Sometimes it was even possible to persuade to cut off half of the white:

Who will buy the second one? - asked the buyer from the back room.


No one gave packages at the checkout either - everyone came with his own. Or with a string bag. Or so, carried in the hands.

The grandmother is holding bags of kefir and milk (1990). Then there was no Tetrapac yet, there was some kind of Elopak. On the package was written “Elopak. Patented." The blue triangle indicates the side from which the bag must be opened. When we first purchased the packaging line, it came with a barrel of the right glue. I found those times when the package opened in the right place without torment. Then the glue ran out, it was necessary to open it from two sides, and then fold one side back. The blue triangles remained, but since then no one has bought glue, there are few idiots.

By the way, at that time there was no additional information on the product packaging - neither the address nor the phone number of the manufacturer. Only GOST. And there were no brands. Milk was called milk, but differed in fat content. My favorite is in the red bag, five percent.


Dairy products were also sold in bottles. The contents differed in the color of the foil: milk - silver, acidophilus - blue, kefir - green, fermented baked milk - raspberry, etc.

Joyful queue for eggs. There could still be Krestyanskoye oil on the refrigerated display case - it was cut with wire, then with a knife into smaller pieces, wrapped immediately in oil paper. In the queue, everyone stands with checks - before that, they stood in line at the cashier. The saleswoman had to be told what to give, she looked at the figure, counted everything in her head or on the accounts, and if it converged, she gave out the purchase (“let go”). The check was strung on a needle (it stands on the left side of the counter).

In theory, they were obliged to sell even one egg. But buying one egg was considered a terrible insult to the saleswoman - she could yell at the buyer in response.

Those who took three dozen were given a cardboard pallet without question. Whoever took a dozen was not supposed to have a pallet, he put everything in a bag (there were also special wire cages for aesthetes).

This is a cool photo (1991), here you can see video rental cassettes in the background.


Good meat could be obtained through an acquaintance or bought in the market. But everything in the market was twice as expensive as in the store, so not everyone went there. "Market meat" or "market potatoes" is the highest praise for products.

Soviet chicken was considered to be of poor quality. Here is the Hungarian chicken - it's cool, but it has always been in short supply. The word "cool" was not yet in wide use (that is, it was, but in relation to the rocks).

4.2 / 5 ( 6 votes)

How did we live in USSR?

People tend to remember in life, basically, only good things. And this is a very useful evolutionary acquisition. Thanks to him, we live like people, and not like angry dogs barking at everything around for no apparent reason. Almost everyone who shares their memories of life in (these are those who were already adults 25 years ago) write that they have preserved the kindest feelings about that time; memories of a carefree childhood, first love, ice cream for 9 kopecks, cheerful student life and many other, of course, pleasant and positive events, causing a storm of emotions. Without denying the pleasantness of good feelings and remembering that the assessments of the same events can be completely different if they are analyzed with different goals, I will try in this article to deal briefly not with the feelings that different events caused in different people, but with the fact that what was the USSR really.

It is necessary to do this because today many public and political figures are very persistent, rather even intrusive, praise the USSR, tirelessly repeating that there we had supposedly free education, free medical care; supposedly free housing, free or very cheap vacation; and a lot of everything else, just as tasty, beautiful and also allegedly free. This enemy Zionist propaganda, with all its might untwisted by enemies, is designed primarily for youth, which at one time did not have time to thoroughly consider all the "charms" of the Soviet life order and therefore is forced to take such clever oracles at their word.

In order to understand what the USSR was like in reality, we need quite a bit:

  • Find out who invented communism and when?
  • Find out why the USSR was created?
  • Find out who was the main beneficiary of this project?

So let's look for answers to these questions, especially since there is more than enough information for reflection today.

Who invented communism and when?

It is generally accepted that communism was invented by two Jews: Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels. In 1848 they published The Communist Manifesto, in which these lines stand out: “Communists consider it a contemptible thing to hide their views and intentions. They openly declare that their goals can be achieved only through the violent overthrow of everything that exists. social order. Let the ruling classes tremble before the Communist Revolution…” However, it is known that these works of the "German" philosophers were generously paid.

"Communism is the brainchild of the Jews!"

In 2001, a book by an American historian and publicist appeared in Russia David Duke titled "The Jewish Question Through the Eyes of an American". The author describes how, while still a schoolboy, he accidentally stumbled upon the truth about the creators of communism in America, while working as a volunteer in the office of one public organization. But he did not believe what was written in the newspapers and decided to check everything himself ... Now he has been speaks the truth out loud about the real role of Jews in many social processes on the planet, from the organization of the slave trade, and ending with wars, revolutions and environmental disasters. Dr. David Duke maintains its website on the Internet (in English) and constantly uploads on its channel in YouTube video messages dedicated to the next revelations of the subversive role of the "chosen people" on Earth. We translate these small, unique films into Russian and post them on Sovetnik and Molvitsa…

"The CPSU was created by the Jews!"

April 24, 2013 Nikolai Starikov on his website very well described who, how and when founded the party RSDLP, which later became known as CPSU. You can read about this in the article. The author writes that in Minsk there is a house-museum, in which on March 1-3, 1898 constituent The first congress of the RSDLP (Russian Social Democratic Labor Party - the predecessor of CPSU). All program and other necessary documents of this party were adopted later, at the II Congress in 1903 in London. And this congress was only to create a party. The founders of the future were the following Jewish comrades:

  • Eidelman Boris Lvovich (1867-1939)
  • Vigdorchik Natan Abramovich (1874-1954)
  • Mutnik Abram Yakovlevich (1868-1930)
  • Katz Shmuel Shneerovich (1878-1928)
  • Tuchapsky Pavel Lukich (1869-1922)
  • Radchenko Stepan Ivanovich (1868-1911)
  • Vannovsky Alexander Alekseevich (1874-1967)
  • Petrusevich Kazimir Adamovich (1872-1949)
  • Kremer Aaron Iosifovich (1865-1935)

This is the definitive answer to the question: who invented communism?. I repeat, communism was invented by people of Jewish nationality who have the Jewish faith. Why is it so important? Because this people had the misfortune of being chosen by certain Powers to achieve certain goals. Information about which Powers they chose, and what tasks they set for the Jews, is discussed in detail in the book of the academician Nikolay Levashov .

This is more or less clear. Now the next question is: Why was communism invented??».

This question is answered "Communist Manifesto", into which the text has become "Draft Communist Creed", written in early 1847 by the son of a merchant, Friedrich Engels, and his partner, the son of a rabbi, Karl Marx, members of the Union of Communists, based in. Here is a relevant quote from the Manifesto: “The history of all hitherto existing societies has been the history of the struggle of classes ... Modern bourgeois private property is the last and most complete expression of such production and appropriation of products, which rests on class antagonisms, on the exploitation of some by others. In this sense, communists can express their theory in one proposition: destruction of private property…»

I hope everyone understands that if private property is destroyed somewhere, i.e. take away, then in another place (from customers who paid for the work of the authors), it arrives, i.e. increases. Those who do not understand this "law of preservation of property" can remember how the Jews carried out privatization in Russia in the early 90s. That's the whole answer. Although, it can be supplemented a little, to expand, so to speak, horizons ...

If you look at least a little bit at the revolutions organized in France and in other countries, and compare the methodology with the modern so-called. “orange revolutions”, then we will see an amazing coincidence! Moreover, communist slogans "Equality, Brotherhood, Happiness" were used by the Jews when organizing the first revolution (coup d'etat) in Persia in the 4th century BC! And then - again during the second coup and robbery of Persia in the 5th century AD. (they then substituted the vizier Mazdak in their place).

Why was the USSR created?

The Treaty on the Formation of the USSR was signed on December 29, 1922, and the next day, on December 30 of the same year, the First All-Union Congress of Soviets promptly and unanimously approved it.

Knowing who and for what purpose created the communist idea and put it into practice in , the answer to the question posed can be obtained almost automatically: the USSR was created by the Jews for enslavement, subsequent robbery and destruction Russian Empire, the Russian people and subsequently the whole white race on the planet. You can read about how the founders of the ideology of communism actually treated the Slavs in general and the Russians and Russia in particular in the article by A. Ulyanov. Hatred of the highest degree and a wild desire to destroy these "unhistorical", reactionary peoples, standing in the way of the world revolution, as "special enemies of democracy."

It was for this that he came to Russia with a lot of money, with weapons and hired bandits from New York Leiba Bronstein(Leo Trotsky), on whose conscience later there were millions of ruined lives of Russian people. Leiba Trotsky, among many others, was supplied with money, weapons and bandits by his distant relative Jacob Schiff- American banker and pathological Russophobe.

Comrade Bronstein was the ideological enemy of everything Russian and did not hide this, openly expressing the aspirations of his sponsors: “... We must turn Russia into one inhabited by white Negroes, to whom we will give such a tyranny that the most terrible despots of the East never dreamed of. The only difference is that this tyranny will not be from the right, but from the left, and not white, but red, for we will shed such streams of blood before which everyone will shudder and turn pale. human losses capitalist wars...

During the civil war, the chairman of the Revolutionary Military Council, Leiba Trotsky, was actively helped by both Americans and Europeans. They even sent him a special armored train, equipped with the most modern means of communication at that time and many other wonders. Here is how Leiba Davydovich himself wrote about this miracle of technology: “... It was a flying control apparatus. The train had a secretariat, printing house, telegraph, radio, power plant, library, garage and bathhouse. The train was so heavy that it went with two engines. Then I had to break it into two trains ... "

Trotsky managed to do a lot during the time that he was actually at the helm of the USSR (Trotsky's Revolutionary Military Council was a body of power parallel to Lenin's Council of People's Commissars). And he would complete his work - until the last Russian if, fortunately for us, he had not been stopped Joseph Dzhugashvili(Stalin). Comrade Stalin, after conferring with his other comrades, rightly reasoned that, since they had seized power in Russia, it was useless to give the country and all the goods completely to the American and English, but it was better to try to reign to your heart's content, especially since the banksters investment in "Revolution" returned, and even with huge interest.

Stalin and his comrades also had plans to rule the world. They sought to create the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics of the World ( USSR). Speaking to the delegates of the Fifth Congress of the Comintern on July 17, 1924, the chairman of the executive committee of the Comintern, Grigory Zinoviev, said: "There is no victory yet, and we still have to conquer five-sixths of the earth's land mass so that there is a Union of Soviet Socialist Republics". It is clearly seen that the name of the state does not contain even a hint of either nationality or territorial affiliation. And the purpose of this state was quite clearly expressed in the Declaration on its formation, namely: “... it will serve as a true bulwark against world capitalism and a new decisive step along the path of uniting the working people of all countries in the world Socialist Soviet Republic» . The slogan of the USSR was the call: "Proletarians of all countries, unite!", And the anthem until 1943 was the "International".

This is how the country appeared, which will soon be called USSR, and in which everything leading positions have always belonged to Jews, some of whom were accomplices of a comrade Trotsky(Trotskyists were mostly Jews Sephardim), and some were accomplices of a comrade Stalin(these were mostly Jews Ashkenazim). In order to get documentary evidence of who actually led the Union, I recommend reading the wonderful book by Andrei Diky "Jews in Russia and the USSR".

What was wrong in the USSR?

Trotsky's Sephardim were constantly at war with Stalin's Ashkenazim. It was an old war Levites managed to arrange in order to be able to somehow manage their hyperactive fellow tribesmen. And although in 1937 Comrade Stalin slightly thinned the ranks of the Trotskyists, this struggle has not subsided to this day and has a decisive influence on most of the events taking place in Russia. We need to be well aware of what USSR created by Jews NOT for Russians but for yourself. In addition, it must be remembered that the Sephardic Trotskyists are still carrying out the task of total destruction on the planet. And the Ashkenazim do not interfere with this, but only try to make sure that enough slaves remain in Russia for them. Those. in fact, the Russian people are hostile and Trotskyists(Sephardi), and Stalinists(Ashkenazi). But the former want to destroy the Rus completely, while the latter agree to leave a little Rus for their own service. That's the whole difference between true creators USSR!

Now, let us briefly analyze, point by point, several specific statements about what and how it was in the USSR, especially since the author lived almost all his life in and personally observed and was a participant in much that happened there. Let me remind you that I am trying to analyze what really happened to us in the USSR, and not what it seems to someone today or what some circles want us to think.

1. Public ownership of the means of production. It - clean water deception(enemy propaganda), because, apart from these words, the “general people” never had anything else. The Constitution did indeed common phrase, but there was no clarification what kind of people in the Soviet multinational state is this owner, and nowhere was it written exactly how this nationwide form of ownership is implemented. In fact, none of the people had even the slightest opportunity to dispose of any part of public property, and therefore, in fact, was not its owner or co-owner! CPSU just powdered brains semi-literate population, masking the fact that Russia was the real owner, which had long lived under communism, even during the war. So, there was no “public property” in the USSR for anything, and Nikolai Levashov quite rightly wrote that "socialism is state capitalism, plus a slave system!"

4. Free housing. And this is a brilliant example of communist ingenuity and Jewish shamelessness! If in the West, almost the entire population has long been buying housing, cars and much more on credit (there are big problems with a local loan, because 200-300% is paid for a loan), then in the USSR it was done it's the other way around! Workers received allegedly free housing, but after standing in line for 15-20 years, and in fact forward paying the cost of housing, and education, and honey. service, and everything else "free" with their hard work throughout their lives. That's so cunning "free" was in the USSR. And so much was shown and written about the quality of the housing being built at one time that only the blind-deaf-dumb did not know about it. By the way, today they build housing almost the same way as it used to be in the Soviet Union. And not because they don’t know how, but because they deliberately deceive apartment buyers, trying to save money wherever possible and impossible, starting from the thickness of the walls, and ending with the lack of ventilation, central heating, inferior windows and doors! But the prices for this shame are set as if everything was made of pure gold ...

5. The country's governance system was truly democratic. Many probably remember that the country was called Soviet, i.e. all power was formally concentrated in all sorts of councils, ranging from settlement and rural, and ending with the Supreme Council. This was done so that the official could avoid personal responsibility for the decisions made: they say, the Council decided so, and "bribes are smooth from him." And the real power everywhere belonged party bodies. The small party god of the regional scale was a real king in his fiefdom, but at the same time he was completely subordinate to another god, who was sitting on the floor above; and so on, up to . So they lived: decisions were made by some, executed by others, and popular discontent, which very often took place in the USSR, was suppressed by others. Reading newspapers with various Decrees and Decisions, it was impossible to understand anything, just like today, and only much later the picture began to gradually clear up ...

6. Real poverty reigned in the USSR! Of course not everywhere! In the Union, in addition to party secretaries and instructors, workers of numerous Soviets lived well, and, most importantly, a populous caste of trade workers. More or less, the heads of enterprises and organizations, workers in hazardous professions, and very few artists and writers could make ends meet. And the bulk of the population (percent 90-95 ) made ends meet with great difficulty. For example, my parents were doctors with higher education. But they were honest and decent people and did not stoop to extorting gifts from the sick, i.e. lived on wages. Therefore, I remember that, although we lived very modestly, for many years my mother could not make ends meet in the family budget and constantly borrowed several rubles from her neighbors "before payday". And this despite the fact that dad never spent money on because he didn’t drink because of a stomach ulcer he got as a student. The salaries of people were extremely low, and the population was deliberately lowered by such a system of remuneration both professionally, and morally, and ethically. In order to live more or less tolerably, people were forced to "chemize"- steal, i.e. break the law, become criminals! By this very Jewish Soviet authority, following the precepts, reduced speed or even completely stopped evolutionary development population, slowly but surely turning it into a large herd of rams (rams).

7. Nepotism and protectionism reigned in the USSR. It was possible to get to any leading positions only (!) By patronage. And to positions, relatively speaking, higher than the head of the housing office, one could get only by Jewish patronage, which non-Jews could never get in principle. The only exceptions are those cases when it was impossible to do without a goy-specialist, when he had to pull all the work on himself. And basically, all any significant positions were occupied by people of revolutionary nationality. One of the confirmations of this may well be the following example, which I saw for several years in the main building of the Donetsk Polytechnic Institute, where I happened to study at one time. There, on the long wall near the Rector's office, there were large portraits all former rectors of this once highly respected university. And passing by this gallery hundreds of times, I gradually read almost all the names of the “patriarchs”, which, of course, turned out to be every single one. Then I did not see anything unusual in this, after all, we were taught internationalism from the cradle. And now, remembering this little touch of my student life, I also remembered that all vice-rectors, all deans and all heads of departments at that time were also Jews and… communists. And then I noticed that the secretaries of the district committees, city committees, regional committees, and the chairmen of the councils of all levels, and all the rest of the “bosses” were either Jews (in most cases) or representatives Semitic peoples(Armenians, Georgians, Chechens and others (more than 30 peoples)).

8. In the USSR there was utter lawlessness and total. This was inevitable in conditions when all power was concentrated in the hands of party functionaries who did not bear before anyone no responsibility for your actions. Therefore, it was not the Law that reigned in the USSR, but the real tyranny of party secretaries and punitive organs. And the entire population was forced to submit to this evil will. Because, with any disobedience, any person could simply be destroyed, depriving him of his job and, accordingly, his livelihood, or putting him in prison or a psychiatric hospital on fabricated grounds or even without them. Party bosses were not afraid of anyone and nothing, because they diligently performed "party line", which possessed sufficient forces to quickly neutralize any person or organization. You can get some idea of ​​the level of corruption in the USSR from the articles, and many others.

9. In science, culture and art almost everything was occupied by Jews. Accurate estimates will surely appear someday, but offhand we can say that about 90% of all figures in these areas were Jews. One of the documentary evidence of the above is the text of the memorandum of Agitprop of the Central Committee M.A. Suslov "On the selection and placement of personnel in the Academy of Sciences of the USSR" dated October 23, 1950, where it is also said in a direct test that the Academy is sabotaging work on the most important areas... To clarify the situation with culture, you can read a short article "Russian culture with a Jewish mark". And be sure to read the wonderful books of the real Russian writer Ivan Drozdov, who began his writing career immediately after the Great Patriotic War, and became a victim of the victorious jewish wars for Russian literature.

This is not a complete list of what those people who sincerely regret the collapse of the USSR do not know or have forgotten. As Vladimir Putin very aptly and accurately noted recently: “Whoever does not regret the collapse of the USSR has no heart, and the one who wishes for its revival has no head!” But, besides the CPSU, there was also the KGB, there was the Ministry of Internal Affairs, there was the OBKhSS, there was the Army, in which all leadership positions always occupied by people who defended the interests of the ruling, and not Russian people. Let us recall, for example, in August 2008, organized by the United States and Israel: the military authorities of Russia did not dare to resist the Zionists! Vladimir Putin, being at that time the Prime Minister of the Russian Federation (President D. Medvedev was then the Supreme Commander), urgently left the Olympics in China and flew to organize a rebuff to the aggressor! And only then Russia began to fight ... Those who wish can always find themselves a lot of additional and confirming materials on the Web and make sure that he was really slave state, only slavery was organized not as shown in the movies - with chains and shackles, but in a modern way, when slaves consider themselves free people and work independently for the slave owner! ..

Who destroyed the USSR and how?

The USSR was a creation of the Jewish financial mafia, it performed its functions of keeping a huge country in slavery very well, and, of course, no one was going to destroy it! The imitation of the confrontation between the "two systems" was necessary to separate the peoples of the planet and instill hatred among the peoples of the whole world for the Russians, whom the Jews exposed as the creators. And, of course, neither the Sephardim, led by the Rockefeller family, nor the Ashkenazim, commanded by the Rothschilds, nor the Levites, nor other clans more high level had no plans to destroy the "system of socialism", with the help of which a good half of the white race of the planet was kept in slavery ...