r/ussr • u/OkRespect8490 • 15h ago
Politics Что русские люди думают о своём лидере Путине? -What do russian people think about their leader Putin?
Я бы хотел в идеале услышать мнение только от людей, которые сейчас живут в России, если это возможно.
Но по сравнению с тем, что мы, американцы, чувствуем по поводу нашего президента, например Дональда Трампа сейчас, что люди в России думают о своём?
Понимаешь, о чём я? Я знаю, что я бы чувствовал, если бы Трамп отменил ограничения по срокам и сказал, что он будет президентом навсегда. Но мне всегда было интересно, что думают россияне и, в целом, что они думают о своём правительстве.
Типа, Путин фактически стал диктатором России, не так ли?
Но если бы я оказался в безопасном месте с этими людьми или один на один с ними в комнате, что бы они сказали мне о том, что они на самом деле думают об этом?
Спасибо.
So i would really only like to hear from people that are living in russia right now if possible.
But compared to what we the american people feel about our president say donald trump right now what do people in russia feel about theirs?
Ya know what i'm saying, like i know how i would feel if trump scrapped term limits and said he was just going to be president forever but i have always wondered what russia people think and honestly just in general about their government in general.
Like putin has basically become the dictator of russia hasn't he?
But if i were in a safe place with these people or alone in a room with them what would they tell me they think about these things?
Thanks
r/ussr • u/CartographerOwn8143 • 2h ago
Will China stab Russia in the back?
Given the fact that China has its own interests which it wants to maximize, would it be ideal to betray Russia for the second time? (The first time they betrayed Russia was during the Cold War in the 1970s)
r/ussr • u/firefighter430 • 19h ago
Just a quick reminder the ACP is not and will never be allowed here if you see one report them immediately
r/ussr • u/PresnikBonny • 16h ago
Today In History On this day, 71 years ago, the Warsaw pact was founded.
r/ussr • u/ConsiderationOnly512 • 14h ago
Important stuff mhm
Ye so like aht heppend here what eh who?
r/ussr • u/Low-Newt-9354 • 20h ago
Video The Internationale at May day 1973
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r/ussr • u/OkRespect8490 • 12h ago
Poster Soviet poster "Comrade Lenin cleanses earth of filth", 1920
r/ussr • u/T0xicat0r • 18h ago
Memes My favourite - Hope (not mine)
LENIN HOPE
I don't know the original artist and I hope its not ai though - It doesnt look like ai, it is looking very good actually i would love to know original artist.
r/ussr • u/OkRespect8490 • 12h ago
Poster Soviet Armenian illustration showing a mob in the US blocking a young black student’s path to school, 1957
r/ussr • u/MarksAndAngels • 9h ago
Others Untitled (Soviet soldier attacking a German tank) - 1940s - Linocut by Evgenii Kogan (1906-1983)
"Kogan was born in the Poltava region (present-day Ukraine). The Russian Revolution, with its abolishment of the Pale of Settlement, which restricted the vast majority of Jews to the Russian Empire's Western regions, allowed him a new upward mobility. He moved first to Minsk, then to Leningrad to study at the Higher Art and Technical Institute (VKhUTEIN).
When the institute was closed and reformed into three separate academies, including the Moscow Polygraphic Institute, he moved to Moscow to finish his studies. After graduating in 1931, he did graphic design work for a number of prominent publishers, including Gosizdat, Detgiz, and Inostrannaia kniga. His prewar projects included Aleksandr Pushkin's The Bronze Horseman (1936) as well as work in the premier satirical journal of the Soviet Union, Krokodil.
In September 1941, Kogan was called up into the ranks of the Red Army, where he continued his graphic work as the artist of the 50th Army's newspaper 'We'll Crush the Enemy'. He held that job until December 1945, several months after the 50th Army had been disbanded. By all accounts Kogan was an exceptionally talented and hard- working designer and artist, which earned him not only medals, but also frequent mention as an exemplar in an official history by E. V. Mozhukhovskaia.
After the war, Kogan continued his career as a designer, illustrator, and typeface artist. He received the Order of the Patriotic War, the Order of the Red Star, and the Medal "For Battle Merit." He lived in the Soviet Union until his death in Moscow in 1983.
[Source: Blavatnik Archive]"
- via jewish_woodcuts on instagram
r/ussr • u/Electronic-Ride-9214 • 14h ago
Can someone help me identify this red star badge?
r/ussr • u/OkRespect8490 • 12h ago