Nicolae Ceausescu LAST SPEECH english subtitles 2/2

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  • Опубликовано: 22 авг 2019
  • Nicolae Ceauşescu (Romanian pronunciation: [nikoˈla.e tʃa.uˈʃesku]; 26 January 1918 25 December 1989) was a Romanian politician who was the Secretary General of the Romanian Communist Party from 1965 to 1989, President of the Council of State from 1967, and President of Romania from 1974 to 1989.
    His rule was marked in the first decade by an open policy towards Western Europe and the United States, which deviated from that of the other Warsaw Pact states during the Cold War. He continued a trend first established by his predecessor, Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, who had tactfully coaxed the Soviet Union into withdrawing troops from Romania in 1958.[1]
    Ceauşescu's second decade was characterized by an increasingly erratic personality cult, nationalism and a deterioration in foreign relations with the Western powers as well as the Soviet Union. Ceauşescu's government was overthrown in a December 1989 military coup, and he and his wife were executed following a televised two-hour session by a kangaroo court.[2]

Комментарии • 1,5 тыс.

  • @damshek
    @damshek 4 года назад +2170

    After this speech he ran away, was caught and was executed 4 days later, still wearing the same clothes.
    One of the most underrated moments of documented history, this.

    • @Marketoromagnolo
      @Marketoromagnolo 4 года назад +71

      both him and his wife were so dirty and ugly

    • @Marketoromagnolo
      @Marketoromagnolo 4 года назад +11

      @Nuren you hate people who tell the truth

    • @Stigsens1
      @Stigsens1 4 года назад +61

      Whole regime was so corrupt, death was too easy a punishment for the leaders, life in a shithole would be better

    • @macioluko9484
      @macioluko9484 4 года назад +55

      Agreed. I truly believe that detailed documentation of such events is discouraged by the current elite...
      They would not want to give an armed population any ideas...

    • @johncronin9540
      @johncronin9540 4 года назад +89

      Marketoromagnolo What they looked like is irrelevant. It’s their tyranny, brutality, and the crimes against their own people that define them. And they seemed incredibly out of touch with this speech, deluding themselves that they could turn back the clock to 1968, and his speech criticizing the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia. Most of this speech was just a repetition, over and over, of the same tired slogans. As one Romanian put it, in a documentary, what good was a small rise in pay, when the stores are empty of food.
      Obviously, the couple hadn’t been paying attention to events across the Soviet Union the previous few years (since Gorbachev came to power), and specifically during the previous few months, as Communist regimes toppled throughout Eastern Europe, and that dramatic night when the Berlin Wall came down. They should have known that the game was up then. But that’s what happens when one surrounds oneself with no one but sycophants and toadies.

  • @vladibalan
    @vladibalan 2 года назад +394

    Dictator manual, page 56, paragraph 7: You must sprinkle "independence", "sovereignty", "the people", [country_name] or [ideology_name] every two sentences for a well rounded, satisfying speech.

  • @dannyformello324
    @dannyformello324 3 года назад +289

    When you have to meet the word count for an essay

    • @fpostolache
      @fpostolache 4 месяца назад +4

      🤣 he had only 4 classes and then was a shoemaker apprentice.

  • @tehdawson
    @tehdawson 3 года назад +731

    Ceauşescu: "Better to die in battle, in full glory than to once again be slaves upon your ancient ground, and we must fight to live free and independent!"
    Crowd: He's right. Let's rush the stage!

    • @BagasPrakoso19
      @BagasPrakoso19 2 года назад +22

      TIMISOARAAA!!!

    • @wozslater7695
      @wozslater7695 2 года назад

      @@BagasPrakoso19 Yobunnywrote 🙂

    • @familybusiness1224
      @familybusiness1224 2 года назад

      The crowd was dumbaf and didn't understand what he was talking about. Now we know and we wish he were alive. I personally apologize for what they did to him, he didn't deserve it. He was fighting for the freedom of our country 😕

    • @wozslater7695
      @wozslater7695 2 года назад +1

      @@familybusiness1224 Many, tho not all, people who are murdered, didn't deserve it, often, tho not always, those that killed them did deserve to die, and eventually they do anyway but, not soon enough 🙂

    • @AndroidGuru13
      @AndroidGuru13 Год назад +3

      And now Romania is the slaves of European Union, only difference is that the Romanian state doesn't own the factories and land in which they work at but foreigners from European Union.
      I.e. their largest bank and company in the country is owned by the French, their largest automotive company Dacia is owned by the French, their largest Petroleum company is owned by the Austrians.... Go down the list yourself and you will see what I'm talking about.

  • @Chimay2000
    @Chimay2000 3 года назад +337

    Sometimes I watch this to remind myself of the fact politicians aren't untouchable.

    • @ericcarlson3746
      @ericcarlson3746 2 года назад +2

      thats why there are..... elections. but not for this dude

    • @AlyphRat
      @AlyphRat 2 года назад

      @@ericcarlson3746
      Elections don't work anymore, it devolved into a meaningless popularity contest, even if they lose, they still have more power, influence, and wealth than you.

    • @0x777
      @0x777 Год назад +7

      Yeah, gives you that warm, fuzzy feeling inside, doesn't it?

    • @wyettmuth8411
      @wyettmuth8411 Год назад +7

      It looks like a spontaneous uprising but in actuality his own government wanted him gone and they retained power once he was. It was also was helped along by both the KGB and CIA, so don’t let it give you a warm fuzzy feeling

    • @HrvojeBan
      @HrvojeBan Год назад

      Politicians are only humans and humans are not bulletproof. 😉

  • @JackPomi
    @JackPomi Год назад +66

    Words "integrity" and "independence": exist
    Ceausescu: *I'll take your entire stock*

    • @fpostolache
      @fpostolache 4 месяца назад

      🤣 wait in the row 🤣

  • @rafaeliacsity5315
    @rafaeliacsity5315 4 года назад +177

    3:42 He quotes a verse from the actual hymn of Romania, which wasn't really permitted under his rule.

  • @chenzirui1520
    @chenzirui1520 4 года назад +145

    Sarcastically,the proverb he cited in 3:50 encouraged people to fight against him ,not the effect what he wanted--continue following his leadership

  • @Dinnyeify
    @Dinnyeify 2 года назад +222

    Ceausescu: "Better die in battle, in full glory, than once again be slaves upon our ancient ground"
    Millions of Romanians: You know what? He's right! *executes Ceausescu*

    • @emitizmo7456
      @emitizmo7456 2 года назад +1

      He got overthrown a literally week after he went in front of people in a speech like this and announced that "Romania has paid off all its foreign debts to international scoundrels who enslaved almost every nation in the world. Romania now owes nothing to no one. Romania is finally free". And then they got him. :)

    • @ivangracia151
      @ivangracia151 Год назад +2

      Lmao!

    • @artv.9989
      @artv.9989 10 месяцев назад +2

      Acum suntem slcavi in vechiul nos pamant iarasi :(

    • @claudiu8426
      @claudiu8426 8 месяцев назад

      @@artv.9989Comentariu infect de troll putinist jegos.

    • @optic_wt
      @optic_wt 4 месяца назад +2

      ​@@artv.9989 de ce? Ai alegeri democratice, poti sa protestezi, sa critici guvernul, poti sa spui ce vrei.

  • @aviaxis6261
    @aviaxis6261 2 года назад +266

    fun fact, he is quoting the poetry: "Desteapta-te Romane!" - "Wake up Romanian!" which is to become the National Anthem of Romania after the Revolution. The song and poetry were banned by Ceausescu because, aside from the verses he is quoting here, they also speak about fighting against the "the barbarian Tyrant" who enslaved the Romanians. Ceausescu was too afraid he could be assimilated with the figure of a Tyrant depicted in the poetry. I would say quoting the poetry here was a bad move for him, showing that he probably wasn't aware of what people actually felt about him.

    • @BennygoatHistory
      @BennygoatHistory 2 года назад +1

      thanks for the information! could you elaborate on who "Tiran" is please?

    • @georgeyoutube7580
      @georgeyoutube7580 2 года назад +1

      @@BennygoatHistory it means tyrant and there are quite a few. For example we learn in school about a guy named Alexandry Lăpușneanu. Basically he invited his enemies to a feast and butchered them game of thrones style using foreign mercenaries. Ended up poisoned by a priest while being sick cos priest thought he's off-center and capable to purge the church. He wanted to live, he asked God to live and promised he will give up the throne and become a monk. When he got better he threatened the church for making him monk and got poisoned by a priest

    • @BennygoatHistory
      @BennygoatHistory 2 года назад +2

      @@georgeyoutube7580 woah what a character, thanks for the story! history can be filled with such terrible crazy people that you think it would all be from a story book, I will look more into this Alexandru Lăpușneanu guy

    • @antoniozavaldski
      @antoniozavaldski Год назад +3

      @@BennygoatHistory "tiran" = "tyrant"

    • @0x777
      @0x777 Год назад

      One should think someone who knew damn well that he's seen as the tyrant he is would notice when people are about to kick his ass.
      Fortunately he was even too stupid to notice that.

  • @redacted628
    @redacted628 Год назад +95

    Correct me if I'm wrong but I think he might have mentioned Romania's sovereignty and independendence somewhere along the speech

  • @kaminobatto
    @kaminobatto 4 года назад +832

    I have very vivid memories of his death. I remember seeing people spitting at his picture and his and his wife's bodies lying in the streets after being executed all over the news. I couldn't believe that a ruler can have such a death! At that age, I truly believed that their kind was untouchable! And although I was merely 6.5 years old, I knew that I had witnessed something significant and despite only seeing it then, I still carry the memory very vividly in my head as if it happened just yesterday!

    • @kimilsungia7507
      @kimilsungia7507 4 года назад +16

      Disgraceful. May Ceausescu rest in peace.

    • @BB-kt5eb
      @BB-kt5eb 4 года назад +9

      What are the people chanting?

    • @BB-kt5eb
      @BB-kt5eb 4 года назад +145

      Kimilsungia
      He was a monster who lived like a billionaire while his people starved.

    • @madapro03
      @madapro03 4 года назад +39

      @@BB-kt5eb Things haven't changed much after he died. The tables just turned. Now are other billionaire while some villages have no electricity and no roads. I find the ones who followed worse than him. They just milked the cow, never fed it.

    • @0000oo1
      @0000oo1 4 года назад +15

      Must have been deja vu when you heard about Gaddafi.

  •  4 года назад +658

    Did he mention anything about integrity and independance of Romania ?

    • @krxs97
      @krxs97 4 года назад +55

      nope, don't think he said it enough...

    • @StrongyHot
      @StrongyHot 3 года назад +22

      Favorite song of all autocrats

    • @dustgreylynx
      @dustgreylynx 3 года назад +9

      He mentioned unity though once ot twice

    • @mattgmail5349
      @mattgmail5349 3 года назад +12

      😂 he forgot also to mention the sovereignty of Romania

    • @getbeget-_-
      @getbeget-_- 3 года назад +5

      He mention but in vain ,fake news rules worldwide.

  • @botatobias2539
    @botatobias2539 3 года назад +287

    Romanian here, thought I'd clarify things.
    What you see here is the core of party activists remaining in the square after the bulk of the crowd dispersed in part one. So obviously they chant FOR him. The recurring chant here seems to be "Vom munci și vom lupta, Țara o vom apăra!" (We will work and we will fight, the country we will defend!)

    • @vegasdad
      @vegasdad 3 года назад +49

      Also, local workers were bused in and forced to hold signs and cheer for him under the threat of losing their jobs.

    • @19iason19
      @19iason19 2 года назад +31

      @Ruby Tuesday he got killed four days after this speech. In all over Romania, fights started. So yes, the people did a lot in 1989. Not only in Romania but in all former east block countries. GDR, Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia

    • @linda10989
      @linda10989 2 года назад +14

      @@19iason19It seemed once the Berlin Wall came down, so did (most if not all) the governments in eastern Europe. It was a very exciting time, especially for my parents who fled Latvia after WW2.

    • @A_L_E_X_A_N_D_E_R_356
      @A_L_E_X_A_N_D_E_R_356 2 года назад +1

      Hmm it seems like a lot of "party activists" out there..to be just "party activists"..

    • @januszinternetu3443
      @januszinternetu3443 2 года назад +10

      @@19iason19 I'm from Poland. Communists in my country wee prepared. They started talks with West in 1980 (Jaruzelski and Rotschild). So, what we have now in Poland is replacement of Soviet Union with Soviet European Union. Same shit, different day.

  • @JohnAsparagus96
    @JohnAsparagus96 Год назад +49

    The fact that he offered to raise pensions and salaries is almost like something a cartoon villain would do.

    • @user-py7wp6nw9h
      @user-py7wp6nw9h Год назад +5

      he was ...people were scared of a cartoon villain. Kinda like Biden

    • @robrob9050
      @robrob9050 Месяц назад

      He almost regained control, but eventually went downhill.

  • @BarEscm
    @BarEscm 4 года назад +635

    I swear half of this speech was comprised of just 5 words: comrades, independence, freedom, sovereignity and socialism; and the other half looks like a reenactment of Adenoid Hynkel's first speech in "The Great Dictator".

    • @AnonAnonAnon
      @AnonAnonAnon 4 года назад +15

      The history of most dictators usually ends in blood and tears. In today's world, a country's internal security departments probably have constant headaches with information about plots to assassinate leaders or change regimes. As an example, I bet it goes on in the likes of North Korea all the time. Just takes one disgruntled individual, and what percentage of NKs are bored, depressed and pissed off knowing there must be more to life than what they have?

    • @johncronin9540
      @johncronin9540 4 года назад +42

      Iván Barbeitos I think Ceausescu was trying to recapture the “magic” of his 1968 speech, where he dared to criticize the Soviet Union for its invasion of Czechoslovakia. Essentially, the Soviets just decided to ignore that speech, while they went about their business. Ceausescu used that moment to become the darling of the West, as the Communist dictator who “dared” to speak up to the Soviets.
      But 1989 was not 1968, and all his years in power blinded Ceausescu to the reality he had created around him, building huge palaces, and warehousing much of the population of his country in massive apartment buildings which didn’t even have plumbing for toilets.
      When he traveled to France he was impressed with Versailles, and wanted to surpass it with that huge palace, but he apparently didn’t bother to learn that Versailles helped pave the way to the French Revolution, which cost Louis XIV’s descendant (Louis XVI) his throne, and then his life.
      But you are right: in his speech, Ceausescu just seemed to repeat the same old tired cliches and bromides over and over, as if by simply repeating them, he could persuade Romanians that their popular revolution would cost Romania her sovereignty. The problem was that by this point, the Romanians knew they weren’t revolting against some outside regime, but against the Ceausescu regime itself. His corruption, economic disasters, (lack of food, heat, and electricity) while he built his palaces, and brutality sealed his fate, and that of his wife.

    • @damianbylightning6823
      @damianbylightning6823 4 года назад +19

      The Soviets were still briefing against him and his use to the west had just ended. That sealed his fate.
      He is important because he reminds us that racism, xenophobia, suspicion, paranoia and state control is not just confined to fascism. It is, frankly, more evident on 'the left' - and an honest audit of racism in Marxist and socialist circles seems to challenge the reality that leftist distorians have vandalised our universities with. Socialism and fascism, are and estranged ugly sisters.
      The race politics of Romania's communist period was a maze of nonsense and coded messages. Contemporary western communists are again building the same delusions and playing the same game. We cannot allow these 'anti-racists' and anti-fascists' to get anywhere near power.
      I know people prefer to stick to cliches about socialism being the opposite of fascism - but this moron is yet more proof that the world is just a bit more complicated than that cliche allows.

    • @camiloacosta
      @camiloacosta 4 года назад +5

      Nicolas Maduro has the same speech, exactly as you hear all this shit.... they are the same shit...

    • @LARiots1992
      @LARiots1992 4 года назад +2

      _"Demokratzi schtunk! Liberte schtunk! Frie sprachen schtunk!"_
      Romania/Tomainia....coincidence?

  • @DamianRangi
    @DamianRangi 4 года назад +104

    Legend has it he was still saying "hallo" and she was still saying "silence" as they were executed

    • @drehder9256
      @drehder9256 4 года назад +5

      What a lame joke

    • @0x777
      @0x777 Год назад +7

      And he got his wish.
      After the shot, there was finally silence. At least from him.

    • @Clipper_Dames
      @Clipper_Dames Год назад +2

      What an awesome joke!

  • @jamestinsley3110
    @jamestinsley3110 4 года назад +489

    Love the part where he starts trying to buy them off.

    • @carmensavu5122
      @carmensavu5122 4 года назад +84

      More money doesn't mean much when there's no food in the shops to buy with that money.

    • @MichielBruijn
      @MichielBruijn 4 года назад +7

      Wait untill utopian UBI will be implemented world wide! Doesn't that sound great!
      Free money for everyone!

    • @jameretief8327
      @jameretief8327 3 года назад +24

      With what was then practically Monopoly play money, and they knew it.

    • @DJSwezzleMusic
      @DJSwezzleMusic 3 года назад +10

      Actually Ceausescu managed to pay off the IMF loan by 1989. If Ceausescu would have still been in charge, he could have done great things.

    • @jameretief8327
      @jameretief8327 3 года назад +48

      @@DJSwezzleMusic yeah he would have outdone the state he admired the most, North Korea! You measure him on debt payoff and yet don’t mention how he acquired that debt and how he squeezed his serfs to get that great credit rating! Nice to know your priorities.

  • @Hale-Bopp
    @Hale-Bopp 2 года назад +159

    If you add the total amount of claps made by each person present in that crowd that's the total amount of how many times he also said independence sovereignty and integrity in his speech.

    • @razoblicavanje4231
      @razoblicavanje4231 9 месяцев назад

      They were what he said. When the US and Britain installed a puppet regime, Romania went under colonization.

  • @A_10_PaAng_111
    @A_10_PaAng_111 4 года назад +134

    Reminds me of that episode of Gillian's island where Gilligan dreams that he's a dictator on a balcony giving a speech. He says to the crowd, "I promise you this, that and the other thing!" Then the crowd erupts into a cheer.

    • @MasterSanders
      @MasterSanders 3 года назад +4

      It seems almost exactly the same.

  • @LEGASItv
    @LEGASItv 4 года назад +356

    Currently reading Yuval Noah Harari's Homo Deus (2017)... This book brings me here 😊 You? Algorithm? 😂 answer me! Alo alo alo alo alo (x 1,000 times) 😂

    • @KleineFrauOhneName
      @KleineFrauOhneName 4 года назад +7

      Richard Angelus this book brought me here too 🙋🏻‍♀️

    • @LEGASItv
      @LEGASItv 4 года назад +2

      @@KleineFrauOhneName just finished it. Chilling contents.

    • @sajeenashrestha848
      @sajeenashrestha848 4 года назад +2

      Same here😂

    • @LEGASItv
      @LEGASItv 4 года назад

      @@sajeenashrestha848 alo alo alo 😆

    • @moaguitar
      @moaguitar 4 года назад +2

      This book brought me here too :)

  • @adrianshephard378
    @adrianshephard378 3 года назад +91

    I swear this is me when I'm writing an assignment for class. Just throwing random words together that mean nothing.

  • @ExclusiveLM
    @ExclusiveLM 4 года назад +166

    4 days later he and his wife next to him in this video were shot to death by a firing squad of the Romanian Army.

    • @parkercushingable
      @parkercushingable 4 года назад +20

      It was filmed too

    • @grunchlk
      @grunchlk 4 года назад +30

      Alls well that ends well.

    • @vernonbrowne6127
      @vernonbrowne6127 4 года назад +5

      GOOD!

    • @RolandNSI
      @RolandNSI 4 года назад +8

      My beloved country has been sold out by corrupt humans in the name of the "saint dollar".
      I will never forgive them.

    • @SillyUwUBilly
      @SillyUwUBilly 4 года назад +2

      Romania ?

  • @kanteannightmare
    @kanteannightmare 4 года назад +225

    "…for the unity of all working people" ever notice how the people who often say those words aren't working people?

    • @ZaRCoK1984
      @ZaRCoK1984 4 года назад +9

      You are wrong

    • @MrRight1297
      @MrRight1297 3 года назад +37

      Most communists nowadays are upper middle class kids anyways, so yeah, it's kind of par for the course.

    • @RobbStark_
      @RobbStark_ 3 года назад +8

      Yes, Marx and Lenin are good examples.

    • @idiocrat3744
      @idiocrat3744 3 года назад +11

      @@RobbStark_ Lenin and Ceausescu are different type of people. If Nicolae was just hearing some "good" news from his securitate general, Lenin himself talked with the crowd after the speeches, ate the same food, didn't have luxury goods (except the car).

    • @muhammadashshiddiq8752
      @muhammadashshiddiq8752 2 года назад +2

      @John S. and he lives in luxury like absolute monarchs, you can see the contents of his house which is full of luxury

  • @Alejo_755
    @Alejo_755 4 года назад +50

    Saw the first part some time ago and just realized you uploaded the second recently lol great timing.

    • @AparatorulPoporului
      @AparatorulPoporului  4 года назад +23

      It was uploaded on his times after the first part, but deleted later by youtube complains (copyrights or political interests).

  • @MaximumHeresey
    @MaximumHeresey 4 года назад +43

    Alright, alright, I get it!
    "Indipendenchi" means independence in Romanian!

    • @shinobisr3339
      @shinobisr3339 2 года назад +7

      independent=independent
      independenţi=independentzi=independent persons (plural)
      independenţă=independentză (ă is schwa sound)= independence
      hope this helps

  • @sveinsigurdgismarvik4445
    @sveinsigurdgismarvik4445 4 года назад +48

    A trip to China and Norrhkorea in 1971 he got inspire to have totally control.that of his own people in Romania.

  • @Sean-me4fv
    @Sean-me4fv 4 года назад +326

    You're ALL getting an extra 100 lei tomorrow so you'll all still be as equally poor as each other tomorrow.

    • @Komotau4691
      @Komotau4691 4 года назад +7

      In USA you can died if you have no money for doctor so this regime was still better in this way :D

    • @OUigot
      @OUigot 4 года назад +47

      @@Komotau4691 - Wow? You really don't understand anything about what Ceausescu and his socialists did to the Romanian people, you think free healthcare, it wasn't free.

    • @Sean-me4fv
      @Sean-me4fv 4 года назад +30

      Komotau4691 I would rather live in the US with freedom and democracy, than live under a communist regime like this.

    • @Sean-me4fv
      @Sean-me4fv 4 года назад +2

      Komotau4691 You must be absolutely kidding me

    • @Komotau4691
      @Komotau4691 4 года назад +1

      @@OUigot I dont think his regime was good but in all socialist block healthcare was free in my opinion.

  • @jamesmatthew1903
    @jamesmatthew1903 2 года назад +95

    He sounds just like politicians in the US today.
    God willing, they'll meet the same fate. Hopefully in 1080p this time.

    • @20blog28
      @20blog28 2 года назад +2

      Nowadays, it's 8K all the way

    • @ericcarlson3746
      @ericcarlson3746 2 года назад

      which politicians do you wish to see executed?

    • @LiveYourLifeWithJoy
      @LiveYourLifeWithJoy 2 года назад +4

      Yes! USA deserves a real government

    • @easiesteevee2532
      @easiesteevee2532 Год назад

      Hopefully we can get David Duke into the white house at some point. He's the only man suited for the presidency.

    • @millenniumman75
      @millenniumman75 Год назад +2

      Well, your prophecy may have been fulfilled on September 1, 2022 with the Presidential speech where he called anyone who didn't vote for him a "threat to the Republic". It was along the same lines as this speech.

  • @HooDatDonDar
    @HooDatDonDar Год назад +7

    Ceaucescu: Comrade revolutionaries…
    People: You don’t know the half of it, Nicco.

  • @delavalmilker
    @delavalmilker 4 года назад +155

    This could almost have been a Saturday Night Live comedy skit. The almost comical old dictator mouthing empty platitudes. In front of the obedient masses, who cheer on cue. Then suddenly in literally a matter of seconds, the mood changes. And they turn on him. It's straight out of Chaplain's "The Great Dictator". But with a grim reality behind it.

    • @coltoncrawford3914
      @coltoncrawford3914 4 года назад +18

      delavalmilker those cheers were from speakers. Common trick of dictators or public speakers. Especially when unpopular

    • @vincentmcnabb939
      @vincentmcnabb939 4 года назад +17

      Sounds like any Bernie speech.

    • @basil7292
      @basil7292 4 года назад +9

      @@vincentmcnabb939 cringe take

    • @the4thindustrialrevolution225
      @the4thindustrialrevolution225 4 года назад +6

      @@vincentmcnabb939 based and true

    • @getbeget-_-
      @getbeget-_- 3 года назад +3

      Dictators are those who create artificial wars and invade other countries to kill children, innocent families. Ceausescu did not do this and did not starve the population. Those who benefited from the 1989 coup also starved the population.

  • @sveinsigurdgismarvik4445
    @sveinsigurdgismarvik4445 4 года назад +109

    But who came after Him? People who worked for Him for years, just like brutal as hi self. Not only one man to blame..

    • @johnjohny3484
      @johnjohny3484 4 года назад +23

      Now it is wors than then , because the coruption is at the highest level, and also Iliescu who killed Ceausescu, is doing great😂

    • @stza16
      @stza16 3 года назад +2

      Ceauşescu would have killed their families if they didn’t engage in the brutality.

    • @sy_dianne5224
      @sy_dianne5224 Год назад

      @@johnjohny3484 He seems to be immortal

  • @briansun6336
    @briansun6336 3 года назад +41

    It feels like Ceausecu was telling his people how they should do when the people have become slaves on their own land. He definitely saw a national unity in the following days, just not the kind he wanted.

    • @cv507
      @cv507 2 года назад

      rm is nöw a fecal pöint öff euröpe... büt söme förce will build sehr vv

    • @aliv480
      @aliv480 2 года назад

      He was right. After 1990 the foreigners stole the country and now the poverty rate is very high in Romania. A lot of emigrants trying to find a job outside the country. This is not independence.

  • @derworfnet
    @derworfnet 9 месяцев назад +6

    Did he improvise that entire bit where he promised that they shall increase pensions and social support? Like, "Uh-oh, the crowd appears to be unruly. Better throw some money at the problem, that'll calm them down."

    • @robrob9050
      @robrob9050 Месяц назад

      Fucking narc looked reenergized after regained crowd control then he failed miserably

  • @neaadi2566
    @neaadi2566 2 года назад +26

    În 89 pensia a fost de 800 ? wow în 2022 e la fel..

  • @Raul-oc9dk
    @Raul-oc9dk 4 года назад +19

    3:47 "Better to die in battle, in full glory, than to once again be slaves upon our ancient ground!"
    -Insusi marele tovaras a alimentat dorinta romanilor pentru libertate si pentru a lupta in continuare pentru democratie si libertate chiar cu pretul vietii.
    -The great comrade himself fueled the Romanians' desire for freedom and to continue fighting for democracy and freedom even at the cost of their lives.

  • @abstractacus1598
    @abstractacus1598 4 года назад +94

    I have vivid memories of that day, of course later in the evening as relayed on the UK news. The look of bewilderment on the old dictators face as he tried to grapple with the mood of that hostile crowd (what were they chanting). Today I can see only the apparatchiks at the front were applauding, behind them a resentful mob of citizens who'd obviously had enough of the 'building socialism together' rhetoric as they struggled to make ends meet in the shadow of the dictators gleaming new palace. I remember soon after this bullets flying. He made a run for it in a helicopter. Romanian flags with the centres ripped out were waving. Securitate police shooting it out with army units who'd gone over to the people. The makeshift trial which they say was 4 days later but I thought it was 4 hrs, and ignominious execution live on TV in a deserted courtyard god knows where. I remember too, at some point, hundreds of miners, still black with dust, arriving in the capital to help put down the revolt (did that really happen?) but it was already over. No leader can withstand what happened at that speech, it is like watching water suddenly pouring out of an old reliable vessel as it cracks and falls to dust. The weird thing about communism is it proclaims revolution but is deeply conservative and paranoid about revolution. It's all top down, its revolution is more elimination; of everything that might oppose it, of everything that might give people some kind of meaning and footing in the world outside the ruling party.

    • @sarfaraz.hosseini
      @sarfaraz.hosseini 4 года назад +2

      Amazing retelling. Thank you.

    • @elenamartin6894
      @elenamartin6894 4 года назад +5

      That wasn't socialism. Starving the people to death while you and your family live in a huge palace... That's not a leftist government. I mean, he can claim shit, but that's not AT ALL what socialism is about. He was not a "socialist" dictator. If you really believe in what socialism stands for, you cannot be a dictator. He was a liar, a murderer, a thief, a psychopath and just one of the many dictators who covered their hunger for power, money and authority with an apparently leftist ideology. A dictator is always a paranoid because he lives in a prison he has built around the people, including himself.

    • @rht785
      @rht785 4 года назад +3

      what were the people chanting ?

    • @sarfaraz.hosseini
      @sarfaraz.hosseini 4 года назад +10

      @@rht785 They're booing him, they're all supposed to be chanting preassigned slogans by the Secretariat who hand out their placards and chants based on their occupation. This happened just after the Berlin Wall fell, the Velvet Revolution in Prague, Czekoslovakia, and an uprising in the Romanian city of Timisoara. So he's already nervous.

    • @fernandocifre4545
      @fernandocifre4545 4 года назад +6

      @@elenamartin6894 That IS socialism. In fact all the leaders of so called real socialism live that way, from Stalin to Tito, from Castro to the Kims.

  • @tachikomakusanagi3744
    @tachikomakusanagi3744 2 года назад +37

    His true mistake was only increasing pensions by 100 Lei. The crowd of angry young revolutuionaries would definitely have gone home if he'd upped it by 200.

  • @user-rf6xz4fk7z
    @user-rf6xz4fk7z 3 года назад +42

    I think we all should agree that no yelling old man will help us with our freedom, independence and souvereignity. Good luck, Belarus

    • @miroklaudius3306
      @miroklaudius3306 3 года назад

      Mali bi rozmýšľať ako to vlastne bolo !!!

  • @truthsearcher596
    @truthsearcher596 7 месяцев назад +7

    Every future political leader of every Western country should be required to watch this, and what occurred shortly afterwards.

  • @AbhilashGregory1985
    @AbhilashGregory1985 2 года назад +25

    One of the major highlights of the Eastern Bloc's Fall!

  • @4stringsbetter
    @4stringsbetter 4 года назад +32

    Nice hat.

  • @johnlangridge1896
    @johnlangridge1896 4 года назад +39

    While his country was hungry and poor, he lived in unimaginable luxury.

    • @gabrielscarlat9856
      @gabrielscarlat9856 3 года назад +4

      I'm sorry, you have wrong informations.

    • @achyutsingh5298
      @achyutsingh5298 3 года назад +13

      @@gabrielscarlat9856 he's right

    • @tekinet7958
      @tekinet7958 3 года назад +1

      @@achyutsingh5298 no

    • @luisreyes1963
      @luisreyes1963 10 месяцев назад +1

      What a coincidence, so does Kim Jong-Un. 🇰🇵

    • @klawlor3659
      @klawlor3659 6 месяцев назад

      He had at least 2 DOZEN mansions throughout Romania. Not including the huge one in the centre of Bucharest!

  • @rdordo11
    @rdordo11 4 года назад +39

    I WILL GIVE YOU 200 AND A PIECE OF SALAMI !!!!!

  • @blackfoot7925
    @blackfoot7925 6 месяцев назад +3

    Dated a Romanian woman in the late 90s and remembered this period in time, she recounted that after Ceausescu's execution the people broke into government warehouses that were stocked to the rafters with food and material goods, they were shocked that all this was in their country and yet not distributed.
    I've had the chance to go to a former Soviet Bloc country several times and have talked with the older generation about their life under communism and their life today and asked them which they thought was better.
    All agreed that national independence and economic prosperity ( or their legitimate chance to attain it ) has improved their quality of life but there was a hint of melancholy for the life that use to be, and for one older gentleman he'd rather go back in time.
    Simpler times perhaps.
    Time marches on.

  • @kranthikiranful
    @kranthikiranful 2 года назад +18

    Very Informative Video .. I now believe I can give speech about the Integrity and independence of a Country without giving information on how to built integrity and independence 😂😂😂

  • @talkaboutwacky
    @talkaboutwacky Год назад +8

    I love how 4 days later the people carrying out the show trial/execution talked about how the wife reeked horribly meanwhile the husband had decent hygiene. Her stink must have been really bad for people to describe it all these years later

  • @maxtoro196
    @maxtoro196 4 года назад +16

    The sound of audience is suspect...

  • @wladislawstanislaw9254
    @wladislawstanislaw9254 4 года назад +149

    We were in a never ending economic catastrophe(only getting worse), high censorship, cult of personality, ultra-nationalism(and xenophobia), isolationism, repression(that was getting stronger day by day), very high corruption and nepotism. No matter how much money you were making you were still not allowed to buy a decent amount of food. Everything was rationed. Food rations(just like in a war), electricity rations(electricity was being deliberately stopped a few hours a day, but there were also power outages), many people lacked warm water( some who had were given only little time every week), natural gas rations(and the gas was sometimes of so little quality that you were not able to cook with it), fuel rations(even if you had a car it was difficult to find the fuel to use it, some restrictions on sundays, and the only car accesible to the common people was the old Dacia). You were not allowed to listen to music from the west or to see movies/news from there, if you were caught you would get jailed and probably tortured. Only one TV channel with two hours 8-10 p.m where you would see Ceau praised. The press was in a similar situation, praising Ceau. Education was shitty. Signs of decline everywhere: declining economy, life expectancy, education(especially higher education), aging industry etc. Pollution was extreme, working conditions were tough. Bad planning and economic structure(not going deep because you are probably not interested in economics). Abortion(in most cases) and contraception were forbidden, in 1980s women were heavily monitored(to not do abortion). He damaged Romanian culture by not allowing foreign inspiration and by promoting those who praised him and not allowing free speech. You had some people turning you to the security if you had spoken against the regime. The regime listened to your phone calls if you were suspected, and also phone calls were hardly obtained. The list goes on. Exits from the country were also forbidden. It was basically a concetration camp.

    • @marleyvonhoffstein3193
      @marleyvonhoffstein3193 4 года назад +19

      Not to mention the appalling conditions in the orphanages, with children starved and neglected in the most cruel manner.

    • @wladislawstanislaw9254
      @wladislawstanislaw9254 4 года назад +14

      @@marleyvonhoffstein3193 Indeed. The orphanages were really comparable to a concentration camp. Also with HIV infections and frequent beatings.

    • @rajathapa87
      @rajathapa87 4 года назад +20

      don't forget, this was communism. How did you not put that? Communism is the worst thing, without that a lot of these problems would never have arisen.

    • @wladislawstanislaw9254
      @wladislawstanislaw9254 4 года назад +18

      @@rajathapa87 Obviously. Many of this problems were because of national communism/stalinism/neo-stalinism with north korean characteristics. Instead of stating that it is communism(a thing which most people know), i talked about the absurdities under this regime.

    • @rajathapa87
      @rajathapa87 4 года назад +1

      @@wladislawstanislaw9254 Alright, sorry for having a go at you. i understand now!

  • @TheGrenadier97
    @TheGrenadier97 3 года назад +13

    Chaos unfolding under his eyes, and there he tries to pacify the common people with hollow promisses. How typical of tyrants.

  • @theguy2730
    @theguy2730 4 года назад +41

    I remember like it was yesterday. But now 30 years passed.

    • @Hardie_Boi
      @Hardie_Boi 4 года назад +2

      Go back and play fortnite jackass

    • @theguy2730
      @theguy2730 4 года назад +2

      @@Hardie_Boi no it sucks

  • @samuelbutt8149
    @samuelbutt8149 4 года назад +20

    Well done my freind.thank you for the effort in keeping the past not just the past to be forgotten;but to be learned from and to be kept alive and past on to others in the next generation. I remember seeing this when I was a young man.....as an American feeling untouchable..how coy was that lizard who came into my house?he was invited.

  • @aleksmalalan5478
    @aleksmalalan5478 4 года назад +31

    The Party was increasing the salary but what could they buy whit that money ?

    • @stayrospaparunas3062
      @stayrospaparunas3062 4 года назад

      A dollar,how many leis were back then?thx

    • @Alexander1868
      @Alexander1868 4 года назад +3

      its was almost nothing ..like 1 dollar to 1,5 dollars.

    • @SJM6791
      @SJM6791 4 года назад +1

      Death to all Marxist Communist!!

    • @aleksmalalan5478
      @aleksmalalan5478 3 года назад

      Leo Walzim I know that... but in the last 80’ I am sure that was a inflation

    • @aleksmalalan5478
      @aleksmalalan5478 3 года назад

      Leo Walzim of course. I understood. I have only written about this situation. He used this thing of increasing the salary to just hide the real situation let’s say. In the 70’ thing were of course completely different. How in Yugoslavia.

  • @naggu1243
    @naggu1243 4 года назад +51

    Well that took awhile

  • @sgrizzo48
    @sgrizzo48 4 года назад +10

    At the end he looked like a broken record

  • @amina-pr8xt
    @amina-pr8xt 3 года назад +10

    45 lost years for Romania, about half of them under him

  • @MichielBruijn
    @MichielBruijn 4 года назад +6

    At least they didn't use teleprompters back in the day.
    But then again. He only repeated the same thing over and over again.

  • @kac56
    @kac56 2 года назад +3

    One day you're in charge of everything, the next day you're put up against a wall...

    • @E.C.2
      @E.C.2 Год назад

      No one is a friend of "the Party."
      Everyone is up for sale or sacrifice within Communism.

  • @glowwormgas
    @glowwormgas 2 года назад

    Can't wait!

  • @wordscapes5690
    @wordscapes5690 4 месяца назад +1

    And now Romania is ruled by a mafia instead of a monster. Same hell, different flame.

  • @mihaikarp4370
    @mihaikarp4370 11 месяцев назад +2

    What happen was that a group of students entered the square shouting against the dictator . One police officer , to scare them off , threw a noise grenade ( not explosive but loud ) , the crowd got panicked as people were shouting '' they are going to shoot us all'' , so they started to run , but there where so,many, one could not move .And it was the beginning of the end..The dictator had a plan to make a stand in the Central Committee Building , where they had a lot of weapons and security troops , ( it is said , if so , it could have caused the death of 10 .000 people ) but in the end he was badly advised and flew with the helicopter in total panic with no planning ahead

    • @lea44822
      @lea44822 8 месяцев назад

      do you know what the students were shouting when they were criticising the dictator?

  • @nomad8166
    @nomad8166 3 года назад +26

    He's just repeating himself, protecting the independence and freedom of our country bla bla bla, from whom are you protecting it?

    • @tekinet7958
      @tekinet7958 3 года назад +4

      he meant to protect from the west

  • @robertshonk518
    @robertshonk518 8 месяцев назад +1

    The crowd shots here seem weirdly incongruous. Some show a boisterous crowd and others a completely placid one. I wonder if some earlier footage was spliced in to replace something that the censors didn't want to show? Maybe someone here has some information on that.

  • @JayPChawla
    @JayPChawla 3 года назад +9

    ceausescu's last stand in which he admits that he has already lost control.

    • @E.C.2
      @E.C.2 Год назад

      He should've left 3 weeks earlier,taken 4 briefcases full of cash,and headed for Australia.

  • @rabidrabbitshuggers
    @rabidrabbitshuggers 3 года назад +3

    Revolutions rustle my jimmies

  • @przzol7071
    @przzol7071 4 года назад +55

    I feel very sorry for Romania that had to suffer such a devil who had been destroing romanian economy and people for nearly half of century just in the name of his own fame. Greetings from Poland!

    • @oteleaionutbogdan5381
      @oteleaionutbogdan5381 3 года назад +6

      Luca L Compared to 1989, it’s super rich. So..

    • @oteleaionutbogdan5381
      @oteleaionutbogdan5381 3 года назад

      przzol7071 Thank you!

    • @dariusznowak9599
      @dariusznowak9599 3 года назад +2

      Fuck poland .

    • @getbeget-_-
      @getbeget-_- 3 года назад +3

      Dictators/devils are those who create artificial wars and invade other countries to kill children, innocent families. Ceausescu did not do this and did not starve the population. Those who benefited from the 1989 coup also starved the population.

    • @oteleaionutbogdan5381
      @oteleaionutbogdan5381 3 года назад +2

      @@getbeget-_- 😂Ceausescu was a dictator no matter what definition you use. He starved the population and kept them in cold.

  • @ProgressiveEducation
    @ProgressiveEducation 4 года назад +2

    History repeat itself..

  • @dxhtz
    @dxhtz 4 года назад +22

    would be useful to have the chants translated, ce serait bien des traductions des manifestants. just to know the tension..cant tell if they are for or against him. I assume some are for, some against. Mais Bavo deja!..Cool video.

    • @weltsauerstoff
      @weltsauerstoff 4 года назад +5

      1. There could not have been chants against him. And even if there would have been some, they would not have been transmitted. But there were none. 2. The chants were pre-arranged.

    • @vv7299
      @vv7299 2 года назад +1

      "Ceausescu, PCR " "Ceausescu, ROmania"

    • @vv7299
      @vv7299 2 года назад +1

      all chants are pro

  • @joeytrimble1558
    @joeytrimble1558 4 года назад +10

    lmao he was promising them the world ..

  • @theirishvideos
    @theirishvideos Год назад +6

    I suspect he would have been remembered fondly if he left the stage about twenty years earlier because he was actually quite a good leader in the beginning. He like many other despots, forgot lifes golden rule and thats when to know, when to walk away.

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar 10 месяцев назад +3

      Kenny Rogers says : Know when to walk away, and know when to run.
      Looks like he should have run, earlier.

  • @sveinsigurdgismarvik4445
    @sveinsigurdgismarvik4445 4 года назад +10

    Whats the point givin the people bit more to live for, when the shops was emty? No food to buy...

  • @sveinsigurdgismarvik4445
    @sveinsigurdgismarvik4445 4 года назад +1

    Thats ok, i also did see what he was writing

  • @0gkmedia0
    @0gkmedia0 2 года назад +3

    First time I see this footage. I always thought only the part until the incident exists. Sad such people get killed. I would prefer we would had been able to keep them to study them.

  • @nepashas
    @nepashas 3 года назад +13

    Watching this and thinking about Lukashenko and Putin

  • @paulmorris5166
    @paulmorris5166 9 месяцев назад +2

    I hope Mark Drakeford, the dictator of Wales watches this.

  • @jonathanmthomas2728
    @jonathanmthomas2728 3 года назад +1

    Why does echoed chanting from the crowd sound like a looped track?

  • @kevq761
    @kevq761 11 месяцев назад +2

    Such a pity that Romania never asked King Michael to return and be king again

  • @Gradenexe
    @Gradenexe 3 года назад +22

    Жыве Беларусь!

    • @olegshyshkov4740
      @olegshyshkov4740 Год назад

      Белоруссы не румыны - будут враскорячку стоять перед бульбофюрером до конца ЕГО дней. Жалкие терпилы...

    • @luisreyes1963
      @luisreyes1963 10 месяцев назад

      Not for long if they accept Russian nuclear missiles & aim them towards Ukraine. 💀

  • @constantinmilitaru
    @constantinmilitaru Год назад +1

    No one knew the dictator himself would be the first to talk about freedom and start a revolution….what a guy…

  • @oldmoviesinbwwithsubtitles3501
    @oldmoviesinbwwithsubtitles3501 Год назад +2

    He raised 2,000 to 2,200 so about a extra 26 bucks more. Lol….

  • @sorsimmanis626
    @sorsimmanis626 4 года назад +16

    So what was the thing or moment when Ceausescu decided to escape? People on this video seemed to be on his side, mostly.

    • @manuelmanzanero5057
      @manuelmanzanero5057 4 года назад +22

      He tried to escape the next day, but his perception of both the situation and the timing were wrong, or misguided by the solipsist state of mind engineered by his flatterers. The problem for him was not on the square or in the crowd, nor did it start on December 22. The problem, although he did not know it, was inside the Central Committee building behind him, in the state and party machinery, and in the international scenario, and had been running against him for months.

    • @0x777
      @0x777 Год назад +2

      Watch part 1. By the time of this video, Securitate already detained the protesters and carted in people to cheer for him.

  • @theferryman4916
    @theferryman4916 2 года назад +6

    Belarus is going in this direction at this very moment...

    • @0x777
      @0x777 Год назад

      Belarus has arrived there a long time ago.

    • @theferryman4916
      @theferryman4916 Год назад

      @@0x777 No revolution yet...

    • @E.C.2
      @E.C.2 Год назад

      Is Lukashenko still in power? Why does he love non-Europeans so much over his own Race?

  • @francofranco7593
    @francofranco7593 Год назад +2

    I would like to ask Romania was good with him or now?

  • @murphy3141
    @murphy3141 Год назад

    Can someone explain what’s written on the crowd’s signs ? Is it protestations?

  • @iancurtis1152
    @iancurtis1152 2 года назад +7

    He knew he was in trouble long before the speech.
    On the other hand he wasn’t all bad…….he loved and promoted Rugby in Romania🏉

  • @geraldV
    @geraldV 3 года назад +4

    Anyone else here whilst reading Homo Deus... there are other videos on youtube that include what Yuval is writing about. This one doesn't.

  • @user-dn4rx8ev3j
    @user-dn4rx8ev3j 7 месяцев назад +2

    The good news here is that the Romanian people courageously freed their nation from a despotic cult of personality.

  • @chriss3115
    @chriss3115 4 года назад +2

    Am I correct that the people of Romania were unawere of where he lived? And I understood that his children had their own apartments in the villa? How did the get out of the house? In blinded window cars or? Thanks.

  • @walterlv01
    @walterlv01 3 года назад +14

    I remember Ceausescu always had a ferocious public speaking style (not so much here) and I always wondered what he was raving on about when I saw him speak since I don't understand Romanian. Once I saw the translation of this I had to wonder if all his speeches were as banal and pointless as this one despite the grandiose delivery? He spends ten minutes going on about absolutely nothing.

    • @MasterSanders
      @MasterSanders 3 года назад +1

      There’s a documentary that claims he borrowed from Hitler in his delivery. I could see that.

    • @walterlv01
      @walterlv01 3 года назад +5

      @@MasterSanders For sure. That makes this speech comical when you look at the translation and see that he is saying nothing of any substance whatsoever while acting all tough. It's almost as if it's an acted-out parody of a dictator.

    • @E.C.2
      @E.C.2 Год назад

      He should've left 4 weeks earlier. An old man too stuck in his ways,too old to leave,yet this speech proves he & the wife knew they were in deep shit.

  • @AnonAnonAnon
    @AnonAnonAnon 4 года назад +65

    I was a soldier in the British Army at the time and was home on leave when this happened. I was glued to Sky News watching all this unfold and all the while, my family cracked on with Christmas. When it was announced on the British national news that him and his wife had been caught, tried and executed, no one batted an eye in my house except for me. Weeks before, I was stationed in West Berlin when the Wall fell. And then this happened. I knew it was the end of Eastern style communism as the world knew it, and I knew other countries would follow suit. I'm not sure Europe is all the better for all this. I'm sure the people of these once repressed countries feel a whole lot better but I can't help but think the Cold War and the Iron Curtain made the whole of Europe a safer place. Am I wrong?

    • @hatsos79
      @hatsos79 4 года назад +13

      Anonanon your not wrong!!! Europe was safer back then.... the world was safer for that matter... their were rules between two big enemies, west and East.... now there is no rules in this new age of terror....

    • @kazi68
      @kazi68 4 года назад +12

      I disagree, I can't call "Cold War" as a safe idea

    • @AnonAnonAnon
      @AnonAnonAnon 4 года назад +14

      @@kazi68 And I further disagree. All protocols were in place concerning government and military for all countries in Europe including the USSR. All countries within NATO and the Warsaw Pact knew their positions. Borders were controlled. ID checks carried out between countries. Troop and weapon inspections. Treaties in place for nuclear weapons. Loads of other things. Since the fall of the Iron Curtain, times have changed and I believe changed for the worse across Europe. There was 'order' pre-Cold War. Every country had its place and role. Now everything is disjointed.

    • @realjohnboxall
      @realjohnboxall 4 года назад +6

      Thank you for your service. You are right, the world was a safer place in the Cold War. Everyone was watching everything, and we knew who and where the enemy was for almost all cases. Now you could be walking home from the pub on a Saturday night and some muslim could try and run you down with a garbage truck full of explosive. That is not progress.

    • @AnonAnonAnon
      @AnonAnonAnon 4 года назад +4

      @@realjohnboxall Yeah, you nailed it with that comment. I've a bad chest cough/cold, can't think straight, but you summed it up perfectly. Now the security services of Britain and Europe are all overwhelmed by the freedom of movement, the freedom for a criminal from the further reach of an Eastern European country to move across Europe without hindrance. The freedom to claim 'asylum' in one country, get a European passport, then move around anywhere, again, without hindrance, even pop over to the States on a holiday visa! Try doing that with say a passport from certain Middle Eastern or African countries. Everything has changed so much. Diplomacy and security is all muddled. Off to bed now to cough my guts up. Peace, out!

  • @paultozzi559
    @paultozzi559 8 месяцев назад

    Absolutely 100

  • @asherhouseman6838
    @asherhouseman6838 2 года назад

    Why does this video cut out just when the going gets good?

  • @codydavenport8429
    @codydavenport8429 3 года назад +41

    Brings my heart joy to watch a communist regime fall apart right in front of my eyes.

    • @codydavenport8429
      @codydavenport8429 3 года назад +1

      @Ruby Tuesday most of the chanting his name you hear is recorded from the front few rows who were basically captured by his regime and blackmailed to appear that they were showing support. And yes I believe he was captured and summarily executed the following day. He fled in a helicopter shortly after giving this speech due to the building being stormed by protestors.

    • @DavidRusu1919
      @DavidRusu1919 6 месяцев назад

      Because our fucking country became fucking corrupt?

  • @marchechter5047
    @marchechter5047 3 года назад +7

    I think everyone on that balcony was like "ah phack, we are done now ... " once he tried to sell these last minute pension raises to the already angry crowd

  • @pumpkinvinewreckingcrew6219
    @pumpkinvinewreckingcrew6219 2 года назад

    What is the crowd chanting?

  • @ShadowsOnTheScreen
    @ShadowsOnTheScreen Месяц назад

    What does the crowd start chanting at key moments during the speech?

  • @rebeccagrrrl2699
    @rebeccagrrrl2699 2 года назад +6

    I don't know about everyone else, but I can't tell what the crowd is doing beyond supporting him... there's not an obvious hint of what's to come from this copy of that speech. His speech is translated and provided in English subtitles, but the crowd chants are not. In part 1, there is a moment of disturbance and it's unclear what is happening.

    • @xshowda
      @xshowda Год назад +8

      Security forces removed the protesters booing him (the ones you hear at the beginning of part 1) from the scene, only the party core (which where FOR him) remained there. Additionally they brought workers from local companies and forced them to stand there holding signs and cheering for him or they would lose their jobs so the place suddenly looks like everybody loves him

    • @RRaquello
      @RRaquello 6 месяцев назад

      Also a lot of not-very-subtle editing. They take parts of the speech and intercut shots of the crowd cheering. They might all be the same shot of the crowd cheering as far as I can tell.

  • @enidc6678
    @enidc6678 4 года назад +10

    What are the crowd chanting?

    • @aleksandarvil5718
      @aleksandarvil5718 4 года назад +25

      @Enid C *"TIMISOARA !!!"* (reference to civilian massacre in Timisoara led by Secret Police *Securitate* , few days before speech)

    • @enidc6678
      @enidc6678 4 года назад +6

      Aleksandar Vil thank you! I had read that’s what was being chanted, I was just curious if that is what was being chanted the whole time? Did he not know/care about what happened there, such that he wouldn’t recognize why it was being said?

    • @aleksandarvil5718
      @aleksandarvil5718 4 года назад +13

      @Jeong Eun Ji NOPE, at first they were **threatened** by Securitate to cheer *HIM* , but fear from death soon dissapeared

    • @manuelmanzanero5057
      @manuelmanzanero5057 4 года назад +26

      No, at no time during the filming of the speech on December 21, the crowd refers to Timisoara. And it should be added that the common and politically correct interpretations of the events seen in this clip are just an epic legend. The sudden bout of excitement that interrupted the speech of the "Conducator" a few minutes after starting was not a massive booing, nor a sign of disaffection towards him, his promises or his regime, nor a proof that the people for the first time "looked him in the eyes with no fear". That is part of the epic legend created a posteriori, which tried to reconstruct those events as an anticipation of the regime's downfall. But, no matter how heroic and emotionally stimulating it may sound, it does not come closer to the truth. Like almost all the events of the so-called "Romanian revolution", that truth is much more prosaic. What interrupted Ceausescu was an uncontrolled reaction of terror and shouts by the audience, before some detonations coming from somewhere in the square, and yes, probably due to an attempt to sabotage the act organized by the dictatorship and spread panic. But it was not about boos, or about hailing Timisoara or the revolution. Those attending the event were taken on purpose as stage staff, many of them forcibly or under diverse threats, and their enthusiasm was visibly void, but this video is not "the gestation of a spontaneous revolution in the eyes of the dictator," because the events of December 21-25, as well as those immediately before and after, had little of spontaneous revolution. This rally and the reaction of the people was the symbol that the regime and its security mechanisms were losing control and began to have very deep cracks (although not enough for Ceausescu to speak in public without protection, instead of behind screens or bulletproof booths, like the Nicaraguan dictator Somoza), but not the symbol of the rebellion of the "oppressed people" in front of the tyrant. That is part of the fiction, fed by the same post-decembrist government, which would soon be responsible as many or more victims among that "people" than Ceausescu himself in his last days.

    • @xxthatpookieeditsxx
      @xxthatpookieeditsxx 4 года назад +2

      Enid C, They were chanting Ceaucescu Pacere - Ceaucescu Pacere.

  • @einsamk2305
    @einsamk2305 2 года назад +1

    I am here for Yuval's book !!

  • @lahabitaciondelatrapado4621
    @lahabitaciondelatrapado4621 4 года назад +1

    What are the people chanting? Can anyone translate?

    • @fernandocifre4545
      @fernandocifre4545 4 года назад +4

      There are two factions in the crowd, one supporting him and the other opposing. Supporters chant standard slogans pre-established by the party. The rest just boo him (first video) and later chant "Timisoara, Timisoara", referring to the government repression of protesters in that city in previous days. Ceausescu responds saying the Timisoara incidents were provoked by those who want to destroy the integrity and independence of Romania, etc.