Nicolae Ceausescu LAST SPEECH

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  • Опубликовано: 27 авг 2011
  • Nicolae Ceaușescu (Romanian pronunciation: [nikoˈla.e t͡ʃe̯a.uˈʃesku]; 26 January 1918 -- 25 December 1989) was a Romanian Communist politician. He was Secretary General of the Romanian Communist Party from 1965 to 1989, and as such was the country's second and last Communist leader. He was also the country's head of state from 1967 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 its troops from Romania in 1958.[1]
    Ceaușescu's second decade was characterized by an increasingly brutal and repressive regime-by some accounts, the most rigidly Stalinist regime in the Soviet bloc. It was also marked by an ubiquitous personality cult, nationalism and a deterioration in foreign relations with the Western powers as well as the Soviet Union. Ceaușescu's government was overthrown in the December 1989 revolution, and he and his wife were executed following a televised and hastily organised two-hour court session.[2]
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicolae_...
    Credits to: „Videograms of a Revolution" by Harun Farocki.
    În balcon:
    Iulian Vlad (șeful Securitatii)
    Emil Bobu (agent de influență)
    Gianu Bucurescu (comandantul desemnat al „evenimentului", General de Securitate)
    Elena Ceauşescu
    Nicolae Ceauşescu
    Manea Mănescu (agent de influență)

Комментарии • 10 тыс.

  • @ashergavriel8373
    @ashergavriel8373 3 дня назад +10

    I come from the future to say that in Brazil something similar happened. The people were outraged by what was happening, by the injustice, the theft, the lies. Everyone filled the streets, protesting, and a growing fighting spirit began to infect Brazilians. Everything stopped. The army took over the streets, parliament was dissolved, legislators and politicians were arrested, the president was executed in a public square, by firing squad. I am writing this on July 22, 2024.

    • @gre7310
      @gre7310 3 дня назад

      Só no teu sonho, seu gado bolsominion terraplanista!

    • @themrandrei696
      @themrandrei696 2 дня назад +3

      why was this pinned 12 years after

    • @EvilmindStudios
      @EvilmindStudios День назад +1

      I am glad to have been part of this revolution, for a fair Brazil we fight today. They will remember this day for centuries!

    • @avia1295
      @avia1295 День назад

      I hope to see this one day in Brazil and Venezuela .. I would be very much delighted ..

    • @ningunoningunos3044
      @ningunoningunos3044 14 часов назад

      Aaaaii mia voooida

  • @joeschmo9953
    @joeschmo9953 Год назад +3248

    He opened his address by sending his sincerest revolutionary wishes to the crowd. They ultimately sent those wishes right back his way.

    • @petekdemircioglu
      @petekdemircioglu Год назад +16

      Ahahah

    • @enterrandomentiras4024
      @enterrandomentiras4024 Год назад +34

      Very good comment, you deserve more likes.

    • @DaL33T5
      @DaL33T5 Год назад +1

      "Yo, Nick, can you say that again to this monkey's paw?"

    • @70ajc
      @70ajc Год назад +7

      Did they though? The majority?

    • @joeschmo9953
      @joeschmo9953 Год назад

      @@70ajc You think that a revolution must be kicked off by the majority ? Simple thoughts. You have been brainwashed by modern speak.

  • @erickobetitsch6055
    @erickobetitsch6055 2 года назад +6810

    I love the look on Ceausescu’s face when he knew the people turned on him. Every leader everywhere in the world should fear the people, not the other way around.

    • @hollandmeester347
      @hollandmeester347 2 года назад +5

      The Roman emperor Nero only feared one thing ......... an angry Roman croud. He fled for an angry croud and gave to a slave the order to kill him to avoid falling in the hands of the croud. Hitler committed suicide too. Napoleon was on Saint Helena Island. What will happen to Mister Putin??

    • @sohaybmegraoui2050
      @sohaybmegraoui2050 2 года назад +1

      @@hollandmeester347 European history has shown that tyrants and dictators tend to meet grisly ends. Look at what happened to Musolini in the end. Perhaps one thing that is consistent among all dictators is their delusion of reality. This is evidenced by the fact they don't learn from history

    • @hollandmeester347
      @hollandmeester347 2 года назад +3

      @@sohaybmegraoui2050 Enemies of Europe like Napoleon, Hitler, Musolini and Putin are doomed to fail. First they are succesful, then they have failures and then they face defeat. At the long end Putin will loose and will be called the Sick man of Europe......

    • @RussiaIsARiddle778
      @RussiaIsARiddle778 2 года назад +1

      @@hollandmeester347 He, like Lennon and Stalin, will be enshrined in Lennon’s tomb. And like Stalin, a new leader will remove his body and bury him in a grave with a footnote in Russian history as a corrupt leader.

    • @charlesdignam780
      @charlesdignam780 2 года назад +210

      It is impossible to understate the brutality of the Ceauescu’s regime.

  • @tinytownsoftware3837
    @tinytownsoftware3837 Год назад +581

    "Please sit down!" There are no chairs and everyone is standing. This guy was a comedic genius!🤣

    • @tinytownsoftware3837
      @tinytownsoftware3837 Год назад +9

      @Cypher I'm Romanian. "Asezativa linistit" poate e expresie bucuresteana. La noi in Bistrita asta se intelege mai literal.

    • @QWERTY-gp8fd
      @QWERTY-gp8fd Год назад +1

      @@tinytownsoftware3837 knowing romanian language doesnt make u romanian.

    • @tinytownsoftware3837
      @tinytownsoftware3837 Год назад +20

      @@QWERTY-gp8fd I said "I'm Romanian". In English that means that I was born in Romania. Not quite sure what you understood.

    • @QWERTY-gp8fd
      @QWERTY-gp8fd Год назад +1

      @@tinytownsoftware3837 u did not born in romania u are just pretending

    • @tinytownsoftware3837
      @tinytownsoftware3837 Год назад +16

      @@QWERTY-gp8fd And how do you know this exactly?

  • @ulamumafarciaporpial
    @ulamumafarciaporpial 3 месяца назад +218

    Romania deserves more praise for this. He ended like a 90s movie villain.

    • @zaphodbeeblebrox9109
      @zaphodbeeblebrox9109 Месяц назад +14

      Look at his popularity in Romania today and you might be shocked. Over 60% are supportive of him today. How quickly we forget the past.

    • @theskeptic3214
      @theskeptic3214 Месяц назад +4

      @@zaphodbeeblebrox9109Codreanu and the iron legion # is what Romania needs

    • @offbeat65
      @offbeat65 Месяц назад

      And that is pretty much what the revolution turned out to be: a movie.

    • @daeveren4120
      @daeveren4120 Месяц назад +10

      @@zaphodbeeblebrox9109 Not true. According to some completely inappropriate "study" by telephone to select people, 46% of the respondents considered that the quality of life was better before 1989. Perhaps they've phone called only unemployed people or something. The study is not representative to the actual population and I doubt that any significant % of the population would accept living with the censorship, total control, restrictions and severe food rationalization that were in place before 1989.

    • @zaphodbeeblebrox9109
      @zaphodbeeblebrox9109 Месяц назад

      @@daeveren4120 it is true. Maybe youre talking about a different study and youve assumed im talking about the one you are aware of. When in fact im not.

  • @zorilaz
    @zorilaz 2 года назад +3871

    I was kid back then. I remember my father came back home shot in the leg. My father was a captain in the army was sent to defend the Airport to keep Ceausescu from leaving. My mother a doctor was kept at the hospital. I was home. Outside it was chaos, people shouting, you could hear gun shots. That's all I remember.

    • @Kevin-finity
      @Kevin-finity 2 года назад +217

      Thank you so much for sharing your memories. You've experienced the important history of your country.

    • @70ajc
      @70ajc 2 года назад +45

      So, was Romania under Ceausescu really so terrible ? Has he been unfairly demonized ?

    • @zorilaz
      @zorilaz 2 года назад +206

      @@70ajc it wasn't that bad. It wasn't North Korea. People had jobs, apartments, going to the mountains, sea side, safe streets. People had enough with the lack of diversity. Shops mostly empty, standing in line at supermarkets. Ceausescu was fooled by the security services, when he was visiting a supermarket for example they were filling it up, everyone had smiling faces. He didn't know the reality. There are people who miss that era so that should say a lot. There were no homeless. They were building apartment buildings for everyone, everyone was working. Some people were different and they wanted freedom, some moved away in USA and Western Europe. I don't believe Ceausescu needed to be executed. The people who were responsible for all the bad were mostly the secret services, Russian Influences and a few figures from the political stage that in the end, killed Ceausescu. It was an immense pressure from the outside, Romania had zero debt and Soviet Russia wanted Ceausescu dead or brought down from his title of head of state. Ceausescu wasn't a fan of what Soviet Russia was doing and so it became hated by the Russians but appreciated by the western world. And that was the first step in Romania becoming a friend or so called friend of USA, starting with the president of USA at that time visiting Romania for the first time. That was the end Romania being influenced by Soviet Russia. Basically changed sides, went on the western aide. It's not like Romania had a choice, as a nation Romania was never a fan of Russia, it was simply in a position, in a geographic location where Russia was too close.

    • @70ajc
      @70ajc 2 года назад +64

      @@zorilaz Thank you for that balanced overview. I was a naive teenager when all this happened but even then, I was shocked by the murder of the Ceausescu's and the very biased coverage in the UK. It's something that has stayed with me. As well as wondering if Romania giving up on the vision of a balanced and equal society for the boom and bust, and unbalanced, nature of capitalism was really in the best interests of their people as a whole.

    • @Lactosian
      @Lactosian 2 года назад +284

      @@70ajc no he was terrible mate. He destroyed our economy, whole country was religiously suppressed, for the last bit of his rule we had to go under rations and most of our people were starving, and he was just a shit ruler who literally killed his own people and thats why the army and the people turned on him. I remember hearing about people in my city being taken away and never heard from again if they spoke against him in any way. Moreover, many don't know this but he gave his wife the highest doctor honors in Romania even though she barely passed high school. Hope that gave you an insight

  • @AK-lg8fj
    @AK-lg8fj 9 лет назад +4408

    This is a fascinating historical document, the downfall of a leader on tape.

    • @detectiemetalebuzau9927
      @detectiemetalebuzau9927 4 года назад +5

      I found this video and I really do not understand anything !!! ruclips.net/video/rH3I_Yvf7jc/видео.html😨

    • @gaygambler
      @gaygambler 4 года назад +27

      Hallo “ allo”

    • @MehMoTronic3Official
      @MehMoTronic3Official 4 года назад +119

      "Leader" would give him a special name, I'd say "dictator" or "tyrant"

    • @monetum1392
      @monetum1392 4 года назад +2

      @@detectiemetalebuzau9927 Want me to explain?

    • @mnco5741
      @mnco5741 3 года назад +32

      @@MehMoTronic3Official leader is a more general term, presidents,kings,dictators.... are all leaders,

  • @briansymmes7917
    @briansymmes7917 11 месяцев назад +137

    I read a book that said the disturbance was caused by someone who got up and shouted, “ Timisoara!” in reference to the police crackdown that had occurred there, and it lit some sort of fuse. The people had had enough of him and he got what was coming to him.

    • @gutsfinky
      @gutsfinky 10 месяцев назад +10

      I hope that person is proud!

  • @robertshiell887
    @robertshiell887 Год назад +187

    I remember this happening on all the news programs and I think that it was the perfect definition of “being on the wrong side of history”.

  • @owenwexler7214
    @owenwexler7214 2 года назад +1844

    One of the greatest things ever broadcast on live TV honestly.

    • @owenwexler7214
      @owenwexler7214 2 года назад +62

      @Quily Aston let's hope.

    • @dejowada
      @dejowada 2 года назад +12

      @@owenwexler7214 Why?

    • @Mihai769
      @Mihai769 2 года назад +10

      @@dejowada why not

    • @dejowada
      @dejowada 2 года назад +20

      @@Mihai769 very construcitve reply

    • @ralex3697
      @ralex3697 Год назад +35

      Dictator Trudeau should watch this

  • @Sameoldfitup
    @Sameoldfitup 3 года назад +853

    “A river cuts through rock, not because of its power, but because of its persistence.”

    • @shatrughankumar7655
      @shatrughankumar7655 3 года назад +11

      Well said man

    • @misterree1443
      @misterree1443 3 года назад +9

      That's powerful thank you.

    • @silverapples75
      @silverapples75 2 года назад +8

      And its power...

    • @marcoantoniogodoy9526
      @marcoantoniogodoy9526 11 месяцев назад

      Now, in 2023, the people of Romania suffer the very extreme cruel tyranny of the Satanic European Union

    • @offbeat65
      @offbeat65 Месяц назад

      Well, the river in this case didn't cut through, because a moscovite Communist came to power after the demise of Ceausescu.

  • @alfredwaldo6079
    @alfredwaldo6079 11 месяцев назад +203

    An incredible important moment in history. When a tyrant realizes he is no longer feared!

    • @gutsfinky
      @gutsfinky 10 месяцев назад +13

      Ah, it warms the soul, doesn't it? 😊

    • @messrsandersonco5985
      @messrsandersonco5985 10 месяцев назад +12

      Putin should take heed!

    • @YouAintGotNoTegridyBoi
      @YouAintGotNoTegridyBoi 9 месяцев назад +2

      @@messrsandersonco5985 don't see how he's not in complete control of Russia. It's not teetering on the brink of collapse like Romania, in fact its economy is doing way better than anticipated.

    • @artv.9989
      @artv.9989 6 месяцев назад

      The crowd screaming was just people panicking because theyve been shot at, it was probably intentionally done by the CIA

    • @concept5631
      @concept5631 2 месяца назад +3

      ​@@YouAintGotNoTegridyBoi I wonder if the slow death Russia is currently facing is worse than the quick one Romania went through.

  • @Happyman28778
    @Happyman28778 2 месяца назад +37

    It’s a weird thought that this video is an only 30+ years old

  • @HooDatDonDar
    @HooDatDonDar 5 лет назад +3250

    “We must demonstrate our strength and unity...”
    “No, no, not by overthrowing me! HELP!”

    • @HooDatDonDar
      @HooDatDonDar 5 лет назад +86

      1:40
      The guy in the hat looks like a gangster.
      Well, come to think of it...

    • @rafanana0077
      @rafanana0077 4 года назад +18

      @Cal Devans the Cadre doesn't look bothered but confused and scarrd knowing that he losed the power he tought would have it forever

    • @mr.battle20
      @mr.battle20 4 года назад +45

      @Cal Devans The Cadre He fled into the wilderness immediately after the speech. 4 days later, he was caught and executed by firing squad.
      Pretty sure he was scared shitless.

    • @madyogi6164
      @madyogi6164 4 года назад +8

      @@HooDatDonDar Honestly? I have no idea who he was but I would bet you were not far from truth. Possibly one word of his and someone could be pulled out of home and never come back...

    • @madyogi6164
      @madyogi6164 4 года назад +3

      @@rafanana0077 Well. He possibly could have it forever but he (like other commie camrades f..d up).

  • @DJayT240798
    @DJayT240798 6 лет назад +2137

    Legend says he's still shouting "Alo"

    • @abbad707
      @abbad707 4 года назад +4

      Ha.

    • @gaygambler
      @gaygambler 4 года назад +6

      It’s Hallo or hello

    • @gaygambler
      @gaygambler 4 года назад +5

      Hallo allo hello ??!

    • @alexpail5635
      @alexpail5635 4 года назад +56

      @@gaygambler no its alo which means hey. It's used to get the attention of others

    • @vova.shlang4230
      @vova.shlang4230 4 года назад +1

      where are you the "HERO"?

  • @acbentertainment6265
    @acbentertainment6265 11 месяцев назад +74

    When he told his people they would have to sacrifice even more, the collective anger rose up with such intensity that his time was up. You can see it in his face.

  • @sadlaosnoises6616
    @sadlaosnoises6616 Год назад +28

    He just knew it was over when everyone started shouting "Timişoara". For a bit of context on December 17, a revolution broke out in Timişoara (west Transylvania), and the Bucharest protest (which this speech is part of) was planned as a counter-action to what was going on in Timişoara. The 80 thousand people present in Bucharest were all moved to the city square by the communist regime and were supposed to stand besides the leader to send a message to the west. It commonly believed that a single person started booing Ceauşescu, and then a lot of others joined in, at which point you can see him freeze and stop mid-sentence. The person denying the praise of the leader is kind of a Romanian August Landmasser, mainly because nobody knows who the exact person really was, but there's a whole myth around him. The thing we can certainly say is that this person played a very important role in stomping the communist regime in Romania.

  • @silasashe4158
    @silasashe4158 4 года назад +1075

    That look on his face when he realizes he lost the country is priceless.

    • @hugolafhugolaf
      @hugolafhugolaf 2 года назад +57

      He looks so out of it, it's like a bad sitcom.

    • @penalozaur
      @penalozaur 2 года назад +12

      too bad current imbeciles learnt nothing. Especially in USA.

    • @millenniumman75
      @millenniumman75 2 года назад +15

      Condoleezza Rice mention this in a speech she delivered and called it The Ceausescu Moment.

    • @millenniumman75
      @millenniumman75 2 года назад +5

      @@penalozaur Don't be so sure. More and more people are waking up here.

    • @penalozaur
      @penalozaur 2 года назад +10

      @@millenniumman75 They.Elected.... BIDEN. They accept 100k covid economic migrants pushed down their throats every month. Cartels control the southern border and threaten landowners there. Elections in 2022 should be a republican landslide and instant deportation like when Donnie was there. Otherwise we'll regret Ceaușescu. At least, this guy wouldn't accept such vile evil.

  • @dannycrockett9878
    @dannycrockett9878 5 лет назад +3211

    My girlfriend in the late 80's in Chicago was born and raised in Bucharest, Romania. She immigrated to the U.S as a ten year old child with her mother, sister, and brother, along with her Uncles family, not long after her father was arrested and disappeared in Bucharest. She said her father was a simple factory worker, ten hours per day, six days a week. He drank, and when he did, she said, he would often talk badly about the government, meaning Ceausescu....One late night the police banged on the door. They told her father that he didn't even need a coat, "you will be coming directly home", she told me she heard a policeman say. But she said her father, whom she'd never seen cry, was crying, telling her mother to take good care of the kids. She never saw her dad again. No word, no nothing. Ceausescu was a piece of shit murderer. He got what he deserved

    • @veronica33s45
      @veronica33s45 4 года назад +363

      That is exactly what commies told people and their family when they took away someone in my country (hungary) during the soviet regime. Fucking commies.

    • @bossss777
      @bossss777 4 года назад +139

      you forget to mention that the "soviet regime" was installed in hungary after it invaded the soviet union in 1941, killing millions. there is no comparison of juche romania and "soviet" hungary. moreover, hungary has gone back to its roots as a fascist far right dictatorship even today, something a Soviet tank army would have never allowed to happen.

    • @militaristicsoldier856
      @militaristicsoldier856 4 года назад +272

      BOBAH БОСС ЖМУР I think we’re talking more about the Soviet invasion in 1956 after Hungary tried to become a democratic country. Then the Soviets massacred all the civilians. Despicable commies

    • @shrecc21
      @shrecc21 4 года назад +10

      Exactly

    • @oliver69cork46
      @oliver69cork46 4 года назад +73

      @Pedro Vaz pure nonsense-compare and contrast the difference between living under Soviet or communism to American influenced regimes. You'll find that not, any American influenced governments fell and people have democracy, same cannot be said of communist countries where it's utter misery as proven here in Romania under this fraud tyrant ceaucescu.

  • @mjw12345
    @mjw12345 10 месяцев назад +280

    I was in Germany then, a French TV streamed astounding coverage for hours including the executions. I'll never forget it - I was also astonished the many interviews by the TV channel - so many Romanians on the streets spoke excellent French.

    • @vladppp9954
      @vladppp9954 7 месяцев назад +41

      This was common then. I was doing 4 hours of french language per week then. Now it is more english focused.

    • @AquaTofana.
      @AquaTofana. 5 месяцев назад +23

      Romania is a francophil nation. Around 30% of our language contains words from french. France supported our independence, and we supported France in the franco-prusian war. And we were allies in ww1. General Henry Berthelot is a national hero in Romania. The first time in our history, when it was declared a day of national mourning, it was for Napoleon the 3rd. There are many more, but i try to keep it short for a yt comment. Peace! 🎉

    • @chelsblue7370
      @chelsblue7370 4 месяца назад +3

      It's normal for Romanians to be proficient in Italian, but French proficiency is also not surprising

    • @samorpeterenpretene9184
      @samorpeterenpretene9184 Месяц назад

      Spaniola la fel

    • @mjw12345
      @mjw12345 Месяц назад

      @@AquaTofana. Appreciate! But I think some Romanians would re-phrase your comment 'Around 30% of our language contains words from french' as follows: Around 30% of the French language contains words from Romanian! Not a student of language but had good Latin: I was amazed as a child I could decipher some Romanian from my Latin competence. I mentioned this to a Romanian friend and he opined or should I say corrected me that Latin had its origins in the Romanian language! I don't think so but I enjoyed the surmise!

  • @RedBaron26
    @RedBaron26 11 месяцев назад +21

    I was a non destructive testing inspection-engineer for an American company and was send to Rumenia in 1984 to inspect a quantity of steel seamless pipe bought by an Austrian company from a Rumenian steel-mill.The steel-mill was in the northern part of the country in a town called Roman. Having lived for my whole life in Holland and Italy i was so surprised to see the living conditions of the Rumenian people. They were all dressed as beggars and you never saw people smiling on the streets. Girls came by the hotel to offer themselves for escort services. The lights in town went out at 21.00 in the evening and i was told the heating as well. The roads were hideous, the stores were almost completely empty, te only cars were from the police forces. The steel-mill we worked in was an old tired mill with turn of the century equipment and the quality of the pipe was really terrible, had to reject over 60% of the production. It was also an extremely dangerous environment, cables of the cranes worn out, no protectionbarriers, very poor personal gear for the workers, sparks from the electrical wiring everywhere. There were over 7000 people working in the mill but the parking was completely empty but for a few cars from the higher management. People arrived at the job walking from the town which was 4 km away from the mill.
    Of course we were based in the best hotel available in the area and had all the "luxury" not available to the Rumenian people (such as running water, electricity, decent food). The factory workers (lovely people) i met gave me some more information about their living conditions though in a very veiled manner. There was an engineer who spoke English and he had to stay with us during all the time we were inside the the steel-mill, probably to check on us. He did not like us to talk politics or telling workers about the living standards of a western factory worker. I always felt really bad about all my privileges when i returned at home and remember i was so happy for the Rumenian people when they finally got rid of that terrible dictator i almost cried.

    • @DutchGuyMike
      @DutchGuyMike 10 месяцев назад

      I am glad they have what they deserve now!

  • @frankpow9429
    @frankpow9429 5 лет назад +1868

    He hadn't the slightest idea what's going on, he just lived in the bubble for twenty-five years.

    • @juliusbernotas
      @juliusbernotas 4 года назад +355

      ​@Cal Devans The Cadre He had no idea that people hate him. It happens in dictatorships, that leader isn't given true information by the officials, because keeping their positions is most important to them. So they try very hard to make matters look fine

    • @echt114
      @echt114 4 года назад +162

      Without the right to speak freely against a government and have a public debate of contrasts, you can't claim there's much validity to public "approval."

    • @juliusbernotas
      @juliusbernotas 4 года назад +132

      @Cal Devans The Cadre I was born in a soviet country and I can tell that all you say is bullshit

    • @monetum1392
      @monetum1392 4 года назад +52

      @Cal Devans The Cadre He thought that it was a demonstration for him, not against. He realized way too late, as you can see in his speech. I think the book "Democratizing Capitalism" also mentioned that, but it's been a while since I read it. I did a 2 week long project on this guy and believe me, he was totally oblivious to the situation.
      Unconnected fun fact:
      His death was determined way before his trial. They even went as far, as accusing him of 60.000 deaths during the revolution, even though it was just 1100

    • @evgenigenov3433
      @evgenigenov3433 4 года назад +5

      @Cal Devans The Cadre Just like Bulgaria.

  • @darmaw22
    @darmaw22 5 лет назад +390

    When cheer shifts to angry roar; when fear fades away, the dictator trembles.

  • @Libyan_Tripoli
    @Libyan_Tripoli 9 месяцев назад +76

    It's really amazing how he went from cruel tyrant to helpless Oldman

  • @Alfaomega2003
    @Alfaomega2003 11 месяцев назад +32

    Romanian language is really fascinating. Sounds like a child of Roman father and Slavic mother. :D

    • @valevisa8429
      @valevisa8429 11 месяцев назад +8

      Indeed,it's a Latino-Slavic language.

    • @bnrid8086
      @bnrid8086 Месяц назад +1

      latin language surrounded by slavic country

  • @ashcarrier6606
    @ashcarrier6606 2 года назад +572

    This never gets old.

  • @claudiograssi1037
    @claudiograssi1037 6 лет назад +271

    What is impressive is the face of Ceausescu: the collapse of a regime in few minutes.

  • @jimmynoneya2584
    @jimmynoneya2584 Год назад +367

    I was only 14 when this happened. I remember seeing it on television. My father was happy about it. With all of the suffering that was caused by these 2 for over 2 decades. Romania was far better after. I know now living in America for the last 26 years that something like this would never happen here. Although it seems like this current regime is about as corrupt as they come. It all comes down to accountability.

    • @karana2260
      @karana2260 Год назад +1

      Why did people suffer for 2 decades. Who initiated this in the 2 hours in crowd? Was it a collective mindset?

    • @ciresedulci
      @ciresedulci Год назад +30

      @@karana2260 romanians suffered from communism since 1947 under Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, till '89 when we shot Ceausescu, no one stepped up because "Securitatea" something like the romanian KGB would put you in prisons if you dared to speak out, censorship was the biggest issue of the communism regime alongside other negative social effects like empty stores, forced labour manifested as "Colectivul", The Collective, in the country, where adults and kids would work the fields for the state. The revolution started in Timisoara in the western side of the country and culminated at Bucharest in the eastern very quickly, with the execution of the general secretary of the Romanian Communist Party. Romania suffered for 40 years because no one dared to speak up until they united as one. Ceausescu and Gheorghiu-Dej were pawns of the Security which itself was a pawn of the Russian influence, Ceausescu leaning towards Western influence thus gaining the American "friendship" and the russians wanted him dead anyways, we just sped things up.

    • @darlamundine
      @darlamundine Год назад

      We need a good flushing in America🐀

    • @AllHopeIsLost1134
      @AllHopeIsLost1134 Год назад

      ​@@karana2260 All families were forced to have at a minimum, 5 children. After the fall, the families couldn't afford to take care of the excess children, so they were put into state-run orphanages, where life was even worse.
      There was no food to feed the kids, so they started to supplement nutrition with blood transfusions. Keep in mind that this was in the 80's when the world was introduced to H.I.V AND A.I.D.S. Ceausescu believed that A.I.D.S. was a western problem they wouldn't have to deal with, so they never tested the blood, and it led to the largest outbreak of both diseases in Eastern Europe. It'll take decades to fix what the communists destroyed.

    • @kevinbrooke8104
      @kevinbrooke8104 Год назад +16

      Jan. 6, 2021. No, it could never happen here 😮

  • @alelectric2767
    @alelectric2767 11 месяцев назад +27

    I still remember this. Was in high school and sitting at home due to having a spare. In those days there wasn’t anything on tv during the day so watch this dude. Had no idea what I was watching until a few weeks later I saw him on the news saying they killed him.

    • @gutsfinky
      @gutsfinky 10 месяцев назад

      Actually from this speech to Ceaucescu's "trial" and execution was only 2 or 3 days. Lightning fast for a revolution! The Romanian people had clearly had enough.

  • @Greatest1979
    @Greatest1979 5 лет назад +476

    Mr. Ceaușescu that was a great and inspiring speech, thank you. Would you and Mrs Ceaușescu be so kind as to stand over at that wall so we can uhhhh...'take a picture', please thank you!

  • @dysonsquared
    @dysonsquared 5 лет назад +521

    I remember how clearly out of touch he was. How he couldn't comprehend just how truly hated he was, right to the end. I wasnt surprised by the events that followed.

    • @mchlbk
      @mchlbk 5 лет назад +65

      I remember too. He (and his wife) didn't seem to understand why the people hated them. They must have live a very isolated life.

    • @rmason4358
      @rmason4358 5 лет назад +4

      D.S.C. 123
      Sounds like the UK prime minister TM.

    • @Unknown-bq9id
      @Unknown-bq9id 3 года назад +15

      Reportedly, there were no shortage of volunteers for the firing squad--many people in Romania HATED both Ceausescus, and for good reason...

    • @XxCreateFlowxX
      @XxCreateFlowxX 3 года назад +8

      @I'M NOT CALIGULA'S HORSE. how do you support someone who is dead and for a good reason?

    • @elijahp271
      @elijahp271 3 года назад +13

      @@XxCreateFlowxX He is sharing statistics. He didn't said that he likes him! Now how truthful they are that is a different question.

  • @charonsferryold
    @charonsferryold 3 месяца назад +32

    It's crazy to think that Ceausescu had just about every opportunity following this moment to take responsibility and attempt to moderate his policies to appease the uprising, but in nearly every instance he doubled down, accusing his opponents of being "traitors" serving "western interests" right up to his execution.

    • @silvadyne00
      @silvadyne00 Месяц назад +2

      funny given that ceausescu in spite of being a domestic hardliner was just about the most pro-western leader in the eastern bloc, to the point that there's a lot of evidence to suggest the entire revolution was orchestrated by Soviet intelligence out of fear that he'd try to leave the Warsaw pact

  • @zombiedodge1426
    @zombiedodge1426 29 дней назад +6

    1:25: [record scratch] "Yep, that's me. You're probably wondering how I ended up in this crazy situation."

  • @nyxsvart368
    @nyxsvart368 3 года назад +1339

    I was born and lived in Hungary till my 21st birthday. Hungary lies beside Romania and was under communist control until 1989. I remember his execution being all over the hungarian news. I was 4. Being a toddler I did not understand communism and dictatorship
    All I understood was love. I asked my dad why was everyone hating him so much and he always found a way to explain me everything in a way I was able to understand it. He said " you know son it is because he was a bastard and kept all the sausages and ham to himself but would not give any to his people so they starved for years". I instantly understood and felt the weight of what he did.
    Thanks Dad for everything you taught me about compassion and decency. Love you

    • @ellebelle8515
      @ellebelle8515 2 года назад +129

      Great father; he took something very traumatic and spoke truth in the way a child could understand.

    • @robertdavis3433
      @robertdavis3433 2 года назад +40

      Tes we all need more sausages and ham.

    • @sorinavadanei2589
      @sorinavadanei2589 2 года назад +5

      ❤👍

    • @Jasandiz
      @Jasandiz 2 года назад +47

      I was in Hungary some 7 years ago. I had never seen so many poor people in my life roaming the streets in a Wester European country. When my grandparents were there in the 80s there were no poor people in the streets. I had the same impression in the Baltics (although there were less poors than in Hungary) and in Russia. Even those who hated the Russian more in Lithuania had to admit they missed having free (or almost free) housing, dental plans, helathcare... It appears that killing communism didn't get you the sausages, on the contrary.

    • @ellebelle8515
      @ellebelle8515 2 года назад +59

      @@Jasandiz How long were you in Hungary? How many times? You really need to be there over extended periods to be able to speak for the people?
      I have been in Romania for eight months now. I was here two previous times, once right after the fall of Ceausescu. I can't speak enough about the poverty and lack of industrial mechanization/ economic development under Ceausescu. My friends spoke about the bread lines and rations of growing up under the Ceausescu regime. Even though the transition has been really challenging, today's Romanians have a good standard of living- a world away from the Communist period. It is also more affordable than the West while average wage continues to increase. And, I am seeing all of the changes in southeast Romania near the border of Moldova- the most economically depressed area. Almost everyone who I talk to would never trade their progress and freedoms for a return to an authoritarian form of government.

  • @2warstwy
    @2warstwy 6 лет назад +1184

    1:23 a moment he realized that he is over. A moment of fear - when you know you are done. That video is classic. Greets from Poland for all Romanian patriots.

    • @Vberar
      @Vberar 3 года назад +31

      @Kabo Torko you are tripping

    • @Vberar
      @Vberar 3 года назад +9

      @Kafa kafica Ion Iliescu

    • @Vberar
      @Vberar 3 года назад +5

      @Kafa kafica 😄😄🤪

    • @wiryx1
      @wiryx1 3 года назад +17

      @@jakewalberg4177 Thing about common russian is that they can't actually rule "their own" without a tzar holding them in firm grip. The nation is not as developed as european nations and there's a long way ahead of them. If you want to know what happens to undeveloped nation trying to break the regime - check the current state of Ukraine.

    • @wiryx1
      @wiryx1 3 года назад +5

      @@jakewalberg4177 "enough amount" has to be at least majority in plain and healthy democracy.. and to overthrow an authoritarian regime it comes to perhaps 70% of population willing to change the system. That's a first one and we already fail there when it comes to Russia.
      2nd one is to have an idea and a political culture able to set up a new political system after current one is overthrown - this is where we fail again.
      I'm not even going into economic issues re-privatisation of regime-connected oligarchies and so on... for now it's unsolvable

  • @user-wy7kx2to1v
    @user-wy7kx2to1v Год назад +28

    1989年は大事件が多かったですが、年末のルーマニア革命は衝撃的でした。

    • @danielzarioiu7495
      @danielzarioiu7495 Месяц назад

      America a facut revolutia pentru ca controla securitatea tari si pe urma Au distrus tara ... Aveti grija de independenta tari

  • @nilsalmquist9424
    @nilsalmquist9424 Год назад +100

    This will be soon be repeated in other nations.

  • @MikeB071
    @MikeB071 6 лет назад +614

    I love how that big fat thug comes up behind him and says "we're screwed!" before running into the building!

    • @maconescotland8996
      @maconescotland8996 4 года назад +39

      @Justin Case No - he was submitting his immediate resignation, verbally.

    • @GuyFromTheSouth
      @GuyFromTheSouth 3 года назад +17

      He said "They are entering the building."

    • @Crave88evarC
      @Crave88evarC 3 года назад +1

      😂Lmao

    • @rasmushansen9334
      @rasmushansen9334 3 года назад +3

      I think it was a bodyguard

    • @lone-wolf-1
      @lone-wolf-1 3 года назад +9

      Seams to be a body guard. I think he said (hardly comprehensibile): "Vin în sediu" / "They are entering the office"
      Or: "Vino-n sediu" / "Come inside the office"

  • @jezmo3761
    @jezmo3761 3 года назад +568

    the last days / moments of Nicolae Ceausescu is actually very fascnating , something happened, the people grew brave and were ready to risk everything, they wanted their history and country back

    • @70ajc
      @70ajc 2 года назад +16

      How exactly had they lost their history and country ?

    • @christiankalinkina239
      @christiankalinkina239 2 года назад +5

      @@70ajc because of the big bad and the magic mcguffin saved the day

    • @moonlightear5144
      @moonlightear5144 2 года назад +67

      @@70ajc they had no freedom and no access to culture, the history was distorted to their advantage it was the darkest time this country has seen yet.

    • @eEmm1
      @eEmm1 2 года назад +38

      @@70ajc well, you see, one example would be, Romania was/is a very Christian country and a monarchy before the Communists took it over. You know what communism does with religion once is in power? They banish it.

    • @dranelemakol
      @dranelemakol 2 года назад

      @@70ajc a communist dictator is a cancerous growth on any nation and must be removed by any means necessary.

  • @elvenkind6072
    @elvenkind6072 Год назад +156

    I remember I was 10 years old when the Ceaușescu couple was executed, and I still remember that I was allowed to watch the news here in Norway, showing the dead bodies of them, on the news by my father, because it was a historical event, when communism was falling. I'm still very grateful for this, and felt it made an interest in politics and history inherent in me.

    • @nikocat2008
      @nikocat2008 11 месяцев назад +7

      Same in Hungary.... I was ten. I was reading a book for children. IT was about a revolution of underwater creaters.. they had a dictator and they fought for their freedom. I was very suprised thet the book was available in Hungary. As the revolution started the book, the revolution happened in Bucharest. I remember my parents were talking about IT Románia earlier they were talking when the Romanian Dictator would be sent away. We knew the day was close... But IT came earlier that they thought.

    • @elvenkind6072
      @elvenkind6072 11 месяцев назад +6

      @@nikocat2008 I'm glad both Romany and your own Hungary are free, democratic countries today, and part of the same Europe as me here in Norway. If I had the health for it, I would travel to Ukraine and help push back the Eastern, corrupt, criminal dictatorship of Russia. The same time I really, honestly hope that Russians might experience soon to also be part of the same Europe as us.

    • @nikocat2008
      @nikocat2008 11 месяцев назад

      @@elvenkind6072 Ukriane used to have the same political system like Russia. They insult the Hungarian minorities who lived there for hundreds of years.
      I very sorry for the Ukrainen people. They were attacked because of idiotic politicians.
      I hate the West to pretend to support them... But they do not give them enough weapons to win.... And did not let them to agreed with Russians.
      IT is like 1956 revolution in Hungary. They told is to fight because they will help. But the help of courde did not come. They used us to divide Russian forces between Cuba and Hungary. And we got a stonger dictatorship Than IT was before.
      Eastern side of Ukriane damaged or occupied. In the Western side foreign compenies bought everything they can.
      Everybody waiting they won against Russia... But they do not give them enough weapons to win...... :-(
      But Ukrainen are Strong people. They will survive. One day they will realize what has happend.
      I whish the peace and quick recovery after this war. I hope they will be EU members.

    • @cuolema
      @cuolema 11 месяцев назад

      Your father was hard line nazi?

    • @mohsenmoradi7752
      @mohsenmoradi7752 7 месяцев назад +1

      I don't know if you will answer me or not. But I would be grateful if you could tell us whether the general situation in Romania was better during the time of Nicolae Ceaușescu or now? Did Ceausescu really want the good of the country?
      How did it have a relationship with powerful countries such as: America (United States) - England and the Soviet Union? Did he want to be independent? Were these countries involved in the Romanian revolution or was it all for the people and the army?

  • @offbeat65
    @offbeat65 Месяц назад +4

    Anybody who thinks the crowd started rioting during Ceausescu's speech is completely mistaken. The crowd started PANICKING because of a sonic weapon, which had been brought to disperse the crowd in case of agitation, and was used too soon, for a minor incident. (You can hear it at 1:18 as a high whistle in the background.) Some say this was premeditated by an anti-Ceausescu faction of the security forces, in order to trigger chaos. Planned or not, that is exactly what followed. But people did not actually riot there. Most of them just left after the mass panic incident, going home or hanging around in the streets. A spontaneous crowd came together elsewhere, eventually starting a protest, which got really huge in a matter of hours, and got shot at by the army after sunset. My point: during this day, Ceausescu didn't yet have a realization that he is not in control. That will only happen next day, when he flees with a chopper, and is abandoned, then captured in the countryside with his wife.

  • @timothykozlowski2732
    @timothykozlowski2732 5 лет назад +382

    He was about as deaf and clueless as they come

    • @danielgyllenbreider
      @danielgyllenbreider 5 лет назад +12

      Almost worse than Merkel and Macron:)

    • @twrk139
      @twrk139 4 года назад +12

      It's called being old and senile.

    • @fahoodie1852
      @fahoodie1852 3 года назад +3

      @@twrk139
      “Old and Senile” couldn’t save him from his Christmas present in 1989

    • @miket9563
      @miket9563 3 года назад +2

      US Government: “Hold my beer”

    • @wyqtor
      @wyqtor 3 года назад +1

      Behold, the intellect of a bootmaker's apprentice put in charge of a country. The really astounding thing is that he also did some good things (not many).

  • @konstantingeist3587
    @konstantingeist3587 2 года назад +639

    Gotta respect Romanians for their boldness against dictators. We lack it here in Russia

    • @Mar.1634
      @Mar.1634 2 года назад +8

      @Griffmost Romanians support freedom fighters. Unlike you, we know tyranny when we see it. What Trudeau is doing is unlawful and tyrannical.
      Why should people be forced to take a vaccine that has been proven that it doesn't stop the spread of the virus? These mandates make 0 sense.

    • @Mar.1634
      @Mar.1634 2 года назад +5

      @Griff what is it with you bootlickers always being so condescending? It's a weird dichotomy yet, you all seem to possess these characteristics. Weird huh...1. The vaccines doesn't stop the spread and you can't prove me otherwise, it only eases the symptoms. 2.The fact that you don't think Trudeau is being tyrant right tells me how brainwashed and comfortable you are in being a slave. 3.I speak in the name of the nation because I live here and I know the sentiment of the majority.

    • @eEmm1
      @eEmm1 2 года назад +5

      @Griff Invoking the emergency act on PEACEFUL political dissents is tyranny, you tool.

    • @TheArchie1112
      @TheArchie1112 2 года назад +4

      Rise Up Now!

    • @anouschb.2414
      @anouschb.2414 2 года назад +9

      @@Mar.1634 Russian bot

  • @johnrider5701
    @johnrider5701 Год назад +89

    Even after all these years i get a huge amount of satisfaction watching this.

    • @Oposum649
      @Oposum649 Год назад

      You are so stupid! This is all a lie, there was no revolution, the Western powers set it all up!

    • @gutsfinky
      @gutsfinky 10 месяцев назад +7

      Me too! I come here when I need a little warm and fuzzy feeling. I love watching bad guys go down.

  • @AnnieBrackett88
    @AnnieBrackett88 4 года назад +238

    How incredible for a revolution to be documented on tape. We hear so much about the French, Russian, and American revolutions from historians and textbooks, but to actually see it unfold is amazing.

    • @otaviofrn_adv
      @otaviofrn_adv 4 года назад +22

      This is not the only major revolution to be recorded. But as of now and for a long time, will be the biggest

    • @spartacus587
      @spartacus587 Год назад

      It was not "revolution".
      It was COUP D'ETAT. Ceaucescu was not a saint, but these events were planned by western agencies, that used some discountents people of these countries.
      After that, they restoured capitalism, with mass privatizations and precarization of labour, like latin america.

    • @marcoantoniogodoy9526
      @marcoantoniogodoy9526 11 месяцев назад

      Mr. Ceausescu was a great patriot
      if that man were alive in this year 2023, then he would have prevented Romanian entry into the very pervert and Satanic European Union

    • @gutsfinky
      @gutsfinky 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@otaviofrn_advtrue. But to be able to see the EXACT MOMENT when things started to go wonky is extraordinary, especially in a pre-smartphone Era.

    • @user-se1dm7fw1t
      @user-se1dm7fw1t 8 месяцев назад +1

      Не сравнивай Великий Октябрь с этой херней, пожалуйста.

  • @liuzhou
    @liuzhou 2 года назад +42

    I loved how he kept shouting "Keep calm!" hysterically!

    • @marcusonesimus3400
      @marcusonesimus3400 Год назад +10

      He did seem to have run out of ideas by that point.
      His prepared speech, such as it was, also lacked content, even by the standards of demagogic politicians.

  • @willyvlyminck138
    @willyvlyminck138 9 месяцев назад +289

    The world have many of them now, unfortunately

    • @AparatorulPoporului
      @AparatorulPoporului  9 месяцев назад +45

      Some of those are hiden wolfs in sheep cloth pretending they are defenders of freedoms!
      Its not just Putin, its Bill Gates aswel, Elon Musk and Joe Biden, and the Obama team, Macron, Von Der Lier, Netaniahu the assasin, Trudeau, they all dictators and criminals of freedoms and the destroyers of democracy, those evils who forced the ppl to get vaccinated with evil tech vaccines, the mark of the beast from the bible!
      This will culminate with the destruction of the western civilization, soon will come ww3 and the first targets will be U.S/UK and The Vatican, they will be nuclear ashes, the bible prophecy never fails.

    • @tjn7608
      @tjn7608 9 месяцев назад +20

      @@AparatorulPoporului
      "the bible prophecy never fails"
      Which version of Christianity are you referring to?

    • @razoblicavanje4231
      @razoblicavanje4231 9 месяцев назад

      They are actual destroyers of this world.
      All satanic governments everywhere.

    • @alvaroprieto2092
      @alvaroprieto2092 9 месяцев назад +43

      @@AparatorulPoporului schizo

    • @marcoantoniogodoy9526
      @marcoantoniogodoy9526 9 месяцев назад

      @@AparatorulPoporului
      The Truth is the truth
      ¡Have you a very nice night Mr. AparatorulPoporului!
      The Great Saint, the Great Valiant and Patriot Mr. Ceacescu defended the authentic National Sovereignty of Romania
      Now, in this 2023 age, the very Satanic and pervert euro bureaucracy of the Euroepan Uunion enslaves and subjugates the defenseless people of the Balkans
      When the Devilish EU imposes many many obligations on them
      However, the pervert EU does not give them rights and treats them like second class european citizens

  • @exbronco
    @exbronco 7 месяцев назад +5

    Ceausescu should've sung from the podium "don't cry for me, Romania. the truth is I never left you."

  • @graffitijunkiejfk
    @graffitijunkiejfk 5 лет назад +325

    It's a real life Emperor has no clothes moment...

  • @akmsk
    @akmsk 5 лет назад +1850

    Who else was referred to this speech from Yuval Noah Harari's Homo Deus?

  • @GeoPolitic12
    @GeoPolitic12 Месяц назад +4

    I'm proud to be a man who fought in this Revolution , a revolition that ended the dictatorial regime in this beautiful country !!

  • @leobz12
    @leobz12 10 месяцев назад +8

    At the 01:42 minute, the right translation is "come inside the building!" (said to Ceaușescu by the security officer) and not "they are entering the building".

  • @pyromania1018
    @pyromania1018 4 года назад +289

    That look on his face when they start booing makes me smile.

    • @gabrielmarian698
      @gabrielmarian698 3 года назад +1

      It was a magnetic tape.

    • @choxxxieful
      @choxxxieful 3 года назад +3

      Couldn't have happened to a nicer guy (and his wife too)...

    • @None-zc5vg
      @None-zc5vg 2 года назад +2

      @@choxxxieful There's a chance that Nicolae and his wife were both stooges for the gangsters who really ran the country: they'd milked Communism dry and now it was time to cut loose and put on business-suits, after first eliminating the two principal front-people and a few more.

    • @ZarkowsWorld
      @ZarkowsWorld 2 года назад +12

      @@None-zc5vg Sure kid, your conspiracy theory for sure will pan out... * rolls eyes *

    • @incorectulpolitic
      @incorectulpolitic 2 года назад

      @@None-zc5vg exactly

  • @kenbamber3785
    @kenbamber3785 5 лет назад +633

    When I was posted to Romania, in the Autumn of 1989, my boss's first words to me were, "This is a place where nothing is as it seems."

  • @NPA1001
    @NPA1001 Год назад +7

    It was at this moment… he knew he had fucked up…

  • @sassulusmagnus
    @sassulusmagnus Год назад +7

    It's amazing how long it takes an autocrat to realize that their time is up.

  • @stephenkyburz6529
    @stephenkyburz6529 2 года назад +287

    I love how he didn't expected it. This is how all dictators should fall, with their people judging them. This should be an exemple for us citizens

    • @sovietyamemini2309
      @sovietyamemini2309 Год назад +7

      it was not the people, it was the military

    • @peter58peter
      @peter58peter Год назад

      westerners have nothing in order to do something like this with their killers.

    • @donsawyer3245
      @donsawyer3245 Год назад

      The people on their own never have power, they need military support. People max can protest and do a shit.

    • @skeletonjanitor
      @skeletonjanitor Год назад +6

      @@sovietyamemini2309are military personnel not people?

    • @bryanbowen8617
      @bryanbowen8617 Год назад +6

      Except in the US they wanted to it in reverse. Depose democracy in favour of a dictator.

  • @tennisguyky
    @tennisguyky 5 лет назад +411

    You can hear Elena shouting in the background too. She was just as vile and more ruthless than he was.

    • @Donknowww
      @Donknowww 3 года назад +56

      Yeah she was a witch! She gave to herself so many titles it was ridiculous. A narcissistic woman same as her man.

    • @lone-wolf-1
      @lone-wolf-1 3 года назад +15

      She even had the "securitate" install bugging devices in his (Nicolae Ceaușescu’s) office.

    • @pridefalcon
      @pridefalcon 2 года назад +12

      I heard that she smelled too bad before Excecution

    • @ArmyJames
      @ArmyJames 2 года назад +28

      She was the Yoko Ono of communist Romania.

    • @user-ip1gt3hw8m
      @user-ip1gt3hw8m 2 года назад +6

      same with wife of Slobodan Milosevic

  • @eliaskranat
    @eliaskranat Год назад +3

    The moment he realizes they no longer fear him..

  • @coinmastercoinmaster
    @coinmastercoinmaster 6 месяцев назад +8

    I still remember when he left the building by helicopter.I was 19 years old when watching it on tv over here in the Netherlands.I was glad to see that the brave citizens didn,t took that sh*t from him any longer.👍

  • @aliyusx
    @aliyusx 8 лет назад +428

    There has been a disturbance in the force

    • @realkk
      @realkk 8 лет назад +4

      lol

    • @RoXKISSolo
      @RoXKISSolo 6 лет назад +14

      He was executed for genocide of romanian people, am I right? Population of Romania 1989 - 23 miliions, 2017 - 19 millions. Why you dont execute your currient goverment, your coutry lost 4.000.000 romanians lol

    • @florinrotaru2430
      @florinrotaru2430 6 лет назад +8

      because during his regime you couldnt just leave the country, because that's what happened to those 4million romanians

    • @sorinnita531
      @sorinnita531 5 лет назад +1

      Dota 2 - Солеварня CORRECT

    • @balancedactguy
      @balancedactguy 5 лет назад +1

      There has been a disturbance in the force...somone OPEN A WINDOW and let the force out!

  • @iana6713
    @iana6713 5 лет назад +670

    I remember this - I was a child but remember seeing the news but not understanding until years later what happened. The people's revenge for twenty-five years of tyranny.

    • @TedGrundy1998
      @TedGrundy1998 4 года назад +16

      Cal Devans The Cadre in piss is where he’s at.

    • @yourneighbourhooddoomer
      @yourneighbourhooddoomer 4 года назад +48

      @Cal Devans The Cadre People like you would have been the first to end up in the state security prisons under his regime, ignorant bourgeoise wannabe lefty.

    • @evgenigenov3433
      @evgenigenov3433 4 года назад +21

      @Cal Devans The Cadre Here in Bulgaria is the same.
      Everyone blame communists, russian and chinese..... 30 years later!!!
      It's not communists, its people who can't admit that they are wrong and has selled their countries for mere yellow coins.

    • @silva3658
      @silva3658 4 года назад +2

      @Gleb B. / Глеб Б. before it was worst, shit everywhere and nobody could escape

    • @Hilariusgamer
      @Hilariusgamer 4 года назад +15

      @Cal Devans The Cadre Not really lol communists imprisoned other communists or executed them in my country for nothing. Most of our Generals who fought against Hitler were killed by communists.

  • @shikshokio1
    @shikshokio1 8 месяцев назад +7

    In 4 days from this speech, the dictator and his wife were executed. Let it be the fate of all dictators.

  • @dreamtheaterpantera
    @dreamtheaterpantera 10 месяцев назад +14

    Bravo Romanian people you did good!

  • @radekkohoutek
    @radekkohoutek 3 года назад +193

    It was similar in Czechoslovakia. The communist chief Miroslav Stepan spoke to the workers in the factory. It was November 23, 1989. The workers began to whistle. He didn't expect that. It was a legendary moment.

    • @philippejenvrin2741
      @philippejenvrin2741 Год назад +1

      It is not shooting !!

    • @Trancymind
      @Trancymind Год назад +3

      So this happened like a domino effect. Cool!

    • @marcoantoniogodoy9526
      @marcoantoniogodoy9526 11 месяцев назад

      Mr. Ceausescu was a great patriot
      if that man were alive in this year 2023, then he would have prevented Romanian entry into the very pervert and Satanic European Union

    • @gutsfinky
      @gutsfinky 10 месяцев назад +11

      ​​@@Trancymindit did, but not like that. Romania was the last of the revolutions of the 1980s--Poland had a long struggle with Solidarity and the Baltic Republics of the USSR had been agitating for years. In November of 1989 the Berlin Wall fell and Czechoslovakia's communist government was done away with, too. Ceaucescu's overthrow happened right before Christmas. Besides being the last, it was also the ONLY violent revolution of that group. Why is still kind of uncertain but a commonly accepted theory proposed by political scientists and historians is that the regime of Ceaucescu was so brutal that the populace had to use a proportionate amount of violence to get rid of him.
      However, to compare this to the end of communism in CZ just doesn't really work. CZ was much more industrialized and... civilized than Romania was. Things were pretty calm there, even in 1989. The Czechoslovak revolution was called The Velvet Revolution for a reason. The workers in Czechoslovakia may have whistled and protested but that's about all that happened.

    • @GeorgeJob-zr9er
      @GeorgeJob-zr9er 9 месяцев назад +2

      The Velvet Revolution,

  • @benjitatts5169
    @benjitatts5169 6 лет назад +155

    we are blessed to have such footage at our fingertips (literally)

  • @gaiusjuliuspleaser
    @gaiusjuliuspleaser Год назад +4

    This is the best real life "It was at this moment he knew he fucked up" moment ever caught on camera.

  • @SleptABit
    @SleptABit Месяц назад +2

    "What? But everybody loves me!!"

  • @iluvleo
    @iluvleo 6 лет назад +413

    2:20
    me when my friend goes afk during the middle of the game

  • @piaIy
    @piaIy 4 года назад +410

    1:22 Ceausescu: Why do I hear boss music?

  • @delunimbus
    @delunimbus 15 дней назад +1

    "this man is already dead, he just dosent know it yet"

  • @aklibakli
    @aklibakli 3 месяца назад +15

    I dream of a day like this in Egypt

  • @Swordman85
    @Swordman85 11 лет назад +776

    I'm Brazilian and I can understand a lot from his speech without the subtitles, given the fact that Romanian is really close to Portuguese, given its Latin origins. It has some Russian words tho, as "tovarisch", the Russian for "comrade".

    • @jovahu5261
      @jovahu5261 2 года назад +54

      Same here, i speak french as a second language (im belgian) so i could also understand quite some parts of it

    • @frenchy5267
      @frenchy5267 2 года назад +72

      @@jovahu5261 Same, I never ealised how similar Romanian was to French. It's Latin but with a slavic touch hahaha

    • @eddiecaplan1908
      @eddiecaplan1908 2 года назад +12

      I wonder if bolsonaro is watching this?

    • @Swordman85
      @Swordman85 2 года назад +1

      @@eddiecaplan1908 Bolsonaro does not watch it, he hates any sort of communists and loves Romanian masons.

    • @samuelsegundo5953
      @samuelsegundo5953 2 года назад +25

      Same with Spanish, I feel like hearing a sort of Latin with Russian

  • @dearomania8289
    @dearomania8289 2 года назад +746

    I was born on January 1990 in Bucharest. My parents told me that when they took me out of the hospital, the army was still in the streets of Bucharest and random people would ask my parents wether I'm a girl or a boy. Most of these people would tell my parents to name me Victoria, because "we are victorious", communism is gone.

    • @kokoaldo9866
      @kokoaldo9866 2 года назад +9

      So is Victoria your surname ? 🙃

    • @dearomania8289
      @dearomania8289 2 года назад +26

      @@kokoaldo9866
      Well, no 😅

    • @Jdn19
      @Jdn19 2 года назад +74

      @@dearomania8289 you were born during a very historic and liberating time for Romania. Congrats

    • @kets4443
      @kets4443 2 года назад

      Were you named Victoria?

    • @Jdn19
      @Jdn19 2 года назад +16

      @@kets4443 she answered no. Look at the Conversation

  • @Volkers1966
    @Volkers1966 11 месяцев назад +4

    History in the making. What a great video, such good commentary

    • @yington
      @yington 6 месяцев назад

      Which video do you mean

  • @MihaiCristea-xj4nf
    @MihaiCristea-xj4nf 2 месяца назад +3

    "Please sit down" Bro was a menace

  • @SSAnwalt
    @SSAnwalt 9 лет назад +510

    1:23 is the key moment, when several firecrackers exploded near The Hilton Hotel (located to Ceausescu's right). Those who fired them were deceivingly shouting "Trag in noi!" ("THEY'RE SHOOTING AT US"!). The shout spread into the crowd and grew in intensity while panic installed (the crescendo of the screams is easily noticeable between 1:25-1:37). Shortly after, other firecrackers exploded even louder (when somebody was heard saying "Someone is shooting"). At 1:41 the subtitles are misplaced, the security agent actually says: "Vino-n sediu!" ("COME INSIDE!") than turns away, opens the door behind Ceausescu and waits for him to react. Ceausescu immediately lowers his right hand (making a decision) than raises his hand after deciding to stay put, he realized nobody was shooting. Meanwhile, the security agent looks back at Ceausescu and understands he's ignoring the call... Outside, the crowd believed someone was shooting at them from the back so they either left the square or pushed forward toward the balcony. They were mere workers from the nearby factories and had no idea of what was really going on. Those who set up The Coup had at first agitated the people so they can convince Ceausescu to flee ("Come inside!"), than urged the crowd against him for shooting at them and than fleeing. The Coup was set up by a group of influential Romanian communists who received Soviet approval and were promoting Ion Iliescu to replace Ceausescu. Ironically, "I wish to thank the initiators and organizers" was The Signal. 1:09. Four days later, Ceausescu was executed. All the above facts were testified 15 years later by some of the accomplices.

    • @puscasumarin6313
      @puscasumarin6313 9 лет назад +18

      Damm right!!! But was necesary. It was an Police State.

    • @lordhighexecutioner
      @lordhighexecutioner 8 лет назад +14

      SSAnwalt After watching the video recently something seemed off... the way it is commonly described is not accurate, and it's more clear to me that it is spin... I think that the accepted story of this is a hoax and that it's probably how you described it...

    • @RoniDVoicu
      @RoniDVoicu 6 лет назад +13

      SSAnwalt I am from Romania and u know more things about Ceasusescu then I know :))

    • @freshcancer713
      @freshcancer713 6 лет назад +29

      Sad!
      Nikolai was a great and honorable man, now his countory and people are slaves to the eurofasist reshime also known as EU

    • @Wran84
      @Wran84 6 лет назад +6

      Sounds like a lot of what goes on in the United States.

  • @gutsfinky
    @gutsfinky 2 года назад +68

    This is a great video.. I've seen this last speech dozens of times but really enjoyed having the contextual information, different camera angles, etc.

    • @vascanj
      @vascanj Год назад +1

      Same. I wonder which documentary this was from!

  • @fhi5y
    @fhi5y Год назад +3

    Awesome recording!! Thank you for posting!

  • @safe-keeper1042
    @safe-keeper1042 11 месяцев назад +3

    I'm expecting this is old Vladimir's not-so-distant future.

  • @satori1312
    @satori1312 6 лет назад +246

    He was surprised as if he saw the Grim Reaper coming at him!

    • @hugospiegel
      @hugospiegel 4 года назад +2

      And it was, in deed.

    • @user-no1nj9ji1d
      @user-no1nj9ji1d 4 года назад +3

      @Cal Devans The Cadre Exactly. Normal, calm human reaction on an uncommon event. Firstly you realize what is it, and only then you do something.

    • @jameretief8327
      @jameretief8327 3 года назад

      satori1312 no it was the figure behind the Grim Reaper who had the horns and pitchfork that really got his attention!

  • @herrzeit5911
    @herrzeit5911 3 года назад +88

    He sounds like my boss giving an xmas-party speech.

    • @drno3391
      @drno3391 2 года назад +3

      we must be colleagues !

    • @archangel4597
      @archangel4597 2 года назад +5

      Companies are basically tiny dictatorships, so i'm not surprised at all you feel that way lol

  • @graham212red
    @graham212red Месяц назад

    whereabouts in bucharest did he make this speech- i am going there soon and i would like to visit this place

  • @CliveWebber
    @CliveWebber 17 дней назад +1

    “Comrades! Are you yelling ‘Boo’ or ‘Boo-urns’?”

  • @James-rp9cz
    @James-rp9cz 3 года назад +292

    My dad went skiing in Romania in 1987/1988. His whole group was followed constantly by the secret police and a revolutionist set himself on fire near the ski resort in protest of the regime. Scary times

    • @incorectulpolitic
      @incorectulpolitic 2 года назад +17

      Secret police, meaning single digit IQ nobodies having an ID which supposedly allows them to do ANYTHING. Makes sense.

    • @chrislouis7913
      @chrislouis7913 2 года назад +15

      I imagine Romania would’ve been very similar to North Korea back then

    • @timornoscommovet1111
      @timornoscommovet1111 2 года назад +6

      @@chrislouis7913 I think albania was even worse than romania during this time

    • @irenaradulovic9308
      @irenaradulovic9308 2 года назад

      Well James, I'd follow you too.

    • @ekesandras1481
      @ekesandras1481 Год назад

      I suppose he was in Poiana Brasov, since that was the most famous skiing resort back than. In the city of Brasov there were big protests already in 1987, that almost sparked a revolution. But this time they were still able to shoot it down and it did not spread to other cities. Possibly your father was there just a few weeks after these events.

  • @nessieness5433
    @nessieness5433 3 года назад +203

    Absolutely fascinating, misuse of power finally being dealt with. Beware leaders all around the globe.

    • @brianwalsh1401
      @brianwalsh1401 2 года назад +6

      They don't learn from this. You can't tell a narcissists or a sociopath anything because they know everything. Ask the people that tried to consul 45 US pres. anything. Fougettaboutit.

    • @millenniumman75
      @millenniumman75 2 года назад +9

      @@brianwalsh1401 You are one President off - you were listening to American Communist Propaganda (LEFT wing!). 46 is the real problem.....we are living our own version of Ceausescu now. Have you noticed that as immigrants with Corona flood the border....he blames that state for a rise in cases - it was his own doing! The media is focused on what ice cream flavor he chose to eat! Wake up!

    • @penalozaur
      @penalozaur 2 года назад +6

      @@brianwalsh1401 Maybe you're right, Ceausescu is closer to 45. He wouldn't tolerate scum entering illegaly in his country. He wouldn't tolerate a group burning and looting whole cities. He wouldn't tolerate 900 USD theft as a misdemeanor and police closing its eyes. He wouldn't accept losing strategic independence to another country (most medicines from USA are made in China, whole industries moved overseas). He wouldn't accept getting a diploma without knowing how to read and do some basic math. Actually, 46 is taking all the wrong measures Ceausescu took, but you are too blind to see.

    • @micahsmith4237
      @micahsmith4237 2 года назад +2

      LOL. the irony with your judgement nessie. I LOVE IT LOL. keep being you imo and thanks lololol

    • @erxo1
      @erxo1 2 года назад +1

      they betrayed a patriot what a shame

  • @ThePlataf
    @ThePlataf Год назад +15

    I rejoiced when this was first on the news. A great way to end the 80s!

    • @marcusonesimus3400
      @marcusonesimus3400 Год назад

      Absolutely, but in 2023, despite undeniable economic growth and technological progress, how much better off is the world really? Look at what is happening in Ukraine and could happen in Taiwan. I don't think we are going to defeat climate change or poverty.
      What I can say in grnuine hope is that the return of Christ and the end of history as we know it are getting nearer all the time.

    • @missingno88
      @missingno88 10 месяцев назад

      @@marcusonesimus3400 climate change doesnt exist but you're right about the return of christ

    • @marcusonesimus3400
      @marcusonesimus3400 9 месяцев назад

      @@missingno88
      Christ Himself prophesied natural disasters as harbingers of the end times, the beginnings of birth pangs. We see such signs in the news quite frequently these days. I live in a northerly country where significant change in weather patterns affecting both humans and wildlife has occurred over the past few decades. Melting of ice in the Arctic Ocean, increased frequency of wildfire in the forest belt, and increased vulnerability to flood and drought are well known here. I see no inconsistency whatsoever between Christ's prophetic narrative and a generalized belief in climate change. To consider humans as partly responsible through greed and 'conspicuous consumption' doesn't seem unreasonable, either, if we acknowledge our sinful inclinations.
      The difference is that the Word of God always speaks the Truth, whereas human science is full of speculation and uncertainty, requiring continual revision.
      How sad that many young people today worship Science as an idol.

  • @radosawrusnak7700
    @radosawrusnak7700 3 месяца назад +2

    the best and most satysfying reality tv I've ever seen

  • @pc3983
    @pc3983 3 года назад +127

    It’s strange how it all changed in a moment and he realised he was screwed !

    • @brianwalsh1401
      @brianwalsh1401 2 года назад +6

      It's wonderful isn't it. To see such a nasty piece of work start to get some payback and where it would finally end shortly. I wonder of he knew that his 30 years of living large was going to end like that if he still would've taken the deal.

    • @millenniumman75
      @millenniumman75 2 года назад +2

      @@brianwalsh1401 After 50 years, Biden's still corrupt, and stupid.

    • @millenniumman75
      @millenniumman75 2 года назад +2

      @Sapnap I don't think that's true....Biden is MUCH more like Ceausescu - completely out of touch with his people, forcing vaccinations, getting out of Afghanistan without telling our allies who had troops there, sending inflation so high people can't afford things like canned soup, and the RUclips Secret Police and SOcial Media being monitored....and protecting Joe like he's a genius.
      Face it, Sapnap - JOEjanHorse is MUCH more Communist than Trump ever was. YOU GOT PLAYED for your vote and you are still in denial!

    • @luiginb
      @luiginb 2 года назад +1

      @@brianwalsh1401 he was just a figurehead for a system that lives on in Romania. the ones pulling his wires are the same ones in charge nowadays. And their children.

    • @sebastianjosefsson3620
      @sebastianjosefsson3620 2 года назад

      @@millenniumman75 Ceausescu was actually intelligent and well spoken, but he is bad as a leader as Biden sure. Biden is a walking mess, he is so dement that he doesnt even know whats going on.

  • @Teachering
    @Teachering 11 лет назад +185

    An artist friend of mine lived in Yugoslavia during the time of Ceausescu. He told me that he would travel to Romania sometimes because art supplies were very cheap in Bucharest. He told me that people on the street walked about in abject misery; a look of sheer misery on every one of their faces. He would see a Romanian soldier from time to time make an appearance and people would scatter in panic. The soldier had a face that showed hatred for every thing and every one. Like a vicious hound!

    • @petekdemircioglu
      @petekdemircioglu Год назад +3

      Theyre all filled with Nothing but hate and violence. Its their character and values.

    • @thepopcornsniper5555
      @thepopcornsniper5555 Год назад +22

      @@petekdemircioglu That's not true. The soldiers for example did not hate anyone, they were mostly village boys in their 20's who had nothing to do with communism and just wanted to go back home. It was the "Securitate" (secret services) men that indeed were cruel, they were the hardliners. My father was in the army at that time and he said everyone there hated Ceaușescu. He is a very kind and warm man, but he said that if he was in the platoon that executed Ceaușescu, he wouldve fired without hesitation his entire magazine in him. What you two say about us is absurd, we are kind and welcoming. During those times, most of the soldiers were filled with hate not towards the people, but towards the dictator that made our life hell. I invite you to visit our country and see for yourself how we really are.

    • @lambda2657
      @lambda2657 Год назад +9

      @@thepopcornsniper5555 Ofc a turkish person calls romanians full of hate xD

    • @thepopcornsniper5555
      @thepopcornsniper5555 Год назад

      @@lambda2657 Yeah, that too 😁

    • @LivebythecodeVJLEE
      @LivebythecodeVJLEE Год назад

      @@thepopcornsniper5555 you never lived in Romania.

  • @quantumshock6620
    @quantumshock6620 Год назад +13

    "Smithers, are they booing me?"
    "Uh no, they are saying '"boo-urns, boo-urns."

  • @DrPatHistorian
    @DrPatHistorian 16 дней назад

    I was studying international relations at uni in Uppsala, Sweden when this happened and "the wall" came down. Our course material had to be updated almost daily. World events were our best teacher. Best time of my student days and very emotional. May Romania stay free and prosper.

  • @buddyanddaisy123
    @buddyanddaisy123 5 лет назад +256

    I liked his wife-a Nobel prize winning chemist! (not). Ceaucescue had chemistry professors write papers for her-she signed them.

    • @fjodordorndorf2706
      @fjodordorndorf2706 3 года назад +18

      sounds like Merkel

    • @andrewuk2683
      @andrewuk2683 3 года назад +22

      I heard she banned Chemists from getting certain products so they got around this by requesting them using scientific names which they knew she wouldn't understand. She then signed them off. Lol. Anyway, all's well that ends well. I'm glad she got a bullet. She deserved nothing less, as did he.

    • @joel.759
      @joel.759 3 года назад +20

      @@andrewuk2683 my chemistry teacher told us about this lol. Ceaușescu's wife was Nobel prized in chemistry but she was actually dumb af

    • @psobbtutorials6792
      @psobbtutorials6792 3 года назад +23

      @@fjodordorndorf2706 this is Germany buddy, not Putinstan. There is credibility to our leaders degrees as we actually indict our politicians like Gutenberg and co for their wrongdoings. And unlike Russia degrees in the west actually mirror scientific progress and metrics such as scientific papers released per year unlike Russia where half the population has officially a degree, yet that same population isn't smart enough to bring prosperity to itself.

    • @jarls5890
      @jarls5890 3 года назад +7

      @@joel.759 She never got a Nobel prize or was a laureate. Can not find any info about that. She did however essentially give herself a Phd in Chemistry, and a number of Romanian honorary titles.
      Not so difficult when your husband is the dictator.....
      PS: She only ever completed elementary school.

  • @sirlew1951
    @sirlew1951 5 лет назад +138

    So we never got to hear the end of the speech. That must have been frustrating for regular listeners.

    • @zedsdeadbaby
      @zedsdeadbaby 4 года назад +2

      actually it was quite satisfying.

    • @Azurefanger
      @Azurefanger 3 года назад +5

      actually 90% of the people was taken by force to hear the spech

    • @icemanbuchanon7728
      @icemanbuchanon7728 3 года назад +2

      ..0.00% was regular

  • @hannahchase3628
    @hannahchase3628 Год назад +33

    This needs to happen everywhere..start with the unelected at Davos.

    • @alalbatross6549
      @alalbatross6549 11 месяцев назад +3

      He looks and acts like president Biden. Completely lost touch with reality.

    • @jackakakreanxx5587
      @jackakakreanxx5587 2 месяца назад

      @@alalbatross6549at least caucescu knew when the jig was up Biden is too disconnected to know when the sky is up unless his puppet masters say that the sky is down

  • @razoblicavanje4231
    @razoblicavanje4231 9 месяцев назад +1

    Put 1/2 in the caption so that people know that there is part two.
    I almost left this page when I saw it accidentally.

  • @eddiemuff0371
    @eddiemuff0371 2 года назад +17

    Him yelling 'Alo' is like a teacher who cant keep the class quiet

    • @halfbakedproductions7887
      @halfbakedproductions7887 Год назад

      I used to have Romanian neighbours in the block of flats I used to live in. Heard 'Alo' a lot if they were trying to attract attention, or if they were having a boisterous party and so on.

  • @BillSikes.
    @BillSikes. 6 лет назад +227

    I remember all this well even though I was just a child when this happened, next he tried to make his escape in a helicopter, but the pilot and crew delivered him not to safety but to a peoples tribunal where him and his wife were found guilty and duly sentenced to death... Yes I remember it all as if it was yesterday

    • @silviucp
      @silviucp 2 года назад +25

      The tribunal was a military one that was composed of generals who repressed by fire the demonstrations in city of Timisoara and by his death sentence they tried to cover up their guilt..

    • @Chechen348
      @Chechen348 2 года назад +15

      Same thing will happen with Putler

    • @biohazard8295
      @biohazard8295 2 года назад +3

      @@silviucp well if he was given to the people they would've killed him nontheless

    • @gykg3202
      @gykg3202 Год назад +3

      Aw wao! Interesting! I did not know that. Brave people in Romania! Greetings from Hingary

    • @AshleyPomeroy
      @AshleyPomeroy Год назад +4

      I remember he was executed on Christmas Day 1989, which meant that television that day was really odd. Adverts for Crocodile Dundee and the Russ Abbot Christmas Show interspersed with footage of Ceausescu and his wife lying dead in a schoolroom.

  • @Morro1916
    @Morro1916 2 месяца назад +2

    Надо видеть как это лицо меняется когда возгласы толпы из приветствия и восхищения перерастают в гул презрения и ненависти)) Думаю тогда он осознал что для него все кончено. Я уверен что однажды на одном из таких публичных выступлений в каких нибудь Лужниках произойдет нечто, чего мы может быть сами от себя не ожидаем.

  • @aaronhamos5925
    @aaronhamos5925 7 месяцев назад +2

    If you play at. 25 speed you can pinpoint the second his heart rips in half.