Should we finally invade Baltics countries? (Latvia, Estonia, Lithuania)

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  • Опубликовано: 25 май 2024
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    Timestamps:
    0:00 - Russkiy Mir: short explanation.
    0:22 - Disclaimer
    0:37 - Don't use relocation services, instead find some local lawyer
    1:21 - 1st person
    1:44 - 2nd person
    1:57 - Amir, 22, student
    2:15 - 4th person
    2:21 - Gleb, 19, restaurant worker
    2:54 - 6th person, 74, professor
    3:42 - Estonia to stop Russians...
    4:34 - Even on the map!
    4:51 - Ground News!!!
    5:18 - They even have application on the phone!
    5:39 - Aleksandr, 50, software developer
    5:56 - Oleg, 47, dentist
    6:43 - Aleksandr, 50, software developer
    8:02 - 9th person, 49, designer
    8:53 - Aleksandr, 26, grad student in economics
    9:39 - 11th person
    10:15 - Aleksandr, 26, grad student in economics
    10:57 - 12th person, 63, works in chemistry industry
    11:33 - Olga Dmitrievna, 74, works in longevity industry
    12:12 - Georgiy, 32, cook
    13:02 - 9th person, 49, designer
    14:12 - 12th person, 63, works in chemistry industry
    14:42 - 9th person, 49, designer
    16:29 - 1420: who made this video, when and where.

Комментарии • 3,1 тыс.

  • @1420channel
    @1420channel  Год назад +66

    Go to ground.news/1420 to check it out for free or subscribe before March 20 and get 30% off unlimited access.

    • @ground_news
      @ground_news Год назад +4

      Thank you Daniil! For anyone interested, check out the link above and let us know if you have any questions.

    • @typxxilps
      @typxxilps Год назад +1

      Simply ask them if they should finally invade Jekaterinenburg.
      Will be funny to listen to those that wann invade Jekaterinenburg cause those might also invade Moscow too once you ask.

    • @stevemccall74
      @stevemccall74 Год назад

      It would be like gettin it on with a sheep, except the sheep would smell better.

    • @ems4884
      @ems4884 Год назад

      Not sure I understand your disclaimer in this video: that "Russian world" is "not that serious." Perhaps you mean to use a different English word? It sounds like something that IS being taken seriously these days, especially by the Kremlin. Are you trying to say that it is not always connected to Russian imperialism?

    • @Synaptic_gap
      @Synaptic_gap Год назад

      Daniil, you should definitely charge a premium for these kinds of advertisements.

  • @edvinask
    @edvinask Год назад +3892

    As a Lithuanian native I can say this - we don't have problems with a Russian speaker as long as he is a decent human being - if you came here and started talking how Lithuania or any other Baltic state needs to be united with the Russian World, prepare for a very negative reaction. Especially if this type of conversation would take place with a young person. We love our cultures, languages and traditions. There is a reason the Baltic states opted to join NATO, we just simply want to exist further, in peace. With no fears of another invasion. And ever since our independence we are just building our society and values again and I'm really excited to see where time will take us. And if the worst case scenario happens and Russia opts to invade our peaceful countries, I can guarantee - the resistance would be fierce and widespread.

    • @andrzejzawada6172
      @andrzejzawada6172 Год назад +254

      Całkowicie się zgadzam. Pozdrawiam z Polski.

    • @axelv1753
      @axelv1753 Год назад +520

      As a Swede I hope we will join Nato soon so we can fight together for your countries if that happens. Russians need to understand that it is agression and authoritarianism we are against, not the russians who respect these values.

    • @evimba
      @evimba Год назад +385

      As a Latvian guy, I could say all the same words!

    • @JesusSanchez-ij5de
      @JesusSanchez-ij5de Год назад +294

      Spaniard here. You are not alone in this figth, brother.

    • @anatolijussierakauskas9639
      @anatolijussierakauskas9639 Год назад

      Same here. I don't understand why russians are mad at us for our ruzzophobia. You f*kers want to remove Ukraine from the map, don't give us all that bullshit about fighting nazies. You are the real evil. From the roots. And you want other countries to look at your atrocities and be like, ok, ruzzians are a bit crazy but we love them, come visit us. Yea, don't think so

  • @StayPrimal
    @StayPrimal Год назад +1688

    ''I'm not embarassed to say that on camera that I recently had a mobilized buddy come back, he told me not to believe what they tell us on TV.'' Thumbs up to this dude, not afraid of the truth.

    • @kkivela
      @kkivela Год назад +72

      On the other hand, this guy also assumes that Russia will now have the conquered territories of Ukraine, which means that Russia has some right to steal the territories of an independent state.

    • @marktuyet
      @marktuyet Год назад +81

      My buddy in Moscow is afraid to talk to me now on the internet. He hates Putin with a passion.

    • @Nancy-mi3xe
      @Nancy-mi3xe Год назад +24

      Brave of this guyto state it openly. Bravo to him. And to you for mentioning it.

    • @kaur9384
      @kaur9384 Год назад

      ​@@marktuyet if so , he could sabotage russian war efforts , a Simple molotov cocktail into train repair depo or into govermental offices could go a long way

    • @ilanweinberg2561
      @ilanweinberg2561 Год назад +101

      @@kkivela I understood him to say Russia's war has been waged unimpressively and that Russia has given up on its original goals and that "at best" it will stop at the borders of the "alleged" new territories .. I don't think he meant that Russia has any right to steal Ukraine's territories.

  • @Shuffledudee
    @Shuffledudee Год назад +601

    "Under the Soviet Union, all the republics lived in friendship and respected each other" What a joke...

    • @janis0085
      @janis0085 11 месяцев назад +59

      They are brainwashed 😂

    • @roetilliceline2917
      @roetilliceline2917 11 месяцев назад +23

      Yep! They massacred Ukrainians back then.

    • @lanamack1558
      @lanamack1558 11 месяцев назад +17

      I guess it's depends on whether you call civil war friendship. My grandfather from Talivka , on the border to ruzzia fought the tsar (Russian Empire) for independence followed by the fight against the Bolsheviks to stop the annexation into the SU. during the Holodomor he was taken to a friendship camp aka gulag for protesting against the Holodomor. My uncle was then deported aka resettled to Central Asia. All in good order, in friendship ... seriously?

    • @siegfried487
      @siegfried487 11 месяцев назад +13

      Especially Crimea tatars and Greeks that were departed in 1944 by Stalin to Siberia

    • @raimondasrimkus6078
      @raimondasrimkus6078 11 месяцев назад +15

      Most of people in prison are also living friendly, but that doesn't mean they like to be there.

  • @jakomentator416
    @jakomentator416 Год назад +582

    Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania can count on Poland. We are together
    🇵🇱❤️🇱🇹❤️🇱🇻❤️🇪🇪

    • @jakomentator416
      @jakomentator416 Год назад +8

      @@JamesGreen57447 oh yeah, I hope it will happen... it must happen!

    • @egro_chaplia
      @egro_chaplia Год назад +1

      @@JamesGreen57447 🤣🤣🤣

    • @egro_chaplia
      @egro_chaplia Год назад

      @@JamesGreen57447 Daydreamed. As a result, Ukraine will lose the war, China will become the new hegemon, and the NATO alliance will either start World War 3 or break up. What awaits Russia and the EU, only God knows.

    • @herluisalvarado8366
      @herluisalvarado8366 Год назад +1

      @@JamesGreen57447 The problem will be if Turkey and Hungary lifts its veto to Sweden over the Kurdish question.

    • @lastsamuraial
      @lastsamuraial Год назад

      Poland casus belli before ww2?Not such a friendly country at all.

  • @sporasparel5032
    @sporasparel5032 Год назад +926

    "Russia never actually attacked anyone" My grandparents would disagree with that one

    • @Call_me_daddy6
      @Call_me_daddy6 Год назад +163

      there are many,many countries who would disagree with it.

    • @MsNinich
      @MsNinich Год назад

      Oh my ancestors wouldn't agree with u too after what u very done in karelia with finno ugrjsh population here, and hey, I am finno ugrjsh of Russia, we never can understand why u r like that

    • @larzkruber822
      @larzkruber822 Год назад +99

      The chechens, the afghans, the ukrainians and the georgians.
      I didn´t even need grandparents to remember them

    • @nbgoodiscore1303
      @nbgoodiscore1303 Год назад +27

      Georgians born before 2005 actually remember it quite well... Since our first long term memories are formed at 3 years of age.

    • @user-mx6cw5mu3f
      @user-mx6cw5mu3f Год назад +19

      thats is russia, they are all the same.

  • @sadsadratatouille5984
    @sadsadratatouille5984 Год назад +1541

    I’m a russian-speaking Latvian and never had any problems, because I still communicate in Latvian when needed. And that’s how it should be. I have my culture that is a bit of both, but I absolutely respect full Latvians that do not speak Russian or don’t want to. Why tf should they? We’re in Latvia.

    • @myrainbowhoneycom
      @myrainbowhoneycom Год назад +103

      Aww... 👏💛
      Tnx form latvian. 🙂

    • @WangAiHua
      @WangAiHua Год назад +14

      Is that just you or do ALL RuZZians in Latvia think that way?

    • @raitiC1
      @raitiC1 Год назад +130

      ​@@WangAiHua No, He is an exception! Most Russians can't even say a hello in Latvian. 😆

    • @Baby_Noodles
      @Baby_Noodles Год назад +42

      Čau no Valmieras! Jauku dienu! :)

    • @thilomanten8701
      @thilomanten8701 Год назад

      Be proud of both - 1 + 1 = 2 You have more to bring, in not less. As those purely imperialistic and grifting wannabe's in the Kremlin think.

  • @HanzGrub3r
    @HanzGrub3r Год назад +62

    As Latvian this video give me hope! If you are a good person, we do not discriminate whether you are Russian or not.The biggest problem is the Russians in our country who haven't learned a word of Latvian in 30 years and behave like pigs. It just gives a bad impression of everyone else. Practically all Russians who have entered Latvia from Russia in the last 15 years are very nice and warm people.

    • @herluisalvarado8366
      @herluisalvarado8366 Год назад +5

      Latvia should expell all them. You must remain that you not are your Baltic Oblast for them anymore!

  • @peterjanoff
    @peterjanoff Год назад +64

    My wife’s Estonian. Her grandmother was deported to Siberia twice. Her mother was born there in the tundra. Let it be said that the people of the Baltics are among the most socially tolerant on god’s green earth. They do in fact co-exist well with the Russian speaking populations of the three tiny states. Strange considering the hell Russia put these small republics through. The Russian minorities are actually quite prosperous there. Such a high level of social integration is rare. Some might resent the ethnic Russians but do that in such a subtle manner that it’s hardly noticeable. Those interviewed were pretty liberal. Which is a great relief.

    • @georgyzhukov6409
      @georgyzhukov6409 10 дней назад +1

      then how come the baltics opened their arms wide for the nazis and helped kill off their jewish population?

  • @just_a_turtle_chad
    @just_a_turtle_chad Год назад +1194

    You have to feel sorry for the intelligent and empathetic Russians that are surrounded by such toxic nonsense.

    • @Nancy-mi3xe
      @Nancy-mi3xe Год назад +20

      AGREE!

    • @51AB
      @51AB Год назад

      Where can you find an intelligent and empathetic Ruskie?? They are all lobotomized and could care less that they are murders, rapists and terrorists.

    • @justicedominica1473
      @justicedominica1473 Год назад

      That’s most Russians, only the leaders and those in power acting like this and brainwashing others ☹️

    • @misterwirez7731
      @misterwirez7731 Год назад

      Check out Russian media monitor channel, if you haven't, and watch the poisous garbage, lies and propaganda. It's disgusting. Translated to english,. I was amazed this video showed more intelligent open minded Russians. There's a lot the other way usually.

    • @UncleHam1337
      @UncleHam1337 Год назад +4

      asynchronicity
      4 days ago
      You have to feel sorry for the intelligent and empathetic Russians that are surrounded by such toxic nonsense.
      6,9 t

  • @juliuszaromskis8738
    @juliuszaromskis8738 Год назад +658

    Lithuanian here. I'm genuinely surprised by the lack of Russians wanting us to join Russia Mir, compared to the previous Poland video. I am sorry to say that recent events in Ukraine has changed my perception of Russians. Before 2021, I only disliked the Russian government, but now, the general indifference and political apathy of perhaps 80% of Russians makes it really hard to appreciate their culture. I wish we could just live in peace, trade and live happily ever after.

    • @mpingo91
      @mpingo91 Год назад +62

      Poland achieved great success after the overthrow of communism. Unlike Russia, the 1990s are viewed differently there, in Russia having a black legend. The quality of life (considered through all elements, not just wages) is incomparably higher there. Russia views such phenomena with envy and doesn't really know what to do about it. The simplest ideas come to mind...

    • @mpingo91
      @mpingo91 Год назад +4

      @@Cortesevasive Read carefully what's in parentheses. In ancient Rome, it was sometimes the case that slaves were richer than their masters.

    • @joe_ninety_one5076
      @joe_ninety_one5076 Год назад

      ​@@Cortesevasive Brainwashed.

    • @PlasticDoll.
      @PlasticDoll. Год назад +50

      ​@@Cortesevasive and how did you exactly come to the conclusion of putting the word Ukraine and n@zi together?

    • @MrVeryfrost
      @MrVeryfrost Год назад

      @@Cortesevasive And if you support Putinazis, you not a problem?

  • @cammie90
    @cammie90 Год назад +49

    🇪🇪 Im happy in Estonia. I wouldnt wanna live under Putins rule.

  • @leldesaulite-rozite
    @leldesaulite-rozite Год назад +89

    I am from Latvia, I was glad to hear few reasonable people, especially 2 ladies starting at 11:14. But what me amazed is how still many mention that in Soviet time all republics lived friendly….😂 yeah so I would correct it and say lived “friendly” as we were occupied and forced to live under communist regime with no other option. I see with many people in Russia that even if they are against war in Ukraine, but the imperial mentality is very strong though!!!! We stand with Ukraine 🇺🇦 🇱🇻

  • @VicSage1836
    @VicSage1836 Год назад +400

    The lady with the red, white and blue beenie with glasses seems like such a good person. And she's right. Successfully leading with competency and compassion will bring people to your side. Those are the kind of people we need in power. Pretty much every person, everywhere on the planet just wants to live a comfortable life with enough food to eat, a roof over their heads and good times with those they love.

    • @KickassUncle
      @KickassUncle Год назад +13

      I was going to say something similar, but you beat me to it, bravo.
      Russia is repellent, not attractive. The people should know this and do something to change it.

    • @ronmullard5718
      @ronmullard5718 Год назад +3

      exactly what is wrong with living peacefully with your neighbours....even if they are in another country.....no one wins in war....

    • @MyFiddlePlayer
      @MyFiddlePlayer Год назад +1

      "Soft power" is vastly more effective at bringing people over to your side than military power. Of course, for it to be effective, you have to be selling something that people might want to buy into...It is hard to imagine that very many people want to buy into rule by corrupt oligarchs, but Q-Anon (another of Prigozhin's projects?) is doing the best that it can.

  • @edpistemic
    @edpistemic Год назад +550

    Overall one of the most reasonable sets of interviewees you've ever shown.

    • @pawekurowski
      @pawekurowski Год назад

      Propaganda hasn't started giving them crap about the nazis in the Baltics yet, so their doublethink lives without a pre-installed system about what they're supposed to think.

    • @RA1KU
      @RA1KU Год назад +32

      I agree, I was ready for some serious genocidal rants.

    • @yidiandianpang
      @yidiandianpang Год назад +9

      Because the question was ridiculous, invade the Baltics.

    • @jasc4364
      @jasc4364 Год назад

      Yet what about the claims that ¾ of the Russians endorse the ‘special operation’? Just BS?
      If true, ¾ is an extraordinary high level of danger and for me and more than good enough to nuke everybody in Russia without the slightest afterthought.

    • @yidiandianpang
      @yidiandianpang Год назад +3

      @@jasc4364 75% is probably true. Well most just assume their leaders must be doing what needs doing and are not thinking about politics much because it's fruitless and dangerous. But real opposition is probably less then 25%. It's hard to blame them given the years and years of propaganda they've heard. This is a well developed science by now.

  • @makuba2
    @makuba2 Год назад +33

    I`m from Estonia... I salute the 9th person for understanding the world as it is.

  • @mk3tsi
    @mk3tsi Год назад +71

    As a baltic person, it kinda baffled me when you said "bring ruskiy mir before western influence", we as Lithuanians drifted far away from "ruskiy mir" and keep on drifting even further. I'd like all the Russians listen to the 9th person 8:03 and understand why WE DONT WANT ANYTHING TO DO WITH RUSSIA. Also he is aware of China. The most well informed person in this video

    • @persapphone
      @persapphone Год назад

      He still thinks we were “indoctrinated”.

    • @Madis002
      @Madis002 11 месяцев назад +3

      I think the "indoctrinated" part was just somewhat badly translated. Don't know much russian myself, so can not confirm to be the case. Though the same person speaks in at the end of the video and from the subtitles it would seem that he might think that the already occupied regions could be considered russian. That part was mentioned in a different comment thread and some other people said that what he actually used words like "alledgely russian" and other adjectives that made it clear that he in no way approved invading Ukraine, so I would rather lean towards assuming that the guy speaking was very reasonable.
      Translating is hard, something will always be lost in the translation. Not trying to be negative here, this channel is great, be safe and keep doing what you are doing!

    • @georgyzhukov6409
      @georgyzhukov6409 10 дней назад +1

      lithuania was always russia, get over it

  • @cbs2476
    @cbs2476 Год назад +332

    The last guy seems to understand the world deeply. Especially his insight about China is very impressive.

    • @devmiles
      @devmiles Год назад

      Russia is about to become China’s bitch

    • @dw620
      @dw620 Год назад +1

      Indeed! The PRC still claims what is now the Russian Far East, for a start...

    • @Daakkii
      @Daakkii Год назад +15

      Exactly

    • @jasonpednault465
      @jasonpednault465 Год назад +1

      China is by far Russia’s greatest threat. They need the land and natural resources more than any other country in the world, and they border a very remote section of Russia.
      It would be easy pickings for China.

    • @cbs2476
      @cbs2476 Год назад +7

      @@jasonpednault465 The Russian government talks about the Neonazi of Ukraine a lot and it is a bit wrong direction. I recommend them to pay more attention to China in this regard)

  • @fredbyoutubing
    @fredbyoutubing Год назад +652

    A lot of rational, down to Earth, people in this video. It almost brings me hope

    • @squeakycleannnn
      @squeakycleannnn Год назад +1

      More like chained to earth.

    • @pawekurowski
      @pawekurowski Год назад +32

      1. It is doublethink like in Orwell. Why they can't say the same thing about Ukraine?
      2. Or is it a war defeat that makes them think in civilized terms? Which means one thing... keep helping Ukraine until Crimea is liberated.

    • @RichardTaylor1630
      @RichardTaylor1630 Год назад +30

      @@pawekurowski Have you forgotten that criticism of the special military operation is punishable by 15 years in prison? They can say what they say about Estonia because it's not covered by that law. They expect you as the listener to connect the dots.

    • @marsianer4842
      @marsianer4842 Год назад +10

      Hope? No. Retribution for what Russia has done to Ukraine and to Ukrainian civilians. Yes. For generations.

    • @gaoxiaen1
      @gaoxiaen1 Год назад +1

      @@squeakycleannnn More like enslaved by the Soviet Reunion. Russia should send mobiks from Moscow and St. Petersburg to prove its commitment.

  • @konchokkadro7436
    @konchokkadro7436 Год назад +26

    I am a Russian speaking Latvian and it was somewhat refreshing to see these people talking about us. One guy even knew about Soviet occupation of the Baltics! We don’t hate each other in Latvia, I have many Latvian friends and many families in interracial marriages. We are bilingual and we speak both languages fluently. One thing I can tell for sure that we are not Russians in a cultural way. The only common thing we have with Russians from Russia is language like British and Australians for example, but our ways of thinking, culture, traditions are very western. This could be the reason why some Russians may perceive our attitude as hostile, it is not, it is just more individualistic and liberal vs Russian conservative consciousness.

    • @Scouter98
      @Scouter98 Месяц назад +1

      Not true at all. Russians, or slavs in general form their owns groups and rarely interact with natives here. Marriage between slavs and balts is not common, as previously mentioned, both groups form their own circle of friends, therefore relationships outside it don't happen often. Exceptions would be slav majority regions.
      Let's not fool ourselves, I can tell a Latvian from a Russian in a glance. From facial features to the way they dress, it's sometimes subtle but nevertheless we are and always will be different.

  • @leotimtom6637
    @leotimtom6637 Год назад +17

    Russkij Mir- poverty, aggression, alcoholism and hipocrisy.

  • @MaxVerhaag
    @MaxVerhaag Год назад +84

    "russia never attacked" srry wtf?

  • @kolasillers7776
    @kolasillers7776 Год назад +38

    I was on barricades 1991 in Riga. Doma Square. I'm now 55 but will do whatever it takes.

    • @fgb6737
      @fgb6737 Год назад +4

      People Sing a song in auditorium opposite Russians 😊
      Greetings from Andalusia in Spain 🇪🇸

  • @DageLV
    @DageLV Год назад +104

    Russophobia in baltics. Well. im latvian. You know how many times a year I'm demanded by russians to speak Russian, when they approach me and i tell em I'm not russian?
    Guess the reason i have never seen all 4 of my grandparents and they took a one way trip to siberia on a train, and russians moved in their houses?
    What about them trying to influence our government and push for russian as second official language, so every latvian is obligated to learn it?
    When is russia going to acknowledge the horrendous war crimes it committed against us and pay for them?
    We ain't visitors in our own country, yet sometimes it feels like we are.
    I don't mind the russians who at least try to speak Latvian, but I've ever met only one, the rest very likely cant even put a short sentence together in our language, yet have lived here for decades or even born here.

    • @stalkeriscringe
      @stalkeriscringe 10 месяцев назад +6

      @@cu6upckuu48 no, but they are there for a short time, these Russians live there,And act rude when you say that you dont speak russian.

    • @nikafomenko2261
      @nikafomenko2261 10 месяцев назад +8

      Same thing in Georgia. Most ruzzians automatically start speaking in ruzzian which is very annoying and disrespectful, especially from younger ones

    • @henriparn9221
      @henriparn9221 10 месяцев назад +2

      ​@@cu6upckuu48again , why not comment on the reply. The difference is the American tourist and short term visitors are here temporary whilst the discussion is about Russians who live in said countries and refuse learn. Yes any other nationality that plans to live long term in any country is expected to learn the language

    • @henriparn9221
      @henriparn9221 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@cu6upckuu48 which ex soviet country you live so I know where these overlords are that are permanent and don't learn the language. You do understand just cause troops are signed to a country doesn't mean they don't rotate them like in every 6 months aka no one is gonna or is expected to learn the language. And the difference between them and Russians is that they could do it but they don't, but russia sure has tried multiple times.

    • @henriparn9221
      @henriparn9221 10 месяцев назад

      @@cu6upckuu48 sure , only exsisted 10k years , Russians will merge with globalism as well. But you never replied, which ex soviet country are you from ?

  • @keblusasmuo933
    @keblusasmuo933 Год назад +21

    as a Lithuanian i was surprised by the answers

  • @VBTrain
    @VBTrain Год назад +502

    Fair play to the people in this video for not leaving me in a state of existential dread like 1420 videos normally do

    • @dylanharper1274
      @dylanharper1274 Год назад

      I've never understood what existential means - what does it mean?

    • @NomadJoe0323
      @NomadJoe0323 Год назад +9

      Agreed. Finally found some reasonable people to interview.

    • @seseliuvaldovas1240
      @seseliuvaldovas1240 Год назад +10

      @@dylanharper1274 Are you even sentient?

    • @dylanharper1274
      @dylanharper1274 Год назад

      @@seseliuvaldovas1240 I notice you don't explain it

    • @PlasticDoll.
      @PlasticDoll. Год назад +10

      ​@@dylanharper1274if you are serious, since I know not everyone speak english fluently.
      existential is just an adjective to existence, basically anything that relates to existence. and existential dread is an actual thing people have like depression, it's when someone exists in a state of despair and uncertainty.

  • @gfody7593
    @gfody7593 Год назад +148

    The last gentleman sounds more informed than all the generals and Putin put together. He obviously gets his news from sources other than Russian state TV. Hopefully more & more people join his ranks. Thanks Daniil!

    • @noname-kf5xs
      @noname-kf5xs Год назад +7

      Last "gentleman", who casually said they should stop on whatever line russia has already annexed in Ukraine, not because it's wrong, but because Ukraine (suddenly!) fights back, instead of pulling out all together out of a sovereign country?
      You have really low standards.

    • @johnwayne8494
      @johnwayne8494 Год назад +4

      @@noname-kf5xs Seriously, the lowered standards in this comment section speak to how indoctrinated Russians are.

    • @harkmi3
      @harkmi3 Год назад +17

      @@noname-kf5xs if you read the translation of this guy’s commentary in the video he called the occupied territories “alleged” parts of the Russian federation which implies he does not agree with the annexation of these territories into the Russian Federation. He is pushing back on the dominant theme in Russian media that all the actions taken by Russia are legal and that the people of Ukraine welcome the invaders. I assume that he would be the kind of person that eventually will accept the return of Crimea to Ukraine along with all the other occupied territories. Let’s not be too harsh on our allies in Russia who are on the right path.

    • @RichardTaylor1630
      @RichardTaylor1630 Год назад +12

      @@noname-kf5xs You seem to have a really low ability to comprehend the comments of a person who has to judge every word against the possibility that he could be thrown in jail for fifteen years for "criticizing the special military operation." In that light, I find him to be extremely sensible, moral and astute. Clearly, if it were up to him, Ruzzia would withdraw all of its forces from Ukraine tomorrow and live in peace going forward.

    • @noname-kf5xs
      @noname-kf5xs Год назад +3

      ​@@RichardTaylor1630 I'm half-russian myself & I speak fluent russian. I will dare to say I have a better ability to comprehend russians than most people from the Western side of the world.
      The "allegidly Russian" wording at 15:57 is biased in translation. What he says is "на границе этих областей, которые мы заявили что теперь это территория російськой федерации".
      Word to word, it translates "on the border of these regions, which we declared now that this is the territory of the Russian Federation". You can check with google translation the accuracy of the sound and translation. There is no "allegidly Russian" bit, whoever subbed this video had added that on their own.
      Russians went to war with Ukraine and got stuck with it for a year, while expecting to be done in 3 days. They know they look bad to the outside world, they won't make themselves look even worse on camera. That's why pretty much all of people in this video, minus the old lady, repeat the same mantra "war bad", but once you ask them whether they WANT Baltics included in russian federation, they sure do.
      This guy's argument is based on "my buddy went there, we're losing so we need to stop", not on "we invaded a sovereign peaceful country and ruined millions of lives, we need to stop".
      Ask yourself what his "buddy" did in Ukraine. People in Bucha didn't shot themselves in their heads on their own, kids in Mariupol's dramtheater didn't drop the bomb onto themselves either.

  • @lauvzane
    @lauvzane Год назад +64

    Do you know what they mean by "Baltics are friendly"? They come to our countries and demand the Russian language everywhere they go- as if they never left Russia. That's what "friendship" is for them. I can't imagine walking into a Moscow cafe and expecting the waitress to understand my orders in Latvian. But for some reason, Russians expect this and call it "friendliness" :) Even after they have lived here for a long time, they don't speak the language, because "we understand Russian anyway, so why bother learning an useless language?". Nobody else does that, Estonians, Swedes, Chinese- all learn the language. But not these people, that's why they call us "friendly" :)

    • @WangAiHua
      @WangAiHua Год назад +9

      It is call chauvinism!

    • @meylishydyrov4382
      @meylishydyrov4382 Год назад +10

      there are lots of ethnical russians living even nowadays in Turkmenistan and they do not speak Turkmen, the state official language of the country. But we still try to display them some tolerance even though we are not supposed to do them any favour.

    • @lauvzane
      @lauvzane Год назад +5

      @@meylishydyrov4382 EXACTLY

    • @alise4041
      @alise4041 Год назад +11

      Constantly makes me crazy how Russians who live all their lives in Latvia are unable to learn even basic Latvian, it's such disrespect and then they wonder why Latvians don't like them, because they are selfish. They think world spins around them! I have meet only couple of people would do their best to learn and speak Latvian and I respect that, because it's not easy language, but they trying. I myself am half Russian and speak in all three languages, yet most millennials and gen z don't even bother learning Latvian, because their selfish parents told them to not bother learning language. I wish all those people just moved back to Russia, as they keep complaining how everything here is terrible and how Russia is such amazing country.

    • @Neeger80
      @Neeger80 Год назад +7

      @@alise4041 I've experienced a Russian person who even didn't understand any latin letter eveh she lived here more than 50 years. It is just an attitude issue.

  • @antoon777
    @antoon777 Год назад +16

    Wow. As a estonian. I am speechless. So many adequat people in this video. Wow.

    • @badass6954
      @badass6954 Год назад

      I think he filtered out the people with hardline view. The other day daniil was complaining about how some people used some clips of his video which favoured war while leaving out people who are negative about the war

  • @fd2824
    @fd2824 Год назад +140

    Whenever I hear Russian propaganda talking about Russian World, I am reminded of Transnistria. 30 years of 'cooperation' with Russia has made Transnistria the poorest region in Europe. Imagine what 30 years of EU would have meant.

    • @fateaglio
      @fateaglio Год назад

      Yeah Russians in high places are so corrupt its insane. They funneled all the cash out of that region

    • @dw620
      @dw620 Год назад +9

      It doesn't help that Русский мир translates as both Russian World and Russian Peace... and crushing dissent in order to implement culture changes can still be deemed a "peaceful" result in the long run (as was the Russian-led Soviet ethos).

    • @gabrieleDATass
      @gabrieleDATass Год назад +5

      Yeah I've been there and it's as depressing as it gets. Everything is either controlled by the "sheriff" or black market. Young people are especially struggling.

    • @HigherMorality
      @HigherMorality Год назад

      That's because Moldova was the poorest in Europe (2nd poorest now since the Ukraine has taken first place). Nothing to do with any Russian cooperation. It's blockaded by the rest of Moldova and isn't connected to Russia by land. Take a good look at countries like Kazakhstan or Belarus that have prospered thanks to Russian cooperation. Both countries are far ahead of pro-western Ukraine in every aspect of development. Whatever pitiful little crumbs the EU throws its vassals have to be paid back for a hundred fold with national dignity, sovereignty and independence.

    • @dw620
      @dw620 Год назад +7

      @@HigherMorality Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania are all more prosperous and happy than your examples. Try again.

  • @grasenwolken
    @grasenwolken Год назад +166

    I am always amazed at how my mood can be affected by what a random person says on the Russian streets. This was a 'good' video. Goodnight

  • @maaripoim9049
    @maaripoim9049 Год назад +9

    Estonian here. I am positively surprised about the lack of enthusiasm on the part of the interviewees. This batch of ppl actually sounded more-less decent, I could understand some of them very well! People seemed to have doubts about the war and having more war just seems absurd, which is good. I hope these sentiments also stop the war in Ukraine. Overall, it feels a bit safer here when ordinary Russian ppl do not support any war in the Baltic region. Whew

    • @user-zu9dp8rs6f
      @user-zu9dp8rs6f Год назад +2

      Советую не верить. Он не выкладывает часовой стрим где опрашивает людей.

  • @sanfander
    @sanfander Год назад +37

    I'm Estonian. When the Russians came to the villages of my grandparents, they gathered up young girls and took them to rape them. They kidnapped the people who were a little bit better off and wealthier and sent them to Siberia. Those people died there. So I think a negative attitude towards Russia is kinda understandable.

    • @nyurkao2061
      @nyurkao2061 Год назад

      hmmm, interesting thought. Why the world doesnt still hate germans who burned/killed/raped half of the Europe by the time of your grandparents?

    • @egro_chaplia
      @egro_chaplia Год назад

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @egro_chaplia
      @egro_chaplia Год назад

      How many days ago did this happen?

    • @sanfander
      @sanfander Год назад +2

      @@egro_chaplia 1930s-1940s, do you not know about the Russian occupation of Eastern Europe?

    • @jjdemor
      @jjdemor Год назад +5

      I am Italian. 20 years ago i made a tour in baltics. I Ve heard only bad things on Russian under soviet Union. But in Lithuania they told me that grandparents used to say that nazists were better than soviets...my god.

  • @squeakycleannnn
    @squeakycleannnn Год назад +341

    Their biggest mistake is assumption that they are in a position to decide what's right or wrong for a sovereign country.

    • @mikebunting7262
      @mikebunting7262 Год назад +41

      That is their SECOND biggest mistake. The biggest is not realizing that the Baltics are part of NATO. We will defend ALL of NATO territory

    • @moisiewe
      @moisiewe Год назад +3

      @squeakyclean didn't usa doing the same all around the world?

    • @squeakycleannnn
      @squeakycleannnn Год назад

      @@moisiewe What does it have to do with anything? You think if someone does something you're automatically entitled to do the same?
      If someone is wrong, you're allowed to be wrong as well?
      Childish, dumb, irresponsible and ignorant.

    • @ObamasBirthCertificate
      @ObamasBirthCertificate Год назад +9

      ​@@moisiewe yeah, and that was wrong too. People generally also agree over that?

    • @moisiewe
      @moisiewe Год назад +3

      @@squeakycleannnn I'm talking about double standarts, everyone is ok with 1 000 000 dead in Iraq (invaded with no reason even when UNSC said big fat "no), it's ok when usa is occupied 1/3 Syria,but everyone is complaining about Russia for some reason.

  • @LethalTurd
    @LethalTurd Год назад +114

    In Lithuania we have a sizeable population of russians who were born here but refuse to speak Lithuanian. It's like they are waiting for the soviets to come back.

    • @aleksandraslisauskas2871
      @aleksandraslisauskas2871 Год назад +16

      Well russians in Lithuania doesnt make up big percentage of entire population. But these so called russian-speakers are very concentrated in certain areas. In fact Lithuania is the least colonized with russians among the Baltic states.

    • @VitaliiThe
      @VitaliiThe Год назад +4

      that's why the two types of passport is the best idea

    • @giedrestankeviciene34
      @giedrestankeviciene34 Год назад +30

      ​​@@VitaliiThe There's only one type of passport in Lithuania -- that of the Republic of Lithuania.

    • @youngxlotus
      @youngxlotus Год назад +3

      Same for Estonia, and the population doing so is pretty big...

    • @VitaliiThe
      @VitaliiThe Год назад +1

      @@giedrestankeviciene34 you better know than me, I'm talking about "Non-citizens" like in Latvia and Estonia

  • @vikentijslauruts2153
    @vikentijslauruts2153 Год назад +14

    8:06 finally a russian who knows history and tried to put himself in our shoes. hats off, thank you

    • @LitNoah
      @LitNoah Год назад +3

      Literally the only russian who I saw speaking from our shoes 😂

    • @Crimson19977
      @Crimson19977 2 месяца назад +1

      Yes, he was very reasonable and honest

    • @henriikkak2091
      @henriikkak2091 15 дней назад

      That would be considered normal for most nations but our bar for Russians is lower than anyone else.
      Someone knows the history of their country: A round of applause!
      Someone feels empathy:
      Aww

  • @mimisor66
    @mimisor66 Год назад +26

    Daniil, a lot of older people seem to think that under the Soviet Union all peoples were respected and lived in peace and harmony with each other. But in ex Soviet republics, historians talk about mass deportations to Siberia, bringing in their place Russian speakers that held all command positions and never bothered to learn the local language, assimetrical development, territory exchanges between republics to divide and control. So it was a period in which Russians where first among peers and had a lot of advantages, but they fail to see the imbalance?

    • @WangAiHua
      @WangAiHua Год назад +5

      You forgot to mention the Holodomor!

    • @mimisor66
      @mimisor66 Год назад +2

      @@WangAiHua This is specific to Ukraine. I was discussing ex-Soviet republics in general.

  • @rlcg37
    @rlcg37 Год назад +101

    The lady at 11:27: exactly. Instead of invading other countries, focus on making Russia a place that people WANT to go to and you'll find friends around the world.

    • @dmitriyivanov9854
      @dmitriyivanov9854 Год назад +1

      That's exactly what Russia and Putin tried to achieve in the beginning, but the idea of strong economically and military Russia was a nightmare for USA/NATO, they always need an enemy to satisfy the needs of the MIC. Just watch the Munich meeting in 2007 and make som conclusions.

    • @rlcg37
      @rlcg37 Год назад +29

      @@dmitriyivanov9854 Again, this is the exact misunderstanding between Russia and the rest of the world. Strong does not merely mean military might. Respect does not mean fear. To others, strength is found in taking care of your own people--not in invading others. Strength means working infrastructure, roads, running water to every house, old people who can heat their homes. Strength means diversified industry at home. Strength means the ability to allow diverse opinions instead of putting it all into the hands of one unchanging government leader, with no room for dissent. And also, strength means taking responsibility for one's self instead of pushing the problem off onto someone else (NATO, the US, etc.) and saying it's all their fault, or using whataboutisms to justify things.
      Respect means not fear and intimidation, not control, but the ability to live peacefully with one's neighbors. To allow other sovereign nations to do their own thing in their own borders instead of deciding they aren't real countries and sending missiles at their hospitals, schools, and homes. Those actions will never create respect, but rather, the opposite. It's continually surprising to me how much Russia talks about the West/the US being "the enemy" when prior to this invasion, the West spent very little time even thinking about Russia, much less being obsessed with trying to oppress the country.
      Look, I don't know the answer to how Russia can solve its problems. That's a Russian question and it's got to be solved in a Russian way. But starting an invasion of another sovereign nation is NOT the way to solve the problems inside Russia. Instead, it just kills off your bright young men, impacts your labor force, and makes other nations not want to interact with Russia anymore. Which is a really unfortunate thing for a lot of people, both in and out of Russia. It makes me sad. I still have individual Russian friends, but my opinion on the nation as a whole has definitely changed, and the respect I once had has evaporated.

    • @pacmanc8103
      @pacmanc8103 Год назад +5

      @@dmitriyivanov9854 You don’t get it, do you?

    • @dmitriyivanov9854
      @dmitriyivanov9854 Год назад +1

      @@rlcg37 same here about the USA. No respect at all for the politicians, but unlike you I still respect the people.

    • @dmitriyivanov9854
      @dmitriyivanov9854 Год назад +1

      @@pacmanc8103 Do you? You read and understand russian as good as english?

  • @TheKitehh
    @TheKitehh Год назад +261

    As a Latvian, it was interesting to watch this video compared to previous multiple videos, a lot of them were very negative but I have to admit, I respect some of the responses like 8:20, its nice to see acknowledgement of Baltic States history, our so called "hatred" towards Russians didn't came with out a reason but a lot of Russians don't see that or even learn why a lot of countries are resentful towards Russia.
    I was ready to see very negative attitude from people but I was wrong. It's a breath of fresh air to see logical people for a change, most of the times I see a lot of delusion and cognitive dissonance from Russians. Respect also for last dude and this lady 11:28. Also she's right about making their own lives better so neighbors are interested without invading, too bad their state uses other means.

    • @WangAiHua
      @WangAiHua Год назад

      Funny how losing in the war makes one think a bit---I wonder if those people wouldn't be cheering had RuZZia been winning!

    • @The_InfantMalePollockFrancis
      @The_InfantMalePollockFrancis Год назад

      Most Russians think this war is absurd. Don't believe what Putin (or Ukraine for that matter) tells you regarding popular support for the war. They are under a dictatorship.

    • @allenk6373
      @allenk6373 Год назад

      The man that was in this second was looking like stereotypical Russian who is Z pro putin
      But he is actually smart

    • @n.jurenic
      @n.jurenic 10 месяцев назад +3

      "making their own lives better so neighbors are interested without invading" this is what russians will never understand. every eu country that joined nato did it willingly not by force. if i were russian i would ask myself, how come that so many slavic people turned to west instead of russia. we slavs speak the "same" language and have simmilar culture after all.

  • @EPlTETS
    @EPlTETS Год назад +35

    The reality in Latvia (from the Latvian perspective) is this - until the war in Ukraine, 90% of the Latvian population tolerated Russian culture in every single way. We had Russian media, Russian schools, Russian monuments, Russian events, etc. No matter where you went, to a club, restaurant, or any other place - you could easily communicate in Russian.
    After the Russian full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2021, things have changed. We removed most USSR monuments, prohibited most of the Russian TV channels, removed the Russian language from street signs, and restaurant menus, we are refusing to buy Russian gas or oil from now on, etc. There will be no Russian schools or kindergartens - in every educational institution in Latvia, the Latvian language will be the primary from now on.
    Some people would say it is wrong, it is Russophobic, etc. But you have to understand that we as an independent country have the rights to shape our internal culture as we want and consider correct. Those who want to stay can adopt. Those who don`t like it can leave.
    It doesn`t mean we have physical aggression against Russians. No. We are just saying that because of what happened in Ukraine, we are finally making some changes that we have been putting off since the collapse of the USSR.

    • @07Blackbeard
      @07Blackbeard Год назад +11

      100% support from Lithuania. I have no idea why even we had Russian-language schools. I don't think any other countries in the world apart from Baltic sisters have publicly funded foreign-language schools.

    • @MsThePrettiest
      @MsThePrettiest Год назад +1

      ​@@07Blackbeard Russia has a Latvian school. And a lot of schools teaching in local languages

    • @slowmorbius8805
      @slowmorbius8805 Год назад

      No, it just shows that you are physically against the Russian people, now is just a great reason for you to drop your masks. Moreover, give you weapons and let you understand that you will not get any payback for the destruction of the Russians and you would be happy to take up this case together with your brothers from the Baltic States. But it's worth paying tribute to you, you tell beautifully that you have nothing against the Russian people and culture. Your wonderful European allies will believe this story

    • @Sdween
      @Sdween Год назад +2

      @@MsThePrettiest Does Russia offer government funded Latvian, Lithuanian, Estonian etc schools within Russia to offer these native people an opportunity to education in their "native" language and culture?

    • @Borubar_de_San_Escobar
      @Borubar_de_San_Escobar 10 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@07Blackbeard
      It is a question of civilisation - human rights.
      For example, in Poland there are public kindergartens and schools where members of National Minorities can learn in their own language in addition to Polish. Lithuanians, Belarusians ...

  • @noTTep
    @noTTep Год назад +53

    I am from Latvia, raised in Russian-speaking family with generalized post-Soviet "Russian" mainstream culture, although I got Ukrainian, Polish and Finnish blood, too (high percentage of each, besides my Finnish far ancestors). But generally you can say I'm "Russian".
    Never ever had any pressure from native Latvians. I visit Lithuania almost every 1-2 months - same. Was in Estonia - same again. In both regular conversations and in official/state institutes people are gentle and kind, and never insulted or attacked me for being "Russian".
    All that cheap Russian propaganda about "fascism" in Baltic States comes from actual modern-day Fascists that don't want to adapt, accept new political reality and not going to consider other cultures as equal in general and dominant on their native lands. These people still exist in historical phantom pain and their government uses "external enemy" and "enemies around" strategy to keep people away from inner problems that now turned into very fundamental crisis in Russia.
    For local Baltic vatniks/ruzzists, the "Baltic Fascism" is an excuse to change nothing in their worldview and lifestyle and keep blaming natives for own life/career/social failures because they simply either don't know language or exist only in reality of "Russian Ghetto" (which means lack of communication, lack of sources of knowledge, lack of working places, work for "grey" business with constant violations of rights and laws) and don't even know what's on the other side, where normal people just co-operate, work, study and chill together no matter what nation or mother tongue they are.
    That's ill mentality I don't want really want to see in my life, because it's disgusting. Everything you need is just learn the language and start respecting natives. This is everything natives ask for. You are free to be whoever you want and speak whatever language in your environment. Yes, natives don't see the history and politics the way ruzzies do, yet country could have only one political and ideological vector and it definitely can't be established by the loud minority of mainly old people. Simple as that. We eventually aren't and don't want to be another Prednestovie, Osetia or DPR/LPR for Russia. And we should never be. Accept it or GTFO.
    Identifying myself as generalized "Western Slav", considering my bloodline and Polish surname - I see Baltic Nations as brothers. Historically and culturally. It means respecting their right to be dominant culture in their native lands, respect their language and policy. Us, Slavs, definitely got the right to be a part of Baltic society, as well as Baltic nations must always be welcomed and considered as brothers in Slavic lands. We existed toe to toe forever and hardly influenced each other cultures. This is the attitude each Russian should seek, too. At this point main enemy of both good Russians and Baltic Nations is Kremlin that ruins whole harmony and co-existence of nations that are supposed to be friends.
    I'm glad at least Ukrainians and Poles are our close allies now. This is how it should be. Maybe, one day, when Russia will be free and mentality of it's core nation will be rehabilitated (if it's even possible) - people from Russia, not RuZZia, will come to Baltic States with totally different attitude and see how "negative" towards others Baltic people really are. I swear to God there will be absolutely no problem. And really never was until you decide to bring back occupation or Russian Imperialism ideas.

    • @herluisalvarado8366
      @herluisalvarado8366 Год назад

      Ukraine and Poland aren't real allies too! Ukraine killed many poles in 1942 in their sized lands of Galizia and Volyn massacres under Stepan Bandera and even Ukraine haven't paid IIWW war compensations to Poland or repatried the bodies of Poles deaths here.

    • @AnjaKnockKnock
      @AnjaKnockKnock Год назад +5

      Ypu are a good man who speaks truth, thank you.

    • @NjoyMoney
      @NjoyMoney Год назад

      There is no such thing as finnish far ancestors, finland is 100years old.

    • @noTTep
      @noTTep Год назад +5

      @@NjoyMoney yeah, Russian Federation exists for 30 years, thus Russian person can't be Russian, right?

    • @antanassmetona4054
      @antanassmetona4054 Год назад +2

      Toe to toe and influenced each other? I agree with everything you said but except that one claim. We're not related, we weren't toe to toe at any point in history. We're just our own people not related to anyone, why can't people just understand that. We've been alone for thousands of years unbothered by anyone, we'd like to keep it that way.

  • @aliancemd
    @aliancemd Год назад +65

    9:45 “lived in friendship and respected each other” - that’s Russian illusion, coming from propaganda. I am originally from a post-soviet country and all the elderly people describe oppression not “friendship”. The other countries were basically slave states for Russia, all resources going into Russia, there was even a saying “Sausage trains”, because people had to get on trains to go to Moscow to buy anything with meat, everything had to go to Russian cities - this is one of the reasons Russians remember it fondly, as the time “they had everything”, because they did, slave states worked for them.

    • @skurvoala
      @skurvoala Год назад +11

      It's not everything. They lived in propaganda that they were feeding us. It was the highest level of impudence. I remember when I was a little boy, I counted the wagons on trains going east. There was a farm machine on each of them.

    • @jakobstraus9842
      @jakobstraus9842 Год назад +4

      Also: illusion abt societal harmony w low crime degree.
      Sure: crime was state monopoly.

    • @Skrullex
      @Skrullex Год назад +1

      You are a liar.
      I live in a border town in the west of Russia, and people of the older generation tell how they traveled to the Baltic states to Belarus and Ukraine, but also to Moscow, to buy goods that were also produced in my region.

    • @pacmanc8103
      @pacmanc8103 Год назад

      @@Skrullex Hey, idiot. She was writing about the people in her country who were oppressed by Russians, not the other way around!😂 Learn to read before calling someone a liar.

    • @Skrullex
      @Skrullex Год назад +1

      @@pacmanc8103 You can also greet your image in the mirror verbally ... It was not necessary to write...

  • @Andymartin1175
    @Andymartin1175 Год назад +162

    I really hope you stay safe. Russia needs people like you for a decent future.

    • @cathjj840
      @cathjj840 Год назад +20

      And some of the people in this video, too.

    • @jonathanstein5049
      @jonathanstein5049 Год назад

      It will be a very long time before Russia decides not to bring its brand of death, destruction and misery to a neighboring country. It has to be contained.

    • @trumphatesyou
      @trumphatesyou Год назад +1

      No 💩. I've been here from the beginning and can't believe what he does.

    • @gaoxiaen1
      @gaoxiaen1 Год назад

      @@cathjj840 Russia has no decent future. Or decency.

  • @RavetsU
    @RavetsU Год назад +54

    Estonian here. Russians have done unimaginably terrible things to my family in the past. But we don't hate Russians. Only when they start to think that Estonians and Russians are the same, we will stand our ground. Russians are not our brothers, never have been. We just want peace and let our culture finally flourish after so many years under occupation.

    • @RivieraByBuick
      @RivieraByBuick Год назад

      "Russians have done unimaginably terrible things to my family" - yeah, right, as Stalin (georgian), Beria (georgian), Hruschev (ukrainian), Brezhnev (ukrainian) are all russians. facepalm. A lot of people mix words russian and soviet - which is a total nonsence, as Russia was occupied by Soviet government (during the civil war of 1918-1922) same as any of the Baltics countries.

    • @RavetsU
      @RavetsU Год назад

      @@RivieraByBuick Yet things have not changet. Hitler was Austrian, so Germans are innocent. Unbreakable logic.

    • @RivieraByBuick
      @RivieraByBuick Год назад

      @@RavetsU exactly. nazi politics is the one to blaim, not german es a nation. Although germany polulation during holocaust was A LOT more homogenous than USSR population. Try to beat it.

    • @reinoeiole9666
      @reinoeiole9666 Год назад

      I am finnish, and estonians are not our brothers either. You are baltic, not nordic.

    • @RivieraByBuick
      @RivieraByBuick Год назад +2

      @@reinoeiole9666 finland is on the baltic sea as well. So finnish are Baltics.

  • @maikastemae3627
    @maikastemae3627 Год назад +40

    As an Estonian, I am grateful that there are men in Russia like the one who speaks on 8.10.
    Estonians have nothing against those Russians who admit that Russia has occupied us in history and accept our freedom. The problem is with the Russians, who claim that they have saved us and that we voluntarily joined the USSR. Our forefathers have shared memories of how Russian soldiers deported our people to Siberia and killed and raped them. Knowing the history, people can be a little hostile towards the Russians. It's not Russianphobia; it's the fear of history repeating itself.

    • @paulm6529
      @paulm6529 Год назад

      I never understood why solders rape people. Why does this happen? Do they feel impunity and do everything they've wanted but haven't been allowed to?

    • @MsThePrettiest
      @MsThePrettiest Год назад

      The problem with your knowledge of history is that you think Russia occupied you, while in fact it was the whole USSR with it's native Georgian leader. And how you describing this got me thinking that you history classes are super americanised oversimplified version of reality where USSR is a synonym of Russia and all it's political elits are ethnically Russian. Which BS for sure and it will not take you long to learn what ethnicities were featured in the Soviet elits.

    • @maikastemae3627
      @maikastemae3627 Год назад +6

      @@MsThePrettiest Estonia was occupied for the first time in 1918 when Lenin was in charge, not the Georgian Stalin. The second and third time it was Stalin in 1940 and 1944. Georgia was not included in the original USSR agreement. It joined later. In addition, the capital of the USSR was Moscow.
      As for Americans, most of them know nothing about Baltic history. Maybe superficially.
      Our knowledge of history still comes from our ancestors-my grandfather, who was in Siberia for a long time. He never blamed Georgia for that. My father-in-law shared a story about his ancestor who the Russians raped on his son's dead body. These stories do not come from a history textbook but from our own lives. No teacher shares these terrible things with us. In that class, we only learned the annual accounts of who occupied us. Sometimes the Germans, and sometimes, the Russians. In addition, the Swedes, the Danes, etc., long ago.
      These people are still alive who have seen the USSR's occupation and life under the rule of the USSR.
      In Estonia, we have a city named Narva. Many Russian-speaking people immigrated there after the war, and there lives few Estonians. The reason is that the original Estonians were not allowed to move back to Narva before the 70s. But by that time, they had built homes elsewhere. Big saver that did not allow people into their homes for 30 years.
      Estonians' mistrust of Russia started before the USSR, because we were forced to live under the Russian Empire in the 18th century

    • @maikastemae3627
      @maikastemae3627 Год назад

      @@paulm6529 War turns man into a monster.

    • @EggertPlays
      @EggertPlays Год назад +2

      @@MsThePrettiest Americanised? More like real ground events reported by Estonians at the time. Just a quick google search could lead you to how Stalin issued an ultimatum to allow Soviet troops into Estonia, in the end it was about 160 000 soldiers. Then that turned into a Moscow approved coup and voila independence gone. So what history are you reading? Only Russian and Belarusian mandated history, because surprise surprise the entire world thinks very differently.

  • @TheZombaslaya
    @TheZombaslaya Год назад +396

    I used to live in Lithuania, lots of people speak Russian. Everyone is basically afraid of ending up like Ukraine and feel a lot of history repeating. Stalin annexed them in 1940 and they were incorporated against their will into the USSR. They want to move past that time and develop in their own way, and now they see Russia pulling the same thing with Ukraine that happened with them. That's why they've been so aggressive to Russia, they do not want 1940 to happen again, and if Ukraine falls, it's going to be either Georgia or them next.
    But you can visit them no one cares if you speak Russian, most of the older generation speak it while the younger generation speaks English. There's a bit more nationalism now post "special military operation", particularly in Lithuania. A guy in my class when I studied there last year was Russian, and he said he didn't notice any change in hostility towards himself being a Russian. So long as you're not pro-Putin and support Ukraine, no one cares there.

    • @nate8312
      @nate8312 Год назад +7

      i expect you lived in Vilnius

    • @TheZombaslaya
      @TheZombaslaya Год назад

      @@nate8312 I did

    • @m.m.6670
      @m.m.6670 Год назад +63

      Only 4.5 percent of Lithuania's population is Russian, but coincidently most of it is in the capital region and the eastern border regions. But yes, the older generations speak Russian, because they had to learn it in school as part of the Soviet regime. People born in 1990 and later do not speak Russian almost at all, unless they chose to learn it in school, but even then Russian language teachers reported slow learning rates due to psychological reasons (aka feelings the effects of the Soviet occupation regime on their grandparents and parents).

    • @nate8312
      @nate8312 Год назад +7

      @@m.m.6670 that’s exactly what i wanted to say

    • @Nancy-mi3xe
      @Nancy-mi3xe Год назад

      Putin has said Moldova next, then a long range plan to absorb Belarus....

  • @jerepyotsia2939
    @jerepyotsia2939 Год назад +100

    Guy from 8:03 is the only one so far who knew their history. Its not his fault, bjt it is wise to know the dark history of once country. Great guy.

    • @wol06fi89
      @wol06fi89 Год назад +21

      As a German I agree that one should always know your country's history and that it's very important to acknowledge your dark past. In Russia many people don't seem to really know how bad Stalin was or how Russia opressed all its neighbours. It has to do with the law that forbids "spreading disinformation about the Great Patriotic War" (It prohibits telling the truth in most cases). I mean imagine such a law in Germany...

    • @jerepyotsia2939
      @jerepyotsia2939 Год назад +6

      @@wol06fi89 Germany is such a great example of what good it can do. USA Credit for having literally a black history month (ofc a lot of improvments must still be done).

    • @squeakycleannnn
      @squeakycleannnn Год назад +1

      He seemed like not having a healthy sense of how tragic the whole operation has been though. Despite the historical facts he had apparently learned at some point so kinda sus.

    • @jerepyotsia2939
      @jerepyotsia2939 Год назад +7

      @@squeakycleannnn cant really tell as of the tone, but at least he understands thay they were to blame and at the ens he gave the good analogy of people not liking anything (Russia in this case) if it is forced

    • @kkivela
      @kkivela Год назад

      @@wol06fi89 So, Russia does not honestly analyze its history. The Memorial started an investigation into Stalin's crimes, but Putin's administration stopped it and made Stalin a hero. The current regime in Russia is a Nazi regime.

  • @GaryBullDog
    @GaryBullDog Год назад +17

    Я с Эстонии. Никогда никем не притеснялся и не чувствовал себя ущербным. Эстонский язык знаю на 50%. Я чувствую страну, как свой дом. Другие национальности они, как родные. Смесь русского и эстонского менталитета, это новое продолжение истории страны. За 34 года жизни я никогда не видел конфликтов на национальной почве. Кто хотел дружить, те дружили. Сейчас в столице, вообще нету разницы, кто ты. Все дружат, общаются и работают.

    • @Aaroncoppelman
      @Aaroncoppelman Год назад +11

      что существует какая-то руссофобия это миф придуманных самыми русскими, я жил в Донецке до 2021 года и благодаря рос пропаганде начисто верил, что во Львове таких как я избивают, но потом переехал в Луцк и когда люди увидели что у меня донецкая прописка то дали скидку на жильё и я за 2 года жизни на западе Украины только позитив чувствовал, хотя на украинском говорю з ужасно(сейчас усердно учу из-за собственого желания)

    • @GaryBullDog
      @GaryBullDog Год назад +5

      @@Aaroncoppelman Россия давно разыгрывает эту карту с "русофобией" и защитой "своих" людей. Люди которые живут за границей, слышат это и на подсознании начинают верить. Ведь "вторая армия мира" помнит о них и хочет защитить! Когда еще приходилось слышать с телевизора, что кто-то помнит и тебе и так яростно хочет тебя защищать? Это знаешь, пример из жизни. Работаешь ты на заводе и слышишь, как с соседнего завода (конкуренты), директор кричит, как он обеспокоен твоими условиями труда. Как сильно он хочет тебе помочь! Но директор твоего завода "нацист/фашист/предатель", всё делает, чтоб твоя жизнь и здоровье на работе, было хуже! Ну как, ты бы начал верить директору конкурирующего завода?

    • @KrokoDildos
      @KrokoDildos 10 месяцев назад +2

      @@Aaroncoppelmanам во львове рассказывали, что вы ненавидите нас и украинский язык, и хочете сделать с нас малоросов и россию 2.0 (как беларусь).
      Это многолетняя пропаганда))
      Я это понял, когда узнал, что организовавший нацисткий марш (именно нацисткий, с зигами и кличами) организовал некий чиновник - в 2016м году на донбассе уже по другую сторону пел об ущемлении русских во львове. Это был один и тот же чиновник.

  • @Tzan_Abrek
    @Tzan_Abrek Год назад +36

    Big respect from Georgia to our brothers from Baltic countries 🇪🇪🇱🇹🇱🇻❤🇬🇪

    • @Joeligma69420
      @Joeligma69420 Год назад +1

      Sending love back from Estonia

    • @JH-pv6rd
      @JH-pv6rd Год назад +4

      Love from Lithuania ❤️

    • @ragnarlaine4065
      @ragnarlaine4065 Год назад

      @@Joeligma69420 It’s like someone always says „Caucasian States” instead of Georgia. It’s no respect when you divide people from each other. During the Soviet occupation Finland helped a lot to restore the indepence and Sweden hosted Estonian refugees, schools and other organizations. So it’s pretty natural to group 🇪🇪🇫🇮🇸🇪 when you say about people, culture and politics

    • @ragnarlaine4065
      @ragnarlaine4065 Год назад

      @@Joeligma69420 Maybe just stop one day and say strong no to pro-Russian things like „Estonia”, „(Pri)baltika” in military, police, education system etc

  • @user-fm2uv4he3n
    @user-fm2uv4he3n Год назад +201

    Why would Baltic countries would like to join with fascist-Russia?

    • @kaur9384
      @kaur9384 Год назад +92

      We would not want to join russia even if it was democratic

    • @closeup6263
      @closeup6263 Год назад +14

      @@kaur9384The need at least 170 years to have a democracy in their country

    • @u2beuser714
      @u2beuser714 Год назад +4

      ​@@closeup6263They dont need democracy, they need competent and pragmatic leadership. Singapore is a de facto dictatorship yet its a prosperous country

    • @jorislal
      @jorislal Год назад +12

      @@u2beuser714I don't think you can apply an example of a city-state to any other country. It's like saying that any country can be as rich as Monaco.

    • @moscowneversleeps-qx3xc
      @moscowneversleeps-qx3xc Год назад +1

      ​@@kaur9384 Russia also does not want to annex the Baltic states. The time of communist ideas is gone forever.

  • @S.M.214
    @S.M.214 Год назад +34

    Invading a Nato country would be really crazy. Putin has enough grief trying to deal with his stupid decision to invade Ukraine.

    • @cinnaminson0653
      @cinnaminson0653 Год назад

      Putin is strong man, like Stalin. Putin not weak.

    • @Naelt147
      @Naelt147 Год назад +8

      ​@@cinnaminson0653 a strong man does not have to lie to justify his actions, a strong man is able to admit mistakes, a strong man does not have to put tens of thousands fathers, mothers, brothers, sisters, sons and daughters, children, toddlers and babys to an early grave just to get his way.

    • @rxtrx765
      @rxtrx765 2 месяца назад

      @@cinnaminson0653biggest mistake putin made, was to start world war 3.. that was the end of russia

  • @rayhoodoo847
    @rayhoodoo847 11 месяцев назад +10

    Honestly speaking, would like to see how russians would not be latvianphobic if latvians enslaved them, invaded them, killed them, oppressed them and did all sorts of other evil things for CENTURIES and even continued to have the same mentality now (contrary to germans, for instance). Huge respect to the man who said that if we are russophobic, then we have our reasons. Just as ukrainians have now.

    • @allright9945
      @allright9945 6 месяцев назад +1

      Russians are not Germanphobes,
      Russians are not Tatarophobes,
      Russians are not Turkophobes,
      Russians are not Japanophobes.
      Russians don’t despise any nations at all.
      This is the lot of smaller, disadvantaged countries that, lacking their own culture, build their culture on phobias.
      And also tell me about the agreement that the Baltic countries signed with Germany in 1939.

    • @rayhoodoo847
      @rayhoodoo847 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@allright9945 Sure. And what agreement? In 1939 Latvia was occupied by the soviet union / russia. If you want to talk about agreements, maybe recall the Molotiv-Ribentropt pact which your beloved country signed with nazis?

  • @Midnight.escape09
    @Midnight.escape09 Год назад +8

    Love how the guy mentioned china, it’s crazy to me that Russians think china has good intentions with them for the future

  • @lunachu8691
    @lunachu8691 Год назад +49

    That’s the smartest sample of people you’ve spoken with yet.

  • @MiSt3300
    @MiSt3300 Год назад +117

    8:18 finally a Russian person who understands why Russia's neighbours hate russia so much

    • @squeakycleannnn
      @squeakycleannnn Год назад +2

      Doesn't take a lot for some to fall out of their chairs. Oh wow, a sane person, lordy!

    • @MiSt3300
      @MiSt3300 Год назад +26

      @@squeakycleannnn in Russia it's very rare to find such a person

    • @radikkhabirov3794
      @radikkhabirov3794 Год назад

      @@MiSt3300 rather rare to find a Russian who can freely tell the truth while getting interviewed. folks seeing clearly what's going on avoid street polls in authoritarian and especially totalitarian states, keep their mouths shut. it's fact that too few brave people are ready to express their real opinion on camera. there was an incident where Russians told their point of view for the poll by DW were found by the police and got in trouble afterwards. the majority is scared to death, while brainwashed people supporting their governments feel completely comfortable knowing that they won't encounter ramifications. that's why you cannot trust any results of the opinion polls in countries with severe regimes. sociology doesn't work in countries alike as it's way too distorted.

    • @MiSt3300
      @MiSt3300 Год назад

      @@cheezed6897 no, but I live in a different neighour to russia

    • @AbsoluteADCC
      @AbsoluteADCC Год назад

      Just like half of Africa and East Asia hates UK, Netherlands and France and most of the world dislikes US.
      Soon, we will add China to this list, when they start "liberating" neighboring countries.

  • @pierre976
    @pierre976 Год назад +1

    I never ceased to learn and be impressed by your videos. ❤❤❤❤ You floor me.

  • @davidadamsmusic
    @davidadamsmusic Год назад +6

    As an American who tries to see through propaganda (from our government too) and seeks to understand the perspectives of each side, I find myself relying more on people’s behavior than what is said or written about in the media. What strikes me the most is how Putin claimed that Ukraine was “not a real country” yet they (Ukrainians) are fighting for it so vigorously. This behavior is very revealing that indeed- Ukraine is a real country that will defend itself. If Russia prevails militarily, that may be the easiest part. Winning over the hearts and minds of a nation after destroying them may be impossible.

    • @robertss7933
      @robertss7933 11 месяцев назад +4

      This learning style certainly isn't the worst, but you have to acknowledge that these opinions will always be based of the knowledge of the sociaty. I recommend you to pick up on some history books. Because very little percentage of Russians are aware of the terrible things they did to any of the post USSR country citizens. For example 1949 / 1941 deportations. It was unlawful to sing/compose Latvian songs, read Latvian books, poetry, and if you did you were put in prisons and had to endure some awful interrogations. And as you can imagine many more things which come under USSR regime.

  • @almastebele4564
    @almastebele4564 Год назад +132

    “The soviet republics were friendly”? As far as I remember, Russians viewed themselves as superior and called the caucas’ region dark skinned people “churki” (a racist slang) and all the rest of nations as Moscow’s slaves. As a Latvian I can say we don’t have a problem with Russian speakers, they just have to respect our language and culture which many of them don’t. They’ve maintained their historical syndrome of superiority. Indeed, the guy in 8:03 knows actual history many russian speakers here will deny.

    • @helivesforever7312
      @helivesforever7312 Год назад +11

      absolutely correct !💯

    • @marymarlow3646
      @marymarlow3646 Год назад +15

      I’m constantly reminded that the soviet states have a very different recollection of the USSR than the Russians have. And the gap has widened since these countries joined the western world and our ‘propaganda’ 😁.

    • @aleksandraslisauskas2871
      @aleksandraslisauskas2871 Год назад +29

      One example during the times when Lithuania was occupied by the soviets russians who moved here were telling to lithuanians to "speak in human". It seems that lithuanian language to the russians it's not human language and lithuanians aren't humans...

    • @almastebele4564
      @almastebele4564 Год назад +19

      @@aleksandraslisauskas2871 their superiority syndrome at its finest…

    • @laincoubert7236
      @laincoubert7236 Год назад +9

      "called"? that should be in present tense cause i hear that slur thrown around a lot. ESPECIALLY from my (slavic) family that actually live in the caucas region in the south, which is pretty much a melting pot of different cultures. truly brainrot.

  • @seadrifter8975
    @seadrifter8975 Год назад +46

    That last guy spoke his mind .some of the returning Russian soldiers are telling how it is in Ukraine currently .

    • @VicSage1836
      @VicSage1836 Год назад

      The idea of returning Russian soldiers isn't even mentioned in western media. Seems like everything I'm shown says they're either surrendering, defecting, or dying.

    • @OlegHooH
      @OlegHooH Год назад +4

      Seems like russia has to choose smaller target to abuse😀

    • @user-zu9dp8rs6f
      @user-zu9dp8rs6f Год назад

      @@OlegHooH что не на фронте ?

    • @user-zu9dp8rs6f
      @user-zu9dp8rs6f Год назад

      Конечно рассказывают. Например то что каждый носит с собой гранату, чтобы не сдаваться в плен, поскольку нацисты нарушают все возможные конвенции.

    • @OlegHooH
      @OlegHooH Год назад +1

      @@user-zu9dp8rs6f Мнооого пленних www.youtube.com/@VolodymyrZolkin

  • @kilrcola
    @kilrcola Год назад +1

    Probably the best video yet. These interviewees were very knowledgeable to what was going on in the past.

  • @grahamlawlor8361
    @grahamlawlor8361 Год назад +3

    Amazing journalism. You are a hero. One of your best ever, for sure

  • @nirvanak4634
    @nirvanak4634 Год назад +38

    Seems like Russians are getting tired of the war whether they’d like to admit it or not. If it’s taking them this long to take Bakhmut then there’s no realistic scenario for which they reach Kyiv.

  • @denv5371
    @denv5371 Год назад +3

    "The republics lived in friendship & respected one another"? Why then did these same republics collapse the Soviet utopia so quickly & comprehensively once given the chance? As for "unacceptable" western values, curious as to what those might be & how they'd somehow be worse than what the world sees Russia doing daily in Ukraine.

  • @laisvydassmailys4247
    @laisvydassmailys4247 Год назад +6

    Come to Lithuania and ask people about their values and their beliefs and which of them are the most important to them. I am 100% sure almost all of them will include freedom / independence. Like the wise man in the 8:00 minute said, we have a right to have an unfriendly attitude towards the russians as they used to take from us something what we desire the most. Our independence.

  • @candykisslolol
    @candykisslolol Год назад +19

    The man at 8 mins was exactly right. An educated man in history.

  • @edmurth
    @edmurth Год назад +16

    When you asked the lady at the end about the war, you could just sense how angry she was.

  • @condigos
    @condigos Год назад +15

    Моя семья (родители моих родителей) была сослана в Сибирь. Они были лишены своей жизни. Мир России был раком. И по-прежнему таким является. Это неизгладимая трагедия, которую нельзя забыть. Я надеюсь, что мирные люди по всему миру будут противиться такой несправедливости и бороться за свободу и справедливость.

  • @diane9247
    @diane9247 Год назад +6

    Daniil and Artyom, thank you once again for providing such valuable insight about Russian attitudes. The lady toward the end, with the funny little hat, was truly brilliant. Again, thank you for your courage. By the way, Daniil, you are a delightfully quirky and gentle human being.💖

  • @wkwojti
    @wkwojti Год назад +31

    I sympathize with all the people who found themselves in the occupied territories of Ukraine. They had their happy life and one day they were invaded by deceit their life has turned into a nightmare and now they have to live with their tormentors

    • @Mixoldi
      @Mixoldi Год назад

      The occupier will be destroyed.

  • @nbgoodiscore1303
    @nbgoodiscore1303 Год назад +96

    What russians are going through resemble a lot what my parents from Portugal went through during Salazar's dictatorship.
    We were also at war with our African colonies, and there was a secret police called PIDE that would hunt you down if you had any opinion against the regime. So people would intentionally avoid talking about politics.
    As you can see in this video, whenever someone says "I'm apolitical", they most likely support Ukraine.
    It is not ignorance. It is not apathy. They know what is going on but they don't know what to do about it.

    • @user-zu9dp8rs6f
      @user-zu9dp8rs6f Год назад

      Нет. Просто есть два выбора:
      1. Быть куколдом и поддержать Украину, на что способны не многие, мазохистов у нас мало.
      2. Не поддерживать Украину, тогда либералы организуют тебе демократическую травлю.

    • @danbaghoi4132
      @danbaghoi4132 Год назад

      @@user-zu9dp8rs6f нацик.

    • @davidfifer4729
      @davidfifer4729 Год назад +5

      Very insightful comment. I'm an American who lived in Portugal from 1976 to 1978. Parallels between Russia today and Portugal's Estado Novo had not occurred to me. Perhaps we should all start sending shipments of carnations to the Russian military.

    • @nbgoodiscore1303
      @nbgoodiscore1303 Год назад +2

      @@davidfifer4729 Salazar was already dead by the time of the revolution.

    • @07Blackbeard
      @07Blackbeard Год назад +1

      No, saying "apolitical" doesn't mean they support Ukraine. They're either neutral or support Russia, trust me. I know.

  • @fortuna7469
    @fortuna7469 Год назад +2

    Thank you for your outstanding and brave work.

  • @jenniferoshea2020
    @jenniferoshea2020 Год назад +1

    Thank you for your work!

  • @ablay777
    @ablay777 Год назад +94

    Daniil, Recently Russian politicians, including consul of Russia in Kazakhstan, were claiming that northern part of Kazakhstan was “gifted to Kazakhs”, and that Kazakhstan “might have growing number of nazis just like in Ukraine”. Could you make a video where you ask people in Russia what they think of Kazakhstan and Kazakh people in general, and should Russia take their northern cities back?
    I am really interested in what they think about that.
    Thanks.

    • @Chaldon-hl6yk
      @Chaldon-hl6yk Год назад

      "Criminal Code of the Russian Federation"
      Public calls for unleashing a war of aggression -
      committed with the use of mass media are punishable by imprisonment for up to five years

    • @aliyasm
      @aliyasm Год назад +12

      Me too… from Almaty. Asked the same question on recently video. And got reply from Russian in Almaty - he was upset and said that we can’t imagine how many Russians who are citizens of Kazakhstan support putin and this horrible war.

    • @rogierfrederiks8420
      @rogierfrederiks8420 Год назад +10

      My sister in law is Kazakh Russian and she is supporting the war 😢 My brother too, he is not even from Russia but from Western Europe🙃
      Before they were against the Russian gov, but have been turned by propaganda. Russian propaganda reaches wide and far...

    • @aliyasm
      @aliyasm Год назад +13

      @@rogierfrederiks8420 we have sooo many Kazakh Russians who was born here in Kazakhstan but support putin. When we Kazakh asked them directly what they will do if Russia attacks Kazakhstan we hear nothing. So my neighbours, my Kazakh Russian colleague - all of them are separatists inside my country. It was a real shock for me.
      fortunately not all Kazakh russians think like that. But we can feel the hidden split in society.

    • @borsuk3798
      @borsuk3798 Год назад +3

      This could be interesting also to ask them how the Russians came from in Kazakchstan.

  • @SoftPastels
    @SoftPastels Год назад +15

    12:43 - "Russia never attacked" wow how braindead some of the citizens are

  • @justaguy-69
    @justaguy-69 Год назад +1

    dude i so liked your videos and style, watched them before at another location in usa but now im in asia and found you again by accident, subscribed now! carry on !
    61 year old american ( :

  • @sivx17
    @sivx17 Год назад +9

    Its rather interesting when the one guy said Russia was more likely to expect a back stab from China because recently they enacted a law to call cities and towns in disputed borders with Russia with their traditional Chinese names instead of Cyrillic.

  • @cameroncurrie7208
    @cameroncurrie7208 Год назад +113

    I'm Canadian and to me Russia looks like a depressing place to live. Nothing ever improves it only goes backwards.

    • @danrook5757
      @danrook5757 Год назад +3

      Obviously you’ve never been in a re-education camp from 1989 to 91. In eastern russia

    • @God_Like_666
      @God_Like_666 Год назад +8

      You’re wrong. I’ve lived here almost all my life and things go improve. And it’s not depressing. It’s just like any other county. Maybe you should stop listening to what your media tells you.

    • @rOstwald
      @rOstwald Год назад +25

      ​@@God_Like_666where exactly do you live in Russia? I have friends all over Russia, young and old. None of them say that anything moves forward. Russia regresses by day.

    • @passerbye
      @passerbye Год назад +7

      I am Russian from Saint Petersburg but now I live abroad. A have not traveled Russia a lot, but from my prospective yes, most parts of the country seem to be depressing, that’s true, but Moscow and Saint Petersburg were very nice places to live, especially if you have a good salary. Saint P is very beautiful, public transportation is very nice, taxi is cheap, lots of bars, coffee shops, many interesting museums. It used to be easy to travel to Finland and Estonia for a weekend, it was really easy to get a Finnish visa, especially before the pandemic. It’s a safe city, safer and cleaner than many places in Europe. The average wage isn’t impressive but it’s more than possible to earn a decent amount of money. Sadly Putin destroyed everything and now it’s defo better to leave Russia.
      But for the war, that would be a joyful place to live. Come visit once Putin is imprisoned, you’ll like it for sure

    • @istvanglock7445
      @istvanglock7445 Год назад +7

      @@God_Like_666
      I visited Russia in Soviet times - utterly depressing. I guess nowadays the big metro centres are rather better, but I'll bet out in the boonies nothing has changed. Even in the metro centres, there's a crunch coming when the monetary reserves run out sometime this year - then it's back to 1990.
      Try not to be condescending toward people. It's one of the more distasteful of Russian characteristics. You don't know on what basis people form their opinions. People have brains, and some people use them.

  • @dpelpal
    @dpelpal Год назад +59

    The idea of Russki mir died hard when the baltics joined NATO lol.

    • @reav3rtm
      @reav3rtm Год назад +3

      From Russian pov yes. From Baltics pov it died when they joined EU.

    • @matejfele9971
      @matejfele9971 Год назад

      Such thing as russian peace never existed in the 1st place.

    • @badass6954
      @badass6954 Год назад +3

      Georgia and ukriane should join NATO too

    • @herluisalvarado8366
      @herluisalvarado8366 Год назад

      @@badass6954 First they must expell the Russian forces from their ocupated lands and their russian population too.

    • @herluisalvarado8366
      @herluisalvarado8366 Год назад

      The Baltics quickly joined to NATO after US invaded Iraq ilegally in 2003, and they realize that Russia as UNSC with veto power could done the same to them, and prove right after that Georgia got attacked in 2008 and Crimea got sized in 2014.

  • @elviskramins3409
    @elviskramins3409 Год назад +14

    Я латыш и мы не имеем не чего против русских которые уважают других народов. Мы нация которая очень любит и ценит свою язык и культуру. И мы рады когда их ценят и другие. Проблема том что иногда его унижают люди которые хотят здесь жить и не учится наш язык. Им так хочется чтобы к нам приехали русские танки и начали нас бомбить. Это заболевание называется БИДЛА. Дайте другим жить в мире и сами живите в мире. 🤝👍

    • @flarrry
      @flarrry 11 месяцев назад

      Так а зачем ваш язык учить? С кем на нём разговаривать? Если латыш образованный он будет знать или русский или английский. А если не знает ни русского ни английского то что с ним обсуждать?

    • @flarrry
      @flarrry 9 месяцев назад

      @@inatklw Не обязаны жители разговаривать с ним на русском. равно как и русский не обязан разговаривать на языке жителей! Есть международный язык - английский, на нём можно договориться с ЛЮБЫМ образованным человеком на Земле, в том числе и с латышом.Вот прямо сейчас в баре в Вильнюсе спросили на русском. Бармен не знает. Переспросили на английском - всё ок. Ну и нафиг тот литовский? Аналогично и с латышским и прочими микро-языками.Зачем учить язык который знает в Мире 1 млн если за то же самое время можно выучить язык который знает 500 млн ?

    • @flarrry
      @flarrry 9 месяцев назад

      @@inatklw Это понятно. Речь о том что страну можно поменять на страну получше. И испанский с английским в этом случае пригодятся гораздо больше, а аутсайдером останется Латвия которая растеряет человеческий потенциал. В той же Финляндии шведоязычных всего 7 процентов. Тем не менее шведский - государственный. И никто из шведов не становится "аутсайдером" и не дезинтегрируется из общества. И никто не забыл шведский "через несколько поколений".😄Даже в США люди комфортно живут не зная английского. И если тратить 600 часов своего времени на изучение иностранного языка, то лучше учить внглийский, а не язык на котором говорит 1 млн человек в мире. И с чего вы решили что изучение русского или английского должно привести "к отказу от своего языка и культуры"? Какой ущерб латышу от изучения русского или английского можете пояснить?

    • @uzstiklo7141
      @uzstiklo7141 9 месяцев назад

      @@flarrry Differently from Russians, Latvians willingly learn foreign languages, especially English. Obviously, there's no enthusiasm whatsoever to learn the russian language now. First, when Latvia was occupied by the Soviets, Latvians were forced rather than chose to learn russian; second, russia is waging a senseless war and committing war crimes in Ukraine, which doesn't serve as an incentive to learn the russian language and culture; third, many russian speakers living outside russia demonstrate chauvinism and entitlement, which isn't an attractive feature at all. Linkėjimai broliukams latviams iš Lietuvos!

    • @flarrry
      @flarrry 9 месяцев назад

      @@uzstiklo7141 So, does anyone force you to learn Russian? The point is that learning a language spoken by 1 million people is a waste of time. It is better to learn English during this time.

  • @laimismalp5049
    @laimismalp5049 Год назад +6

    I am Lithuanian who speaks fluently Russian and have no problem with a people still love Pushkin and other authors and artists but if you will come with Putins t-shirt ore Z letter we have a problem, I think this how the most my countryman view Russians! BTW you guys doing amazing work!

  • @ines_uk
    @ines_uk Год назад +132

    As a Latvian, I hope the majority of Russians think like most of these interviewees… at least secretly. Growing up in Riga, I’ve met and worked with so many Russians and most of them were really nice people. Never had any real problems with any. Although, it’s true that there are almost two parallel worlds living in one - Russian and Latvian. We coexist mostly peacefully. I used to work in an office where more than half of my colleagues were Russians and many of them didn’t know Latvian well or at all. Yet they all had good jobs, salary and opportunities. So no one can tell me that they are oppressed due to anything. And none of them wanted to be back in Soviet times either.

    • @telebubba5527
      @telebubba5527 Год назад +15

      It all depends on the propaganda that they are being fed and how much they believe in it. But rest assured, Latvia, just as the other Baltic nations are part of NATO now and your future is secured. The Moscovites will never dare to touch your country.

    • @linamatusov9283
      @linamatusov9283 Год назад +9

      Я как русская могу вас заверить, что я не знаю никого из моего окружения, кто бы хотел захватить вас. Это звучит как нонсенс и бред. Нам это даром не надо. Вот, честно, мы даже не думаем о вас. Вы думаете о нас больше, чем мы о вас. Мы вам не завидуем, как многие почему-то думают. Нам нет до вас никакого дела. У нас своих хватает. Вывод - простым людям в России вы неинтересны. Если у вас есть претензии к нашему правительству, ваше правительство должно вместе с нашим на дипломатическом уровне решать возникшие разногласия.

    • @leotimtom6637
      @leotimtom6637 Год назад +10

      So what stopped them from learning Latvian language? Velikij ruskij shovinism?

    • @WangAiHua
      @WangAiHua Год назад

      @@linamatusov9283
      So why did YOU attack Georgia and Ukraine?---In RuZZian media there are many threats to take the Baltic countries!---Do you live in dreamland?--Do you lie to us? Do you lie to yourself?--Because what you same does not fit the facts!

    • @alekisp6814
      @alekisp6814 Год назад +10

      ​@@leotimtom6637 young generations of Latvian Russians know Latvian language. Its not a problem for majority. But anyway, its not about a language at all. Rusophobia is a official part of ruling class politics. Unfortunately

  • @demetr285
    @demetr285 Год назад +167

    Now the expression "Ukraine is the shield and sword of Europe" means more and more meaning

    • @OlegHooH
      @OlegHooH Год назад +3

      + bread busket for Africa, Asia

    • @SirMatusalem
      @SirMatusalem Год назад +2

      Long live Ukraine, fck Russia.

    • @perfectmazda3538
      @perfectmazda3538 Год назад +3

      @@OlegHooH so ? russia is a petrol station for the world...

    • @OlegHooH
      @OlegHooH Год назад +6

      @@perfectmazda3538 kind of, discounter for China

    • @santar5006
      @santar5006 Год назад +2

      What do you mean? I didn't hear much desire to invade the rest of Europe in this video

  • @amalekited
    @amalekited Год назад

    Thanks for the vid bro

  • @46FreddieMercury91
    @46FreddieMercury91 Год назад +4

    Let us take a moment to remind ourselves how brave these people are to express their honest views on camera, under that government

  • @karjalanpie6606
    @karjalanpie6606 Год назад +189

    I am originally from Latvia, born and raised there but now I live in Finland. And as a Latvian I can tell you a lot of people have hate against Soviet Union (todays Russia) because of the atrocities they did to our people. Even in schools they never really told me that SU occupied our territories but after basic history lessons anyone with half a brain understood what happened back then. Latvians very rarely will say out loud their real thoughts but after population was so decimated I am even surprised people are not full out russophobic. My generation tries to move on from the past but also not forget it. This topic really hurts and I am happy that small Baltics are protected under NATO. Jokes on me as my mother is actually Russian and father Latvian I am myself in the middle but always know where I came from and as crappy a country Latvia is it is wonderful in its own way for me.

    • @user-uv1gv4tt5w
      @user-uv1gv4tt5w Год назад +6

      what does your mother have to do with the USSR, given that she is Russian and found those times? why the hell are you blaming the Russian people for what the government of the USSR did (and I would not forget the governments of the Baltic countries of the 1940s, who voluntarily joined the USSR, for some reason you don’t blame all Latvians here)

    • @helivesforever7312
      @helivesforever7312 Год назад +12

      crappy ??? are you ok

    • @almastebele4564
      @almastebele4564 Год назад +77

      @@user-uv1gv4tt5w volunteraly joined? 😂😂😂 did you hear your fellow compatriot in 8:03? We had an ultimatum from Moscow who threatened to invade by force if we do not “join voluntarily”. Also, how could the small Latvian army fight the Red army? And we don’t blame these days’ russians, we just want you to RECOGNIZE those facts. Most of you won’t do that.

    • @galactichitchhiker_
      @galactichitchhiker_ Год назад +2

      @@user-uv1gv4tt5w "Voluntarily join USSR" what a liar, was an occupation. They ever wanted be part of Russia after decades of humiliation and repression, another time that russians didn't respected treaties that themselves signed. What a disaster for Europe that was and is Russia.

    • @user-uv1gv4tt5w
      @user-uv1gv4tt5w Год назад +2

      @@almastebele4564 after the Baltic States joined the USSR, the Baltic government was not repressed, that is, you were betrayed by your own government, which went to cooperate with the USSR

  • @troopzon
    @troopzon Год назад +32

    11:24 "We need to make a life for ourselves, and then our neighbors will be drawn to us without invading"
    "Peace at home, peace in the world" -Mustafa Kemal Atatürk

  • @bamereg
    @bamereg Год назад +4

    Person 9 for president. The parallel he draws to movies and his comment on China show what a sane and aware human being he is.

  • @davewestner
    @davewestner Год назад +31

    Well, the last lady and gentleman give me some hope that there might be some opinions changing in Russia. Hope there's more of that kind of thought.

    • @wekurtz72
      @wekurtz72 Год назад +1

      I kept waiting for her to turn into Magda Goebbels, but then she didn't. It was weird. I bet she's not even russian.

    • @thehoneybadgerusmc
      @thehoneybadgerusmc Год назад +1

      And what makes you think at least half of Russians do not think that way? This channel is targeted for a North American/Western European audience so they might just show one side in order to create some outrage which apparently is working.

  • @ground_news
    @ground_news Год назад +77

    Thank you Daniil! For anyone interested, check out the link in the description and let us know if you have any questions.

    • @autr3553
      @autr3553 Год назад +4

      You (the company and employees) should be super proud of how far you’ve come in the past year!

  • @andersgrassman6583
    @andersgrassman6583 Год назад +20

    My father did business in pretty much all eastern Europen countries in the 1970's. But he refused to do business with the Russians. 'They are completely impossible to deal with, everything is wrong there' was kind of his declared rationale. Also he avoided east Gearmany - "it's all so depressing, it's just grey, grey, grey". Perhaps DDR was extra sensitive, since his father and hence a large portion of our family lived in both parts of Germany.
    Every week, he would visit Poland, Hungary, Tchechoslavakia (which he told me as a the 10 year old kid really was two countries), Bulgaria and - well - diifferent parts of "Yugoslavia".
    My grandfather on my mother's side was a diplomatic consul for the Estonian Republic, which of course turned into helping Estonian refugees for years. He also as a voluntary marine officer (he was a shipping agent by trade), commanded transports of arms at night (to avoid airraids), over the ice, from Sweden to Finland.
    All European families have been subjected to the "Russian Mir" aggressive megalomania. So it's no wonder 97% (!!!) of Swedish people support sending arms to Ukraine. There are good reasons we are wary of Russia. Now, you may use the description "Russofobic" of that, but then you could perhaps also describe me as 'crocodilefobic' and similar. As it happens, polar bears consider people to be food, and you always have to carry a gun where they live. I'm sad to say that applies to "the Russian bear" as well.

  • @buckbenelli8
    @buckbenelli8 Год назад

    Thanks Daniil, just a little hope is nice to hear.

  • @klauu8842
    @klauu8842 Год назад +19

    Is it just Poland they dislike cause all of the answers have been pretty chill since that video 😂

    • @helivesforever7312
      @helivesforever7312 Год назад +14

      they dislike pretty much every democratic country

    • @reinoeiole9666
      @reinoeiole9666 Год назад

      @@helivesforever7312 Poland is not democratic :D

    • @helivesforever7312
      @helivesforever7312 Год назад +2

      @@reinoeiole9666 Poland is top democracy compared to russia

  • @joe_ninety_one5076
    @joe_ninety_one5076 Год назад +12

    Georgiy (12:30) seems to think that Russia has never attacked. Tsarist Russia dismembered Poland, and attacked various others countries, gaining an empire. If he includes the Soviet Union, there is Finland, Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Japan and Afghanistan. Post Soviet Russia has Chechnya, Georgia and Ukraine.

    • @marin4311
      @marin4311 Год назад +2

      You forgot China in 1945

    • @joe_ninety_one5076
      @joe_ninety_one5076 Год назад +1

      @@marin4311 I also forgot Romania (annexing the Bessarabia, Northern Bukovina and Hertsa regions).

  • @kaiaugustin2856
    @kaiaugustin2856 Год назад +4

    I'am german and I don't have any problems with russians. I worked years ago for UtAir. It was sometimes very different and not everytime easy, but I never had bad feelings. You are europeans, too. Love and peace to the russian people.

  • @janisvinters8797
    @janisvinters8797 Год назад

    Good job man. Keep that way!

  • @dutchreagan3676
    @dutchreagan3676 Год назад +15

    Great job; Daniil. It's good to hear from regular people in the street.

  • @dennisgarber
    @dennisgarber Год назад +5

    Russia is that really popular kid, named Russ, in High School everyone liked, until he stabbed, beat up and killed his best friend. As a result he was furious and could not understand why everyone around him, his former friends were afraid of him. He called everyone Russophobics and decided to go after all of the irrational Russophobes.
    If Russ would have played more nicely, his friends would never have had to distance themselves from good old likeable Russ.

    • @hettitiern
      @hettitiern Год назад

      Biff is Russ... And look how he ended up

    • @reinoeiole9666
      @reinoeiole9666 Год назад

      A little hypocritical, considering what countries like USA, china UK etc have also done in the past.

  • @kestutisi
    @kestutisi Год назад +4

    It's really nice to listen to smart people talking. Seems people in Moscow knows their history pretty well. However, I guess reactions in some rural areas would be different

  • @retafmil
    @retafmil Год назад +6

    Excellent video! Very well done. Thanks for all the hard work!!! -Carey from Michigan

  • @1verstapp
    @1verstapp Год назад +14

    not so many tv1 watchers in this bunch. keep up the good work, Daniil.