Ion Cristoiu: "Ceaușescu se purta cu Gorbaciov ca cu un copil"

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 2 ก.พ. 2025

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  • @vioricazamfira7065
    @vioricazamfira7065 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Are dreptate dl Cristoiu am avut perioada foarte buna din 1965- 1978.!Cam din 1979 a inceput sa fie cate putin mai rau in fiecare an !

  • @mirceagroza3942
    @mirceagroza3942 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Inainte de '89 Romania a avut un proiectde tara:Industralizarea:La Cernavoda cinci unitati,canalul din Baragan irigarea,hidrocentrale,petrochimia(titei din Iran,Libia),intreprinderile cu actionare straina,(pentru tehnologie),samd.

    • @jeorgemarconimarconi2934
      @jeorgemarconimarconi2934 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      eed, that unlikely interlude seemed mostly forgotten, until the publication of “Putin’s People: How the KGB Took Back Russia and Then Took on the West” (2020), a landmark work of investigative journalism by the longtime Russia correspondent Catherine Belton. Her thesis is that, after becoming the President of Russia, in 2000, Vladimir Putin proceeded to run the state and its economy like a Mafia don-and that he did so through the careful control of ostensibly independent businessmen like Roman Abramovich.
      When Abramovich went to Chukotka, Belton tells us, he did so “on Putin’s orders.” The first generation of post-Soviet capitalists had accumulated vast private fortunes, and Putin set out to bring the oligarchs under state control. He had leverage over government officials, so he forced Abramovich to become one. “Putin told me that if Abramovich breaks the law as governor, he can put him immediately in jail,” one Abramovich associate told Belton. A “feudal system” was beginning to emerge, Belton contends, in which the owners of Russia’s biggest companies would be forced to “operate as hired managers, working on behalf of the state.” Their gaudy displays of personal wealth were a diversion; these oligarchs were mere capos, who answered to the don. It wasn’t even their wealth, really: it was Putin’s. They were “no more than the guardians,” Belton writes, and “they kept their businesses by the Kremlin’s grace.”

    • @jeorgemarconimarconi2934
      @jeorgemarconimarconi2934 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      eed, that unlikely interlude seemed mostly forgotten, until the publication of “Putin’s People: How the KGB Took Back Russia and Then Took on the West” (2020), a landmark work of investigative journalism by the longtime Russia correspondent Catherine Belton. Her thesis is that, after becoming the President of Russia, in 2000, Vladimir Putin proceeded to run the state and its economy like a Mafia don-and that he did so through the careful control of ostensibly independent businessmen like Roman Abramovich.
      When Abramovich went to Chukotka, Belton tells us, he did so “on Putin’s orders.” The first generation of post-Soviet capitalists had accumulated vast private fortunes, and Putin set out to bring the oligarchs under state control. He had leverage over government officials, so he forced Abramovich to become one. “Putin told me that if Abramovich breaks the law as governor, he can put him immediately in jail,” one Abramovich associate told Belton. A “feudal system” was beginning to emerge, Belton contends, in which the owners of Russia’s biggest companies would be forced to “operate as hired managers, working on behalf of the state.” Their gaudy displays of personal wealth were a diversion; these oligarchs were mere capos, who answered to the don. It wasn’t even their wealth, really: it was Putin’s. They were “no more than the guardians,” Belton writes, and “they kept their businesses by the Kremlin’s grace.”

  • @adicristian354
    @adicristian354 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    slavă cristoiule

    • @eugentura6171
      @eugentura6171 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Rāu ati ajuns.Slāvim pe Coroiu!.Poate o icoanā,ceva?.Vā puteti chiar închina.🤦🤮

  • @elenabibescu1848
    @elenabibescu1848 ปีที่แล้ว

    Pentru ca Romania nu a mai fost independenta. Petre Roman a avut ideea ca industria este un morman de fier vechi.

  • @jeorgemarconimarconi2934
    @jeorgemarconimarconi2934 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    eed, that unlikely interlude seemed mostly forgotten, until the publication of “Putin’s People: How the KGB Took Back Russia and Then Took on the West” (2020), a landmark work of investigative journalism by the longtime Russia correspondent Catherine Belton. Her thesis is that, after becoming the President of Russia, in 2000, Vladimir Putin proceeded to run the state and its economy like a Mafia don-and that he did so through the careful control of ostensibly independent businessmen like Roman Abramovich.
    When Abramovich went to Chukotka, Belton tells us, he did so “on Putin’s orders.” The first generation of post-Soviet capitalists had accumulated vast private fortunes, and Putin set out to bring the oligarchs under state control. He had leverage over government officials, so he forced Abramovich to become one. “Putin told me that if Abramovich breaks the law as governor, he can put him immediately in jail,” one Abramovich associate told Belton. A “feudal system” was beginning to emerge, Belton contends, in which the owners of Russia’s biggest companies would be forced to “operate as hired managers, working on behalf of the state.” Their gaudy displays of personal wealth were a diversion; these oligarchs were mere capos, who answered to the don. It wasn’t even their wealth, really: it was Putin’s. They were “no more than the guardians,” Belton writes, and “they kept their businesses by the Kremlin’s grace.”

  • @morosanudoina
    @morosanudoina 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    Adevarat,tot ce spune dl.Cristoiu despre comunism.Este purul adevar.De ani de zile multi dintre românii ce au trăit în acea epocă,se întreabă și se vor întreba probabil pana la sfarsitul vietii lor,ce lucruri "minunate" ne-a adus capitalismul???!!!

    • @eugentura6171
      @eugentura6171 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Normal ,stie Coroiu cum au stat lucrurile,era om de curte(sā,nu spun turnātor si colaborator,asta a spus-o justitia) atunci lua bani laudînd unde trebuia si turnînd cînd trebuia.Acuma î-si vinde pe TH-cam ,,memoriile'si amintirile.Ps: Petrov(dovedit) tāiat,luat,terminat de la toate.Coroiu(dovedit)mentor,anal -zind tot ce miscā,,MAESTRU.👮👏👏🤮🤮

  • @MrBoazhorribilis
    @MrBoazhorribilis 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Cand asta mintea pe timpul lui Ceau. el stia ca minte.
    Lupul si al sau narav ...

  • @anisoaraamariei9605
    @anisoaraamariei9605 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Adevărat!....Trădătorii ,au zis...,de ne-au dus la râpă....

  • @roxannamatei3857
    @roxannamatei3857 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Olteanul asta increzut.nu l lada pe Cristoiu sa vorbeasca.

  • @ionmaria2888
    @ionmaria2888 2 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    Ca întotdeauna domnul Cristoiu exagerează și este unilateral, nu așa gândește un mare ziarist..

    • @eugentura6171
      @eugentura6171 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      🤔🤔 Nici odatā, nu-i tîrziu.👍

    • @mariusstanciu8843
      @mariusstanciu8843 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Vă supără adevărul?

    • @ionmaria2888
      @ionmaria2888 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@mariusstanciu8843 Care adevăr, cel spus parțial dintr-o parte?Da, și Stalin a a vrut un proiect de țară, și a reușit, milioane de ruși au trecut prin GULAG,mulți au murit acolo, noi l-am copiat. În anii 50 sute de mii de români au trecut prin închisori, mulți au murit acolo. Canalul a fost alt proiect. Domnul Cristoiu este cam putinist, Putin este un comunist , un stalinist de rit nou. Costul uman al modernizarii nu este spus. Doar o mică idee, sunt multe de spus, lucrurile trebuie văzute nuanțat și dincolo de ce credem noi la un moment dat sau dincolo de interesele de moment și domnul Cristoiu are mereu interese de moment ...

    • @jeorgemarconimarconi2934
      @jeorgemarconimarconi2934 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      eed, that unlikely interlude seemed mostly forgotten, until the publication of “Putin’s People: How the KGB Took Back Russia and Then Took on the West” (2020), a landmark work of investigative journalism by the longtime Russia correspondent Catherine Belton. Her thesis is that, after becoming the President of Russia, in 2000, Vladimir Putin proceeded to run the state and its economy like a Mafia don-and that he did so through the careful control of ostensibly independent businessmen like Roman Abramovich.
      When Abramovich went to Chukotka, Belton tells us, he did so “on Putin’s orders.” The first generation of post-Soviet capitalists had accumulated vast private fortunes, and Putin set out to bring the oligarchs under state control. He had leverage over government officials, so he forced Abramovich to become one. “Putin told me that if Abramovich breaks the law as governor, he can put him immediately in jail,” one Abramovich associate told Belton. A “feudal system” was beginning to emerge, Belton contends, in which the owners of Russia’s biggest companies would be forced to “operate as hired managers, working on behalf of the state.” Their gaudy displays of personal wealth were a diversion; these oligarchs were mere capos, who answered to the don. It wasn’t even their wealth, really: it was Putin’s. They were “no more than the guardians,” Belton writes, and “they kept their businesses by the Kremlin’s grace.”

    • @ionionescu6777
      @ionionescu6777 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Cristoiu e propagandist rus nu e ziarist