very progressive and socially aware, much more so than anything in america in this time. this is one of the reasons i have much respect for the soviet union.
@@Arcimbosco Socialist collectivization ended famine. Mass starvation was happening in Russia way before the October Revolution, almost every 5 years there would be a drought leading to mass famine.
We are willing slaves now, working for their almighty paper currency, so we can buy all their single-serving sized material crap. We work 24/7 to buy crap processed food, and because we are working so much, we need to buy the microwave quick meals that are nothing but chemicals scientifically designed to taste good. Have you tasted bread nowadays ? It barely resembles actual bread.
@@nknighton70 Ironically this was a term falsely attributed to Lenin during the McCarthyist period, in which the House Un-American Activities committee... wait for it... Actually arbitrarily imprisoned people for no reason.
The problem is that the Soviets never believed Marx. They knew what to say (just quote him), and how to make cartoons, though it was all a put-on, all a Potemkin politic. There was as much communism in the Soviets as there is Christianity in the Catholics.
Lenin had indeed tried to apply Marx's analytical grid to Bolshevik Russia, but it was Stalin who departed from it with his policy of economic planning and his cult of personality.
Yeah instead of the microphone to talk I accidentally hit the button 9 and then it came up with inches no but anyone thumbs down in this is a straight-up hater hater haters did you get them
We can criticize the USSR on many points, but if there's one area in which the Soviets were light years ahead of us, it was in their treatment of ethnic minorities. Over there, minorities were not segregated, and above all, racial discrimination was firmly condemned - quite the opposite of in the United States. For example, at that time host Rudy Zamora mentioned that an African-American had applied to work in Pat Sullivan's studio to work on the Felix the Cat series, but that he wasn't hired just because Sullivan didn't like black people. If he had been hired, this African-American might have been able to make his mark and show that blacks were just as capable as whites of working in the animation industry, but unfortunately he didn't get the chance because of the backward mentality that reigned supreme at the time; it's simply lamentable that anyone should take the liberty of giving moral lessons to communists after that.
A bit of context about the film: Cooper went on to complain about “those Negroes who you ordered from here for the production of an anti-American film, depicting the persecution of Negroes in America. Do you know who these Negroes are?” The Russian word used by his Soviet interlocutor was negry, but it might not have been the word which Cooper used. “They are quite often rapists, who violate American white women, and we for this beat them, lynch them and will lynch them.” It is true, Cooper admitted, that there are fewer examples of Negro rape, but this is because they fear what will happen to them afterward. And you solicit here “these beasts” to make a film depicting “the persecution of Negroes in America.” Cooper was talking about the film project entitled Black and White, which was intended to depict racism and labour conflicts in Montgomery, Alabama, in Jim Crow America. Twenty-one Black Americans, including the poet Langston Hughes, were invited to Moscow to participate in the project. “This is outrageous,” Cooper opined. “And I am not saying this confidentially, but completely openly, and you can circulate it.” Imagine, he went on, if “the American people” hired a couple of dozen kulaks and made a film about Soviet persecution of them. “How would you like it?” Cooper’s Soviet interlocutor responded calmly that there was nothing particularly “frightful” about the arrival of American “Negroes” in Moscow. “Our country,” he added, “is not driven by racism or other such prejudices.” The Amtorg clerk then asked if Cooper had spoken to Molotov about his complaint. “I didn’t think it necessary,” Cooper replied, “to speak about such matters to the head of government, who is not clever enough to know himself about the undesirability of such a venture. I am simply amazed by the juxtaposition of these bosses’ geniality with their unspeakable stupidity. They don’t understand anything about what is going on in America. They don’t know that such a venture will without a doubt arouse the American people against the idea of recognition and all the past work until now will have been in vain.” “Are you for or against Negroes?” Cooper then asked. “I am not against them in any way,” the Amtorg agent responded. “That means you are for Negroes,” Cooper retorted: “If that is the case, then it will be impossible for you to interact with Americans. In any way. When I get to New York, I will explain all of this, and you will be isolated from any relations with Americans. You get out of here.”
very progressive and socially aware, much more so than anything in america in this time. this is one of the reasons i have much respect for the soviet union.
Next you'll be saying all of their starvation issues was fake.
Yeah, and that they didn't slaughter millions, repress many minorities and have a system of GULAGs 10x the number of Nazi concentration camps.
@@Arcimbosco Socialist collectivization ended famine. Mass starvation was happening in Russia way before the October Revolution, almost every 5 years there would be a drought leading to mass famine.
We are willing slaves now, working for their almighty paper currency, so we can buy all their single-serving sized material crap. We work 24/7 to buy crap processed food, and because we are working so much, we need to buy the microwave quick meals that are nothing but chemicals scientifically designed to taste good. Have you tasted bread nowadays ? It barely resembles actual bread.
@@nknighton70 Ironically this was a term falsely attributed to Lenin during the McCarthyist period, in which the House Un-American Activities committee... wait for it... Actually arbitrarily imprisoned people for no reason.
What a "find". Thank you this piece of historical film and other uploads.
Very good complete version. Thanks! Spaceba!
I like the animation style. It’s very minimalistic, aged pretty well æsthetically.
I recommend watching the short film "A Dizzy Day" (1933), which is a fine early example of the minimalist style in animation.
inspired by the poem of Vladimir Mayakovsky about the social situation in Cuba.
vintage Russian cartoon I love it 👍👏💜
@Larry Turner did you actually watch the cartoon?
@Vladimir Putin no shit
Long live the proletariat and the red banner!
Hmm... Wow that was deep!!!
That was interesting.
The problem is that the Soviets never believed Marx. They knew what to say (just quote him), and how to make cartoons, though it was all a put-on, all a Potemkin politic. There was as much communism in the Soviets as there is Christianity in the Catholics.
Lenin had indeed tried to apply Marx's analytical grid to Bolshevik Russia, but it was Stalin who departed from it with his policy of economic planning and his cult of personality.
Yeah instead of the microphone to talk I accidentally hit the button 9 and then it came up with inches no but anyone thumbs down in this is a straight-up hater hater haters did you get them
Good animation. Thank you.
0:00 They using jesus cross
Miguel SURRVIVALCRAFT 2 API yes in the name of Jesus Christ lord and savior
That's the saddest part
As opium, to dull the senses
4:17 WHAT IS THIS THING
DEAD PEOPLE HANG HIMSELF
Edit[Nov 28 2021 A.D.]:How Did People Got Hanged In Transmission Lines
Mob lynching
@@milandroidii oh
I see
@@EvilSkales25WasHere what did he sayd?
A deleted comment
1:39 P I N E A P P L E
T I M E
02:45
I think he ate some of those red mushrooms Mario likes.
THIS DUDE!!!!
did USSR make this for USA because if they did that would be very weird
In fact, the film was released in the USA in 1933.
We can criticize the USSR on many points, but if there's one area in which the Soviets were light years ahead of us, it was in their treatment of ethnic minorities. Over there, minorities were not segregated, and above all, racial discrimination was firmly condemned - quite the opposite of in the United States.
For example, at that time host Rudy Zamora mentioned that an African-American had applied to work in Pat Sullivan's studio to work on the Felix the Cat series, but that he wasn't hired just because Sullivan didn't like black people. If he had been hired, this African-American might have been able to make his mark and show that blacks were just as capable as whites of working in the animation industry, but unfortunately he didn't get the chance because of the backward mentality that reigned supreme at the time; it's simply lamentable that anyone should take the liberty of giving moral lessons to communists after that.
I hats the cartoon name ?
ARE YOU STUPID!? READ THE TITLE.
[To: Jay DeJuan]: Yes.
Those who think that's a white man hammering next to the black man you're wrong that's a mexican brother or a native..
who the fuck cares look white to me lol
Cuban. This Who is based upon a poem written by a Russian poet about the situation and Cuba
This is sad.
All racism aside.
I find this *interesting*
But the cartoon is about racist exploitation o.O
@@hanielcampos349 •
I know.
@@kagechu2005BISVG shit totally misunderstood you there m8 nvm
A bit of context about the film:
Cooper went on to complain about “those Negroes who you ordered from here for the production of an anti-American film, depicting the persecution of Negroes in America. Do you know who these Negroes are?” The Russian word used by his Soviet interlocutor was negry, but it might not have been the word which Cooper used. “They are quite often rapists, who violate American white women, and we for this beat them, lynch them and will lynch them.” It is true, Cooper admitted, that there are fewer examples of Negro rape, but this is because they fear what will happen to them afterward. And you solicit here “these beasts” to make a film depicting “the persecution of Negroes in America.”
Cooper was talking about the film project entitled Black and White, which was intended to depict racism and labour conflicts in Montgomery, Alabama, in Jim Crow America. Twenty-one Black Americans, including the poet Langston Hughes, were invited to Moscow to participate in the project.
“This is outrageous,” Cooper opined. “And I am not saying this confidentially, but completely openly, and you can circulate it.” Imagine, he went on, if “the American people” hired a couple of dozen kulaks and made a film about Soviet persecution of them. “How would you like it?”
Cooper’s Soviet interlocutor responded calmly that there was nothing particularly “frightful” about the arrival of American “Negroes” in Moscow. “Our country,” he added, “is not driven by racism or other such prejudices.” The Amtorg clerk then asked if Cooper had spoken to Molotov about his complaint.
“I didn’t think it necessary,” Cooper replied, “to speak about such matters to the head of government, who is not clever enough to know himself about the undesirability of such a venture. I am simply amazed by the juxtaposition of these bosses’ geniality with their unspeakable stupidity. They don’t understand anything about what is going on in America. They don’t know that such a venture will without a doubt arouse the American people against the idea of recognition and all the past work until now will have been in vain.”
“Are you for or against Negroes?” Cooper then asked.
“I am not against them in any way,” the Amtorg agent responded.
“That means you are for Negroes,” Cooper retorted: “If that is the case, then it will be impossible for you to interact with Americans. In any way. When I get to New York, I will explain all of this, and you will be isolated from any relations with Americans. You get out of here.”
9
Wow. Didn't know propaganda went so far back😮😮😮
The gulag doesn’t care about race, only WrongThink.
Yes, WrongThink like fascism they deserved it.
@@gla9322 lol. Learn history. Many people went to the gulag for non political reasons. Nothing to do with fascism. 🙄