Yeah if you dont count freedom of speach, economic opportunities, personal freedoms when it come to traveling, access to information, living standards and cultural freedoms but yeah, big prison
@@somerandomvertebrate9262 Getting canceled online is not the same as getting sent to a soviet prison or workcamp. Also comparing the western economic opportunities to a completely state controlled economy. In 2021 in USA you had more then 5 million new business applications. Just look of the 1962 Novocherkassk massacre where Soviet troops killed protestors demanding better living conditions. Wow
@@DarkDragonRuswhat’s crazy is the tables have turned Out here in USA you live to work and work to live My cousins in Russia just live and they have everything Parents left back in 1990 to survive, still surviving Ran away from one bad life to another
Starting to remind me of 1918, how for a long time the lines were static on the western front, but suddenly it became more and more dynamic. No longer was it just fighting over the same 200 meters at the same trench lines. Everything started to move, and as it moved more and more it became clearer and clearer Germany was falling apart. I think Ukraine is looking pretty similar right about now. They certainly still have fight left in them, but they can't stop the inevitable.
But in WW 1 Germany was moving forward. They surrendered 35 Km from Paris. It it were the Socialists who overthrow the Kaiser and caused this surrender. The resulting Weimarer Republic was ended 1933 by Hitler.
The Austria-Hungarian front was broken in Thessaloniki by Allied forces. Serbs and France knocked out Bulgaria first. After that Belgrade was liberated. They were half away to Vienna when Austria-Hungarian empire collapsed. Without it Germans lost it last support. And government and Kaiser were gone.
you lost big time in 1918 if i remember correctly ? After the Bolshevik Revolution in October 1917, Russia was plunged into a civil war between the Red Army (supporting the Bolshevik government) and the White Army (comprising anti-Bolshevik forces).
WW1 had just at that period introduced the first tanks. It became obvious that just sittign would not work anymore because soon every country would be fielding them. So they started to go for the all or nothing.
@@hansjorgkunde3772Is it what Germans learn in school? Because it's incorrect, Germans surrendered after they were pushed back and their defense lines were broken. They did advance towards Paris during their last offensive spring-summer 1918, but they consequently lost all that ground when the allies counterattacked. The November revolution happened in, surprise, November, when Germans weren't close to Paris.
@@LeoTheLion66He's constantly in denial, he is not right, more balanced pro Ukrainian sources are much more sober and clear minded about the situation.
In mali there's wagner pmc, not the army. If mali terrorists ramp up attacks then there will be reinforcements from Russia, possibly with heavy weapons.
During the soviet times there were not much housing were there (High rise buildings as you mentioned many times). As a solution Nikitha Krushev started building one bed room and two room apartment buildings during that era. They called them as Krushevskiye dama (Houses). Those are out sids of the houses people got from where they work and have to be in the queue to get one and paid every month from the salary few rubles. They separately built the garages outside of houses in a separate area (That's why you heard in the videos garage areas). They have to stay in the queue to get these garage as well same as apartment (There is a very nice soviet files called Garage and must watch). Some times you heard in these videos dacha area. Most of the people had some land to cultivate some veggies in these areas. In summer they grow veggies bit far away from the apartments in dachas (small private land).
Those are not castles. Those are carbon (coal) mines. They called Ugal. There are many carbon mines in Donestsk oblasth (state). Russians came to work on those mines during the soviet times. That's why Russian population is much higher in these areas than Ukraninas. Specially Luhansk and Donethsk.
Just a humble suggestion, start going over the whole front the nice way you do it and show the changes and do not read the same thing but just the names of the villages in the prelude ...
They’re in Russia until Russia rebuilds Ukraine froze the bank accounts and cut pensions of eastern Ukrainians so RU offered them temporary fast track citizenship But they will be an autonomous republic after it’s over still Ukrainians
A good life during the Soviet time did not exist. Having seen the poverty and the hunger I find it insulting to hear that lie. The Russian concentration camps killed millions of people that were not into politics the were poor farmers workers, academic people. The security had numbers they had to reach.
That’s simply Western propaganda. The average Soviet citizen worked fewer hours and had more holidays than the average in the West, for example. Most recreational activities were heavily subsidised, and so very cheap compared to the West. Restrictions on freedom of expression did exist, but it varied a lot and depended upon the circumstances. Western filmmakers, as an example, envied their Soviet counterparts as they had more artistic freedom - while they had to avoid annoying the censors, they had no long list of interfering people from the studios to deal with and satisfy. (Generally true across the ‘Soviet bloc’, which is why you got so many highly regarded films from those countries.)
@@boggisthecat Have you been there, have you seen the people of the bread lines, the rural poverty. I have seen it. So you seem from my perspective to be the one that has listened to propaganda. The empty stores told of the disaster of their economy.
@@sorennilsson9742 In the 1990s, post Soviet era, yes. We had a fair number of Russian tourists out here (New Zealand) after Uncle Sam had a hissy fit over the nuclear free status. They augmented the trawler crews that frequented here for as long as I can remember. The sailors would convert the weird local currency into various goods - locally made Levi’s brand jeans were particularly sought, along with certain electrical goods. A retired professor from Leningrad did courses at my high school (which did adult education in with the teenagers). He was an interesting man. So you can spout your propaganda nonsense all you want. I know better from personal experience.
Ukraine will inevitability lose. But they have put up a hell of a fight. Too bad the leaders of Ukraine didn't take their opportunity and settle the dispute in April 2022.
I noticed that Ukrainians began to deliberately exaggerate the successes of Russians. And then they draw on their maps that the territories have been recaptured. at least some victories need to be shown to the people
I don’t think so it’s mostly Russian DRG units that made those gains they weren’t heavily fortified by Russia yet because it can be a trap and Russia knows that they use the same tactic
For whatever reason, Baykal, it is the case that the Ukrainians very frequently concede more ground lost to the invaders than the invaders themselves claim. Your attribution of a motive may be correct; I don't know; but the fact of the phenomenon is indisputable.
@@meofamily4 Could well be to claim success in recapturing areas that were not really captured. That would make sense, from the point of view of the people being told to deliver good news. Unfortunately a lot of Ukrainians will have little idea of how badly this is going. That means less pressure on Kyiv to resolve the conflict, and lengthens the war which increases the damage.
No wonder that the Russian are losing 1200 to 1400 people every day. It is a strategic and tactical disaster that we see. They attack with kompani or even pluton size units losing people for every m of terrain. It is sad to know that the Ukrainian losses also is high. 36 000 dead but considering the over 170 000 dead Russians it is losses necessary to slow down Russia. 3 million people has by today escaped from Russia and more are leaving.
@@somerandomvertebrate9262 They are not British intelligence has mapped the Russian losses from the start of the war using several methods. As for the Ukrainian losses they are normal considering they defend while Russia attack prepared defences. A large part of the Ukrainian losses happened last summer when they tried to go on the offence. Ukraine has used small drones successfully causing huge losses to the Russian army, more than 800 drones are now used every day and they have been the cause of enormus suffering for the Russian troops. As for the Russian system to transport its wounded from the battle place it simply does not work. We talk about the first golden hour in the west while Russia talks about the the first day. Having a 24 hour transport delay is not good enough, furthermore being on attack makes caring for wounded much harder than if you defend. At percent speed of advance it will take Russia over 200 years to take Ukraine. Russia also spends a lot of resorses on attacking civilian targets and infrastructure. This has an enormus impact on civilian life but not so much on the Ukrainian army since the weapons given to Ukrainian troops are produced outside of Ukraine. It is like the Korean war, the USA bombed N Korea to the stone age with little effect since they were not producing their arms, Russia and China did. The situation is similar here. Russia has had little effect on the war. The 8,400 missiles and 4,900 Shahed drones that Russia has sent into Ukraine has to a large extent been a waste since their effect on the war has been very small. The strikes has killed a lot of civilians mostly women and children. The only thing they really have done is destroying Ukrainian electricity production. The loss has largely been compensated by EU providing electricity to Ukraine. Sweden sends electricity to Poland and Poland sends electricity to Ukraine and on it goes. So not even the destruction of Ukrainian power plants has done to Ukraine what Russia expected. This war will go on for at least the next 5 years if Putin can hold on to power that long
@@sorennilsson9742 Surely, the Russian use of drones is primarily tactical, like Ukraine's, not strategic? As for the losses, it's a war of attrition wherein Russia has a lot more artillery than Ukraine and does not suffer from the same supply shortages, which ought to mean that Ukrainian casualties are higher on average. Secondly, the attacker suffering higher losses is never a cut and dry thing. It has a lot to do with supporting arms, operational integration and tactics. Since the fall of 2022, the Russian army has apparently applied a very cautious offensive stance - maybe somewhat reminiscent of the infiltration tactics of WWI - and not moving until the opposition is completely hammered into the ground, obviously with the intention of minimizing casualties. This has gradually turned a Russian numerical inferiority into a numerical superiority. I don't see how this is compatible with the very lopsided casualty ratio you're presenting in Ukraine's favour. Considered the limited Russian reinforcements sent to Ukraine, 170 000 Russian KIA would practically mean the eradication of the frontline army, which apparently has not taken place.
@@vatnikxxi7717exactly it is going to be most prosperous province once again when foreign owned property is sized, debts cancelled and industry and agriculture restored
@@JohnScott-el9gm Most likely you had in mind the Ukrainian government, but not the people of Ukraine. It is unlikely that Boris Johnson's famous flight brought happiness to the Ukrainian people.
I worked in Singapore for seven years, I'm hear for the comforting sound of that accent, nostalgia therapy
wyatt dont have enough la
Crispy Lemon ( Krasny Leman)
- hug -
RU set a world record in an air attack yesterday. Ukr fighter was shot down from a distance of 213 km, the 3rd in a week.
❤excellent
Yea the video?
how did they confirm the kill?
@@Dude29 🤡 Heul leise.
@@Dude29 Radar
Defense Politics AAAASSSSIIIIIIIIAAAAAAA
You’re right - the current western “life” is prison when compared to soviet life. Funny now looking back how that’s the case 😢
Soviet life wasn't a prison. Is was like massive factory.
Yeah if you dont count freedom of speach, economic opportunities, personal freedoms when it come to traveling, access to information, living standards and cultural freedoms but yeah, big prison
@@ZugZugMahogny We no longer have any freedom of speech in the West, and hardly any economic opportunities for that matter.
@@somerandomvertebrate9262 Getting canceled online is not the same as getting sent to a soviet prison or workcamp. Also comparing the western economic opportunities to a completely state controlled economy. In 2021 in USA you had more then 5 million new business applications. Just look of the 1962 Novocherkassk massacre where Soviet troops killed protestors demanding better living conditions. Wow
@@DarkDragonRuswhat’s crazy is the tables have turned
Out here in USA you live to work and work to live
My cousins in Russia just live and they have everything
Parents left back in 1990 to survive, still surviving
Ran away from one bad life to another
Cheers Wyatt.
Cheers gyatt.
Been subscribed to this channel since the start of this war, I'm so glad that I did.❤
- hug -
Starting to remind me of 1918, how for a long time the lines were static on the western front, but suddenly it became more and more dynamic. No longer was it just fighting over the same 200 meters at the same trench lines. Everything started to move, and as it moved more and more it became clearer and clearer Germany was falling apart. I think Ukraine is looking pretty similar right about now. They certainly still have fight left in them, but they can't stop the inevitable.
But in WW 1 Germany was moving forward. They surrendered 35 Km from Paris. It it were the Socialists who overthrow the Kaiser and caused this surrender. The resulting Weimarer Republic was ended 1933 by Hitler.
The Austria-Hungarian front was broken in Thessaloniki by Allied forces. Serbs and France knocked out Bulgaria first. After that Belgrade was liberated. They were half away to Vienna when Austria-Hungarian empire collapsed. Without it Germans lost it last support. And government and Kaiser were gone.
you lost big time in 1918 if i remember correctly ?
After the Bolshevik Revolution in October 1917, Russia was plunged into a civil war between the Red Army (supporting the Bolshevik government) and the White Army (comprising anti-Bolshevik forces).
WW1 had just at that period introduced the first tanks. It became obvious that just sittign would not work anymore because soon every country would be fielding them. So they started to go for the all or nothing.
@@hansjorgkunde3772Is it what Germans learn in school? Because it's incorrect, Germans surrendered after they were pushed back and their defense lines were broken.
They did advance towards Paris during their last offensive spring-summer 1918, but they consequently lost all that ground when the allies counterattacked. The November revolution happened in, surprise, November, when Germans weren't close to Paris.
Thankyou commander..
Thanks for continuing to repeat that the changes you highlighted occurred in the last 24 hours.
Keep up the good work!
The lines are moving and are not static. Ukrainian defence is cracking, there is too much copium from Denis davydov.
He changed his rhetoric a little.
What if Denys are right? Ever considered that from your clay cottage
@@LeoTheLion66 in what he right?
@@LeoTheLion66He's constantly in denial, he is not right, more balanced pro Ukrainian sources are much more sober and clear minded about the situation.
The commander looks rested...
❤good
And refreshed 😄
We are "the Commander" to whom Intelligence Specialist Wyatt delivers these reports.
@@stavroskarageorgis4804lore accurate comment
excellente'
Thank you 👍
❤Thank you very much Teacher. Good morning commanders. Well done Russian armed forces.
Mind blowing.
Respect bro keep it real
Love
DPA!
So Mali guerrilla fighters have more victories versus Russia this week than Ukraine?!
Напрасно радуешься
In mali there's wagner pmc, not the army. If mali terrorists ramp up attacks then there will be reinforcements from Russia, possibly with heavy weapons.
Because of US intelligence
Russia has blocked most of that shenanigans on the Ukraine front
@@RtFa-ol7vd I mean... am I wrong? because I dont see any Ukrainian victory for this week for Ukraine :/
@@qwinn9963Russia has many supporters around the globe so be discreet with your words
During the soviet times there were not much housing were there (High rise buildings as you mentioned many times). As a solution Nikitha Krushev started building one bed room and two room apartment buildings during that era. They called them as Krushevskiye dama (Houses). Those are out sids of the houses people got from where they work and have to be in the queue to get one and paid every month from the salary few rubles. They separately built the garages outside of houses in a separate area (That's why you heard in the videos garage areas). They have to stay in the queue to get these garage as well same as apartment (There is a very nice soviet files called Garage and must watch). Some times you heard in these videos dacha area. Most of the people had some land to cultivate some veggies in these areas. In summer they grow veggies bit far away from the apartments in dachas (small private land).
There are no houses on "liberated" land..... everything demolished by the Russians
DPA NUMBER #1
These changes better be massive...
Those are not castles. Those are carbon (coal) mines. They called Ugal. There are many carbon mines in Donestsk oblasth (state). Russians came to work on those mines during the soviet times. That's why Russian population is much higher in these areas than Ukraninas. Specially Luhansk and Donethsk.
In English we say "coal mines", not "carbon mines".
@@andrebalsa203True. "Carbon mine" is literally correct but "non-idiomatic". 😊
Yeah we know. Avdivka to the south is where it went for processing
Zelensky’s “coke” plant
After this war is over I would like to see a movie about Spirne, god knows how many times this town changed hands..
Hi Wyatt
Hi gyatt
Tk you v much
I was here ^.^
Algorithm food
Ukrainian mapping is a special kind of art😁
4:06 Ironic how "Spirne" literally means "contested" in Ukrainian.
I see MASSIVE CHANGE everyday but it's amazing how little Russia has captured since Oct 1st.
Compared to the much-vaunted Ukrainian offensive last year?
@@boggisthecat Competing to see who can get more of their young men killed seems like a stupid tactic.
@@jamesburke9865
You wrote about territorial gains.
Yep, Niu-York intel dropped!!!Massive changes!!!!...all right, for sure
Tymofievka! Good name.
👍👍
Just a humble suggestion, start going over the whole front the nice way you do it and show the changes
and do not read the same thing but just the names of the villages in the prelude ...
63! thanks
Niu York is divided by a river and several bridges.
Third !!!
🇷🇺👍👏
Why surround 'The Castle' when the Russians could just make it FABulous?
What happens with the people living in the claimed residential areas? Are they evacuated? Do the Russians have to manage them?
They’re in Russia until Russia rebuilds
Ukraine froze the bank accounts and cut pensions of eastern Ukrainians so RU offered them temporary fast track citizenship
But they will be an autonomous republic after it’s over still Ukrainians
A good life during the Soviet time did not exist. Having seen the poverty and the hunger I find it insulting to hear that lie. The Russian concentration camps killed millions of people that were not into politics the were poor farmers workers, academic people. The security had numbers they had to reach.
Propaganda
But what described does happen in Ukraine even now
DPA probably meant more like in the 60's, 70's or 80's, meaning after de-stalinization.
That’s simply Western propaganda. The average Soviet citizen worked fewer hours and had more holidays than the average in the West, for example. Most recreational activities were heavily subsidised, and so very cheap compared to the West.
Restrictions on freedom of expression did exist, but it varied a lot and depended upon the circumstances. Western filmmakers, as an example, envied their Soviet counterparts as they had more artistic freedom - while they had to avoid annoying the censors, they had no long list of interfering people from the studios to deal with and satisfy. (Generally true across the ‘Soviet bloc’, which is why you got so many highly regarded films from those countries.)
@@boggisthecat Have you been there, have you seen the people of the bread lines, the rural poverty. I have seen it. So you seem from my perspective to be the one that has listened to propaganda. The empty stores told of the disaster of their economy.
@@sorennilsson9742
In the 1990s, post Soviet era, yes.
We had a fair number of Russian tourists out here (New Zealand) after Uncle Sam had a hissy fit over the nuclear free status. They augmented the trawler crews that frequented here for as long as I can remember. The sailors would convert the weird local currency into various goods - locally made Levi’s brand jeans were particularly sought, along with certain electrical goods.
A retired professor from Leningrad did courses at my high school (which did adult education in with the teenagers). He was an interesting man.
So you can spout your propaganda nonsense all you want. I know better from personal experience.
Wyatt's pro-NATO stance is shining through more and more. He fooled many in the beginning.
Rah-bOh-tee-neh. _Not_ robbo-TEE-neh.
Slava Ukraine.
Rishi Sunak supports you.
Jellyfish Sunak supports you..
loyd cadena ikaw ba yan vahkla?
first hopefully?
Ukraine will inevitability lose. But they have put up a hell of a fight. Too bad the leaders of Ukraine didn't take their opportunity and settle the dispute in April 2022.
It was okay but I think the Afghanis would’ve done better with that 300 billion and support from 37 other nations (a first in human history of war)
@@off6848
Very different conflicts in very different geographies with different cultures.
We are winning eventhough we re losing men and ground. We re WINNING ,Zelensky and the Western medias said.
Он хитрый, но не умный. И жалкий .
🇷🇺🇷🇺🇷🇺💪💪💪
Russia is losing so badly😂😂😂
I wouldn't describe the Ukrainian posistion as winning when they loss control of 20 percent of their land mass.
I noticed that Ukrainians began to deliberately exaggerate the successes of Russians. And then they draw on their maps that the territories have been recaptured. at least some victories need to be shown to the people
I don’t think so it’s mostly Russian DRG units that made those gains they weren’t heavily fortified by Russia yet because it can be a trap and Russia knows that they use the same tactic
For whatever reason, Baykal, it is the case that the Ukrainians very frequently concede more ground lost to the invaders than the invaders themselves claim. Your attribution of a motive may be correct; I don't know; but the fact of the phenomenon is indisputable.
@@meofamily4
Could well be to claim success in recapturing areas that were not really captured. That would make sense, from the point of view of the people being told to deliver good news.
Unfortunately a lot of Ukrainians will have little idea of how badly this is going. That means less pressure on Kyiv to resolve the conflict, and lengthens the war which increases the damage.
Ukies are winning the race to Kiev.
The ruble is winning the race to the gutter.
Bankrupzia will loose and Putler will be windowed
100th
второй
Z
No wonder that the Russian are losing 1200 to 1400 people every day. It is a strategic and tactical disaster that we see. They attack with kompani or even pluton size units losing people for every m of terrain. It is sad to know that the Ukrainian losses also is high. 36 000 dead but considering the over 170 000 dead Russians it is losses necessary to slow down Russia. 3 million people has by today escaped from Russia and more are leaving.
I lol’d good troll
Where do you get your numbers from? The casualty ratio seems completely unrealistic.
@@somerandomvertebrate9262 bro you just gotta believe
The side with better tactics, commanders and 10x the firepower is totally taking more losses
@@somerandomvertebrate9262 They are not British intelligence has mapped the Russian losses from the start of the war using several methods. As for the Ukrainian losses they are normal considering they defend while Russia attack prepared defences. A large part of the Ukrainian losses happened last summer when they tried to go on the offence. Ukraine has used small drones successfully causing huge losses to the Russian army, more than 800 drones are now used every day and they have been the cause of enormus suffering for the Russian troops. As for the Russian system to transport its wounded from the battle place it simply does not work. We talk about the first golden hour in the west while Russia talks about the the first day. Having a 24 hour transport delay is not good enough, furthermore being on attack makes caring for wounded much harder than if you defend. At percent speed of advance it will take Russia over 200 years to take Ukraine. Russia also spends a lot of resorses on attacking civilian targets and infrastructure. This has an enormus impact on civilian life but not so much on the Ukrainian army since the weapons given to Ukrainian troops are produced outside of Ukraine. It is like the Korean war, the USA bombed N Korea to the stone age with little effect since they were not producing their arms, Russia and China did. The situation is similar here. Russia has had little effect on the war. The 8,400 missiles and 4,900 Shahed drones that Russia has sent into Ukraine has to a large extent been a waste since their effect on the war has been very small. The strikes has killed a lot of civilians mostly women and children. The only thing they really have done is destroying Ukrainian electricity production. The loss has largely been compensated by EU providing electricity to Ukraine. Sweden sends electricity to Poland and Poland sends electricity to Ukraine and on it goes. So not even the destruction of Ukrainian power plants has done to Ukraine what Russia expected. This war will go on for at least the next 5 years if Putin can hold on to power that long
@@sorennilsson9742 Surely, the Russian use of drones is primarily tactical, like Ukraine's, not strategic?
As for the losses, it's a war of attrition wherein Russia has a lot more artillery than Ukraine and does not suffer from the same supply shortages, which ought to mean that Ukrainian casualties are higher on average. Secondly, the attacker suffering higher losses is never a cut and dry thing. It has a lot to do with supporting arms, operational integration and tactics. Since the fall of 2022, the Russian army has apparently applied a very cautious offensive stance - maybe somewhat reminiscent of the infiltration tactics of WWI - and not moving until the opposition is completely hammered into the ground, obviously with the intention of minimizing casualties. This has gradually turned a Russian numerical inferiority into a numerical superiority.
I don't see how this is compatible with the very lopsided casualty ratio you're presenting in Ukraine's favour. Considered the limited Russian reinforcements sent to Ukraine, 170 000 Russian KIA would practically mean the eradication of the frontline army, which apparently has not taken place.
Slava ukraine 🇺🇦
As a part of Russia.
@@vatnikxxi7717exactly it is going to be most prosperous province once again when foreign owned property is sized, debts cancelled and industry and agriculture restored
🤣🤣🤣🏴❤️🇷🇺
Bro!
@@matthewmallan1995 uk stands with ukraine 🇺🇦
@@JohnScott-el9gm Most likely you had in mind the Ukrainian government, but not the people of Ukraine. It is unlikely that Boris Johnson's famous flight brought happiness to the Ukrainian people.
Ura!
👍👍