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романенко
юрий романенко
романенко юрий
новости украина
романенко последнее
Виктор Коренивский
империи
Российская империя
США
либеральная империя США
Китайская империя
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00:00:25
friends Hello everyone, srfa Loafers
00:00:27
deviants We continue our broadcast, we have a
00:00:30
second broadcast today, the first was In Poland
00:00:34
with a Polish political scientist I advise everyone to
00:00:38
watch it, you won’t regret it and now we
00:00:41
will have a debriefing with the honey badger on the
00:00:45
Empire Viktor kovsky in our studio
00:00:47
Hello hello Yes, we will look at the concept
00:00:51
empires and in general, in principle, the role of empire
00:00:54
in history and most importantly in the future,
00:00:58
because I wrote it correctly in the description, it means
00:01:02
to the air that many have a negative
00:01:06
perception of empire, although in fact
00:01:09
the Empire is one of the most
00:01:11
stable structures of social
00:01:14
organization and even in the future We know
00:01:17
the Empire absolutely exists normally
00:01:19
let's remember there Star Wars The Empire
00:01:20
strikes back
00:01:22
uda empire horo
00:01:28
hatmu we are talking about our
00:01:32
good old empires Greetings from Scotland
00:01:34
she writes Rizhenko Hello to Scotland
00:01:36
hello to everyone who watches us,
00:01:38
turn on the likes You know what to do
00:01:41
By the way, the Scots are too Here is an example
00:01:43
of that
00:01:44
as a people who took part in
00:01:46
the construction of one also colossal
00:01:49
empire, and they have no
00:01:50
inferiority complex at all, as it were, Well,
00:01:52
no, well, in general, probably some of the
00:01:56
most
00:01:58
hackneyed ones have been in Ukraine for a long time, this is
00:02:01
what Those who don’t know their
00:02:03
past there don’t have future, but our
00:02:05
Eternal problem is always that our
00:02:09
concept in general, the perception of the past was
00:02:11
so fabulous like all our
00:02:13
ideas, and in general about the world and
00:02:15
even about our own future, and even all these fantasies
00:02:19
began tritely even with the perception of
00:02:21
What is
00:02:22
power if, well, I already
00:02:25
He said several times on air that power
00:02:28
was directly in the context of a
00:02:31
person’s religious worldview in the
00:02:33
past, literally right in
00:02:36
the process
00:02:38
of life, people saw how a
00:02:41
certain person manifests himself, he
00:02:44
demonstrates, he takes
00:02:46
responsibility, he gives answers to
00:02:48
certain tasks, challenges that he gives
00:02:53
It perceived the external environment and religious thinking. The
00:02:57
whole
00:02:58
process, so to speak, of this muse of
00:03:01
inspiration, was experienced as a kind of mystical experience. In addition, the
00:03:06
very ability of a person to captivate other
00:03:10
people, to capture their thoughts there, to
00:03:13
captivate them with some kind of his idea, to
00:03:15
organize, to concentrate their efforts
00:03:17
in some in one direction it
00:03:19
was also perceived as a kind of Divine
00:03:22
gift, not even a gift, but as a calling of a person. The
00:03:26
Romans called it atoris, this is
00:03:31
power as the ability to control others And
00:03:35
if we look at the experience There is some kind of
00:03:39
world history
00:03:41
And as I once talked
00:03:44
about there Sar Gone of Akkadian, the fact that
00:03:47
he was faced with the task of
00:03:50
uniting this is all
00:03:53
Mesopotamia, where virtually every city
00:03:56
was its own State and
00:03:58
the worldview of man at that time, it perceived
00:04:00
that we are fighting among ourselves there, we are
00:04:03
capturing each other, we can
00:04:05
plunder the city, but neither in no case
00:04:08
should we conquer him because his gods
00:04:10
will punish us, and so he solved the
00:04:11
problem of how to unite this, so he
00:04:14
planned and he came to the conclusion that he
00:04:17
made his children simply priests of the priestess of these
00:04:22
main deities in all cities between the speech
00:04:24
and thus he like if he would have united, he would have
00:04:26
secured this Well, it’s like the approval of
00:04:29
all of these deities, and if we
00:04:31
look even at this pop
00:04:34
Wikipedia of ours, there is already an Akkadian state,
00:04:36
it is perceived as a kind of
00:04:39
Empire if you look at it in the context of
00:04:44
the times in general, how in general people then lived like
00:04:47
that at a distance of literally ten
00:04:49
kilometers, people could understand each
00:04:51
other approximately as we understand
00:04:53
the Polyakov, there wasn’t even such a linguistic,
00:04:56
um, such monotony, that is, people
00:05:02
lived extremely isolated in their own
00:05:05
communities and each
00:05:08
territorial state
00:05:10
was already in fact an empire. If you look at it like that
00:05:13
But let’s say there’s
00:05:16
some kind of myth there. It’s only there somewhere that
00:05:19
the theme of the history of the past begins,
00:05:22
well, the empire is always a prison
00:05:24
of nations there, it’s some kind of oppression there, and who
00:05:27
had it good at all, everyone there, the
00:05:31
coals seemed to have been robbed, and so on other
00:05:34
other Well, in general, the Empire was the only one in
00:05:38
history, this is Rome and Rome,
00:05:42
it is like a unification of such
00:05:45
human diversity as a form of
00:05:48
government of everything, it
00:05:50
became for the West, as it were, such an ideal
00:05:52
model, in general, an ideal model of the greatness of the
00:05:56
demonstration of power
00:05:58
Inya Empire and Emperor it became just
00:06:02
like such a cliché that the Western World has
00:06:06
always tried to identify some other
00:06:08
political formations in the history of
00:06:10
mankind,
00:06:13
if we let’s
00:06:15
look at China and Japan. Here we are,
00:06:18
too, the average person says. Well, there were
00:06:21
also empires, there were emperors who ruled.
00:06:23
Well, look at China this is their mandate of
00:06:28
heaven, the ruler they called the son of
00:06:32
heaven, if you take the founder of the Qing Shi Huangdi,
00:06:37
who united China for the first time,
00:06:39
he applied the formula, and for the first time in
00:06:42
the history of China, what did this title
00:06:44
Huangdi mean, as in fact, this
00:06:49
deity on earth he appointed himself By God,
00:06:51
but subsequently, when this dynasty fell, it
00:06:54
happened, it had already fallen, it fell very
00:06:57
quickly, by the way. Well, yes, it was as if the Son had
00:06:59
already fallen. That is, since 221, in fact, the
00:07:02
unification of China and the
00:07:04
Han dynasty began, I don’t remember, in 206,
00:07:08
or in short, about 210 there.
00:07:11
BC, that is, they
00:07:13
actually Well, this is an example of how
00:07:15
all these lovers of taking everyone under the hood,
00:07:19
legalists, are just forever, uh, this is a
00:07:21
Chinese tradition Well, in general, a tradition in the history of
00:07:23
humanity is when everyone who thinks that
00:07:25
he will build everyone now In the end, he
00:07:26
himself is put to waste Well and all the
00:07:29
ideologists
00:07:31
after 206 and before that in general, when China
00:07:35
was fragmented, every ruler of
00:07:38
this specific principality
00:07:39
was also a son of heaven. But it was like
00:07:43
issuing such a divine mandate, it’s
00:07:45
like this is generally the oldest tradition
00:07:47
there, starting with nomadic tribes
00:07:49
when in all these cosmological
00:07:53
myths, the god of the sky would create the world
00:07:58
in the future and about the sedentary way of life
00:08:01
there, this fragmentation seems to happen very often.
00:08:02
By the way, the Jews,
00:08:05
by virtue of their also nomadic
00:08:08
way of life, they surprisingly
00:08:11
preserved
00:08:12
here the concept of God is also connected with
00:08:15
heaven, so this is the only monotheism
00:08:17
in China. That is, every local
00:08:21
emperor. This was the son of heaven, he was, as it were,
00:08:23
given the madat of heaven nhu, so he
00:08:29
walks back and forth and If we express the
00:08:33
Europeans as an emperor, well, he is again was the
00:08:36
son of heaven who was given a mandate, and
00:08:38
even now, if you look closely at the
00:08:41
policy of the Chinese authorities in general, well, in
00:08:44
fact, the Communist Party is like the name of
00:08:47
another dynasty. But they still rest on
00:08:49
this, well, just a thousand-year-old
00:08:51
tradition of theirs, that they
00:08:54
just need to confirm their mandate from heaven,
00:08:55
otherwise Very often it was there that the handle
00:08:58
went out of the way and again a couple of million
00:09:01
people were thrown into the furnace in the next
00:09:03
Revolution and we look at Japan,
00:09:06
where supposedly the
00:09:09
emperor is also Japan, just this m
00:09:12
deification of the ruler She took it from
00:09:15
China and it seems to us Well, both here and there
00:09:19
the emperor, but the paradigm of thinking is different in
00:09:21
China - this is the ruler, a person who
00:09:24
is given a certain mandate, and if he does
00:09:27
not support this mandate
00:09:29
in the furnace, demolition in Japan, why is the current
00:09:33
dynasty it is they who tie themselves up
00:09:36
there under some other demigods there from
00:09:40
some 6th century BC, if I’m
00:09:43
not mistaken there, this is precisely
00:09:46
the paradigm of thinking of the perception of power as
00:09:48
God on earth and everything in general
00:09:52
is changing radically, the perception that is, the
00:09:54
structure itself there, even these different
00:09:56
political upheavals throughout
00:09:58
history, they somehow change but
00:10:01
the perception of power is preserved, that
00:10:04
is, the context is completely different. This is
00:10:06
the concept of Empire, there is an emperor, this is
00:10:09
equivalent to what the Europeans say. Well, there is
00:10:12
Hinduism in India. Well, it’s just a
00:10:14
colossal variety of different
00:10:16
religions, and it seems to us that this is
00:10:20
so eastern, such pride When they
00:10:23
consider a Western person Well, there’s like a
00:10:25
barbarian, well, if Western people
00:10:28
are trying to interpret their entire culture
00:10:30
through their own paradigm
00:10:31
of thinking. Well, this is the same as how the
00:10:34
Greeks looked at those
00:10:37
different Celts there who wandered
00:10:39
around the Dacos and others and others, that is,
00:10:42
for them it was, well, really if a person
00:10:44
doesn’t understand But a barbarian and here we take
00:10:47
the same 1st century AD already there, you
00:10:50
can take a closer look there, you can
00:10:53
google the Han Dynasty, look at
00:10:55
the map we see the Han Empire
00:11:00
in the west we have the Roman Empire and between
00:11:03
them sometimes it’s called the Parthian
00:11:05
the kingdom is sometimes Parthian Empire and
00:11:07
then we still have such a
00:11:09
Kushan
00:11:12
kingdom If Parthia is still sometimes in
00:11:15
historiography then the Empire then it is a kingdom and it is
00:11:19
no longer the emperor who rules there, there is
00:11:21
already some kind of Shahin Shah who rules And what
00:11:23
is the Kushan kingdom in general
00:11:25
if you look at their history
00:11:27
the same formation there, dating back to the
00:11:30
Greco-Bactrians,
00:11:33
let’s say the Persian Empire in the
00:11:36
modern context, but this is also like the
00:11:38
deepest misconception Bactria It
00:11:40
was always part of the
00:11:42
Achaemenid power before the fall from the invasion of
00:11:45
Alexander, an actually independent
00:11:47
territorial entity and there
00:11:50
was constant confrontation with the
00:11:51
Parthians When the first ruler under
00:11:54
whom the Greco-Bactrian became
00:11:56
Independent tried to resist with
00:11:58
traces
00:11:59
of sleep, well, it was as if he was immediately thrown into the furnace.
00:12:02
This is the perception that
00:12:04
once before there was such a
00:12:06
dominance of power there and starting with the
00:12:10
Greco-Bactrians there were a
00:12:14
bunch of other peoples there and different peoples
00:12:18
who subsequently
00:12:19
assimilated themselves with China there and from
00:12:23
India there was a lot of population interesting for us there is an
00:12:28
image of the ruler and on the other
00:12:31
side there are various deities Greek
00:12:35
deities there are some
00:12:37
local ones The point is that the coin was
00:12:40
always in the east One of the main
00:12:42
methods of propaganda is if according to in our
00:12:45
perception, that is, a person looked
00:12:47
as if at a coin on the back of this
00:12:50
deity and he had a corresponding
00:12:52
attitude towards this power, that is, the
00:12:55
Kushan kingdom of Greco Bactria Greco
00:12:58
Indian Priti state
00:13:00
education is tantamount to the fact that let us
00:13:03
unite China with Japan there and
00:13:07
is published for each society relatively
00:13:10
speaking, Propaganda has its own association with
00:13:12
this power, that is, what is it? Why does this
00:13:14
person rule us at all and the
00:13:17
only real
00:13:19
entity that was an empire
00:13:21
that became Well, what I said was
00:13:23
Rome, and why in general? Well, this is how it is with us too
00:13:28
very often. An empire there is an
00:13:33
emperor, in general, the concept of this
00:13:38
empire is from the beginning. Well, if
00:13:41
you look at it literally, it is the highest
00:13:42
executive power, initially it
00:13:45
was used in military affairs, but let’s say
00:13:48
empires could be obtained simply from the
00:13:50
Senate to manage, say, a certain
00:13:53
province initially, since the management of the
00:13:55
province was
00:13:58
combined with secular power. Well, how if
00:14:00
administrative management and military
00:14:02
control of
00:14:04
territories,
00:14:07
so the title of emperor, initially he did
00:14:11
n’t just receive it from someone or
00:14:13
endowed himself with it, legionnaires proclaimed him emperor,
00:14:18
and what was this title for anyway?
00:14:22
It’s the one who got the opportunity
00:14:25
to call himself emperor, he made a
00:14:28
request
00:14:30
for that to get a Triumph in
00:14:33
Rome and it wasn’t just a Feast, as if to
00:14:36
throw antlers, to show off how nice I am there, so that
00:14:42
Sali would be surrounded by flowers there with something else empires, it existed in the
00:14:47
context of such a thing as a pomerium, a
00:14:49
pomerium - this is actually a sacred
00:14:51
territory, and it’s even was not
00:14:55
in
00:14:56
the context of the city limits, as if in the form of
00:15:01
defensive walls there, it could, as it were, expand
00:15:04
even beyond the line, very
00:15:06
often it was simply identified by such a
00:15:09
white stone
00:15:12
and the Emperor was the one who received this title,
00:15:15
this whole Triumph when he entered
00:15:18
Rome, and the legionnaires provided this title
00:15:23
in order to make a sacrifice, this
00:15:25
is also an ancient connection between the power,
00:15:28
even there, as if military power, and the
00:15:31
connection, as it were, with heaven and the gods, that
00:15:34
it is not just a man who has won, it is
00:15:37
as if given to him from above, and we must
00:15:39
thank the gods here that navia writes
00:15:43
absolutely correct Therefore, from the moment of
00:15:44
complete secularization, talking about empire
00:15:46
as a phenomenon in the form of
00:15:48
state organization does not make sense because the
00:15:51
place of God was taken by the people of Mary, so simply
00:15:54
then the People's Empire appears and
00:15:56
then nationalism begins Yes, it’s just
00:15:59
that communism is some kind of another
00:16:01
modern ism, and we’re in we believe this
00:16:03
Daska continues the fantasy of the empire
00:16:06
exists in the form of the Federation and
00:16:08
Confederation Danil Mashak Maria good
00:16:11
afternoon we can call anything God,
00:16:13
even though the Great Mouse here povia continues
00:16:17
to persist you personally can call
00:16:19
anything God but legitimacy
00:16:20
comes from general and not individual
00:16:23
manifestations Masha Marie no one prevents you from
00:16:26
doing personally in general, there are many such examples
00:16:29
in Isto Novitskaya’s tenacity, you offer a
00:16:33
new
00:16:34
transcendental Lord, well, you see
00:16:38
Come to the chat If you watch our broadcast
00:16:40
Come to the chat we always have there
00:16:43
Passions are boiling there and even
00:16:46
married couples are born before our
00:16:48
eyes Well, the point is that The Empire,
00:16:52
if we discard Well, in general, the modern
00:16:55
perception is a product, to put it bluntly, a
00:16:58
product of the Neo Empire during the 10th
00:17:03
century. Here is the modern perception, that is, the
00:17:05
point is that it didn’t exist then. Well, then
00:17:08
the identity was actually
00:17:10
religious, even the concept of
00:17:13
democracy is there. Well, that’s also how it is
00:17:16
Democracy is very distorted, it doesn’t exist,
00:17:19
it doesn’t go beyond the boundaries of some
00:17:20
small settlement, or it
00:17:22
requires
00:17:25
transcendence, don’t even
00:17:27
embrace a democrat in those conditions. Well,
00:17:30
because he didn’t have a
00:17:31
corresponding Pantheon of gods. Well, that
00:17:34
is, well here I even have to say that the
00:17:38
very concept of democracy, well,
00:17:42
Plato also called it the worst
00:17:45
form of government in general, since it is ruled by
00:17:47
Well, the uneducated masses, if we
00:17:50
look at some small settlement,
00:17:52
here it’s just like there is
00:17:54
such an ideological unity simply due to the
00:17:57
fact that everyone from a generation knows each other
00:18:00
and there is a lot of research that when a
00:18:04
certain number is reached, well,
00:18:07
as if a person in any community It
00:18:09
simply divided Or they begin
00:18:10
to provoke a variety of conflicts
00:18:14
and the idea, even if you don’t say religion, the
00:18:17
idea is this transcendence is there
00:18:19
was always something that made it possible to somehow
00:18:21
unite, how to expand, and
00:18:24
the clashes did not occur between
00:18:26
religions or ideas, the clashes
00:18:28
occur between people, this is
00:18:30
human nature, but if we
00:18:33
look there, there is a terrible Empire
00:18:36
of some kind that came there and the Romans captured,
00:18:38
for example, Gaul after the second the uprising of the
00:18:41
Gals there, as the researchers say,
00:18:43
Well, they slaughtered about 2/3 of
00:18:46
the population there, as if Caesar had worked to the
00:18:48
fullest, but how the Gals lived, it
00:18:51
got to that point, village to village, 150 to
00:18:54
150 people, they slaughtered each other. If
00:18:56
they just wanted to destroy everyone,
00:18:59
this entire temple would be spent demolished, too, as if
00:19:03
these Heads of some kind were thrown somewhere,
00:19:05
burned or buried there, or they
00:19:08
simply took these Heads and
00:19:10
brought them to them, as it were, and now they,
00:19:12
too, seem to worship them, and this is what they are
00:19:15
now exploring the ancient Saba this
00:19:20
here is the
00:19:24
south-southwest of this
00:19:27
peninsula
00:19:29
and there when they dig up cities there are
00:19:32
some documents there a description that there is a certain
00:19:36
military leader who destroyed
00:19:38
a thousand cities and it’s interesting there when
00:19:41
the excavations take place. They see that in
00:19:43
fact every house has its own
00:19:45
little deity after a group of houses
00:19:49
It was already surrounded, in fact, by a wall,
00:19:52
this is how a clan lives, and this
00:19:53
clan has its own highest deity who
00:19:56
would lead everything, they are already, as it were, in
00:19:59
smaller places after We have
00:20:02
clans in general unite, there is a city, and
00:20:04
that’s just when we translate the city as well
00:20:06
- this is, well, like a distortion due to the fact
00:20:10
that we don’t have words that
00:20:11
would denote the concept of the person of that time.
00:20:14
When they describe a thousand
00:20:16
cities, this is the same association with this, well, let’s
00:20:19
put it this way directly, with communities that
00:20:21
worship a certain deity, that is,
00:20:23
having captured one settlement there destroyed a
00:20:26
whole
00:20:27
bunch of communities And gradually, in such
00:20:31
a pit in the history of mankind,
00:20:33
this single Pantheon
00:20:35
of the Gods was formed, and the local ones, these domestic heads,
00:20:37
they fell to the level of some spirit
00:20:39
there, a Totem or something else, and now
00:20:43
let’s return, as it were, to
00:20:45
Rome Why is this happening here the crisis
00:20:49
begins of this whole republican
00:20:52
structure, as it were, Yes, because Rome
00:20:53
began to gradually expand and why,
00:20:57
let’s say there, well, starting
00:21:01
if you understand the paradigm of thinking of that
00:21:03
person in general, the context in which he was
00:21:07
born and he was already in a state
00:21:10
that you need to enter into a
00:21:12
political fight he Burn Julius Caesar
00:21:14
from the house of Julius That is, you just
00:21:17
got there already there you can go to the Senate you are
00:21:20
already entering all these
00:21:23
party vicissitudes there is a
00:21:24
unification if some party
00:21:26
dominates a
00:21:28
showdown is already beginning and Caesar has
00:21:31
already come Well, before that it was there
00:21:33
dictatorship of the Sula dictatorship of Maria, that is, the
00:21:35
republic had already been there for several decades, it was bursting
00:21:38
at the seams, it was in a severe
00:21:39
crisis, and yes, and for this reason, it was as if they were
00:21:42
expendable. As a result, he was already
00:21:44
planning these new elites that
00:21:46
were included, he already seemed to realize
00:21:48
that the Senate, here
00:21:50
it is, plus Remember that there were the
00:21:53
Italian Wars,
00:21:55
when the peoples who inhabited
00:21:57
Italy there, all these elites they also raised
00:22:00
Bond, they received the status of plebeians, plebeians, the same thing was also
00:22:03
sought in the Middle Ages by the
00:22:05
concept were patricians, initially suba,
00:22:08
right from the city of Rome, like the top and the
00:22:13
plebeians were the elites, that’s all the
00:22:15
Italian stuff there, who also
00:22:18
came in after they got the right to vote, but Rome is
00:22:21
further
00:22:22
expanding the elites, as it were, this system
00:22:26
is already impossible to maintain and was already trying
00:22:29
to figure out how to additionally
00:22:31
include the elites, how to give them the right to
00:22:34
vote, besides, if we we perceive
00:22:37
Rome as such oppression there and so on Well,
00:22:41
there is simply a city that for 2000
00:22:44
years they can’t just how I don’t know there de
00:22:47
communi de imperiali Zro Well, the city of Cologne the
00:22:50
name is literally a
00:22:52
colony is a city that has a
00:22:55
status there like the mother of German cities, it
00:22:58
had a long name there but it
00:23:00
was called the colony of
00:23:02
Greene, the mother of this Nero, the wife of Claudius. She was
00:23:06
born there and she achieved
00:23:09
the status of a colony. A colony means entering the
00:23:13
status of an imperial city and obtaining
00:23:15
the right of citizenship and the right to vote, and
00:23:19
if we look at the gradual
00:23:21
expansion of this provision of
00:23:23
Roman citizenship, then Those
00:23:26
territories that are
00:23:29
most interesting for the emperors were those who came from
00:23:31
Illyria, this is, relatively speaking, the entire former
00:23:34
Yugoslavia, so Ilia - This was the backbone
00:23:37
throughout the entire Roman Empire
00:23:39
from where the
00:23:40
legions were recruited because the man of that time had
00:23:43
these personal
00:23:46
connections, he depended on them,
00:23:48
all power was built on this when someone like
00:23:51
this and
00:23:53
now we have
00:23:57
become not modern, a certain frame Well,
00:24:00
most people have no idea that
00:24:02
politics is just your personal
00:24:03
relationships and everything was built then.
00:24:05
Similarly, that’s why even soldiers were recruited
00:24:08
mainly from Liri, it’s like emperors
00:24:10
came from there, that is these
00:24:22
semi-classical ones,
00:24:25
this is only the year 212 of the Antonines, this edict,
00:24:30
well, that’s also a
00:24:32
distortion of the supposed Severo dynasty. Well,
00:24:34
actually, the Severo issued an
00:24:36
Antonini coin, and they tied themselves to the
00:24:39
previous Antonin dynasty, and here is the
00:24:43
Antonin edict, we go to this pop
00:24:46
Wikipedia of ours, there we read what we needed
00:24:49
just to fill the budget, but literally the
00:24:51
next phrase, which no one
00:24:53
has already planned, is that the researchers do not give an
00:24:55
unambiguous understanding of why all
00:24:58
this was done at all. And if we understand
00:25:01
all the dynamics of the development of Rome,
00:25:03
starting there, why Caesar seemed to
00:25:05
have died there, etc., etc., this is how
00:25:08
once there was this dynamic How
00:25:12
to unite This whole colossal
00:25:14
number of people who lived on the
00:25:17
territory of this state The fact is
00:25:19
that the ideology of Rome
00:25:22
was originally law and order if you remember the
00:25:26
back of this African and his
00:25:29
intellectual circle there. They generally
00:25:30
considered Rome as such a
00:25:32
policeman
00:25:33
of the Mediterranean but the other
00:25:36
party won and that is, the beginning was, as it were, the
00:25:39
seizure of these territories, and the Romans
00:25:42
did not care at all. What language do you
00:25:44
speak? Who do you pray to for
00:25:46
a long time? the
00:25:55
court of appeal only
00:25:57
considered many territories in general, they
00:25:59
just ended there like Well, let’s say the
00:26:01
Moorish kingdom, well, the dynasty just
00:26:03
stopped and it just came under
00:26:07
the control of Rome. Besides, when I
00:26:09
consider the fact that some kind of barbarization was taking place in Rome,
00:26:13
they were complete pragmatists when we
00:26:16
look at this the picture from the movie is
00:26:18
that they are all standing in such plate
00:26:20
armor. Well, this is a picture in the movie. They
00:26:22
dressed there. Whoever liked what, and
00:26:25
this helmet that they already had, which
00:26:27
seems to us Roman, actually this is
00:26:29
the time of the Republic when they fought
00:26:31
with the Celts. Celtic and this is all
00:26:34
syncretism, a mixture of cultures, there
00:26:36
was no decline at all, and the Romans. They did
00:26:39
not invent any other forms of
00:26:41
government at all, this whole
00:26:44
basis is Greek there, Plato Aristotle,
00:26:47
they simply developed it, and now we see the
00:26:51
year 212, receiving, as it were, citizenship, but
00:26:55
it begins There are always some kind of chaos going on there. There are
00:26:59
some
00:27:03
legions there. Well, basically there are
00:27:05
riots, just legions along this
00:27:07
Rhine Danube, they had problems there, like
00:27:11
with inflation, a little bit there, as if salaries
00:27:15
were delayed in payments and very
00:27:18
often these are simply proclaiming
00:27:20
some kind of our emperor, but this
00:27:23
emperor He sat still and
00:27:24
could not
00:27:27
burp anywhere, a split occurs, the
00:27:29
Palmers kingdom and the Tamga Empire appear, but this is
00:27:32
also a fairy tale, as if for schoolchildren,
00:27:35
Adena sat in the Pamir kingdom, which he
00:27:38
received from the emperor Galin the appointment of a
00:27:40
strategist for the entire East, there was
00:27:43
no separatism. They did not
00:27:45
imagine themselves outside of Rome, but the Gali
00:27:47
Empire. Well, this postum was sitting there who
00:27:51
controlled literally legions along
00:27:54
the Rhine, after that he simply began to
00:27:57
rob the closest clans since he
00:27:59
had nothing. Just how to pay. What if we
00:28:01
take There's half of France There's the south,
00:28:04
it's Occitania there in general Aquinas these
00:28:07
cities said What kind of post is there
00:28:09
some kind of [ __ ] you're sitting there anyway, well, the
00:28:11
Senate didn't legalize you, well, you're
00:28:13
nobody at all and he couldn't do anything
00:28:16
and in the end I do
00:28:19
n't remember the last one there who there just
00:28:21
turned to Rina dude come because they’ll let
00:28:23
me go as if they’re expendable here now
00:28:25
and that’s all in general when that’s what there
00:28:29
was then some kind of rigid vertical of power
00:28:33
Well, Philip the Arab was such a Roman
00:28:36
emperor in the territory of
00:28:39
Liri the legions rebelled there
00:28:42
they proclaimed some new
00:28:43
emperor Philip the Arab wanted to give up
00:28:45
power, such a Decius
00:28:49
Roman aristocrat comes there, he says wait, I’ll go
00:28:51
there, I’ll sort it out, he arrives there
00:28:53
before him, this emperor seems to be
00:28:55
allowed into Rosol, they say, and you came from
00:28:57
the Senate, you mean now our emperor Well,
00:29:01
it’s worth it, the kids seem to think, well, either I’ll be
00:29:04
lying here now too, or Well, it’s like
00:29:06
you have to fight for power and
00:29:08
then he’s an emperor in captivity with these emperors,
00:29:10
and it was okay in general,
00:29:12
this is the situation for the whole T century, these are
00:29:15
constant there, like there would be vacillation, confusion,
00:29:18
and what you said was problems with
00:29:21
finances, one of these reproaches
00:29:25
towards the empire very often is that
00:29:28
they are there to upset Rome, let’s say,
00:29:30
or another capital, it is important to perceive
00:29:33
that monumental construction
00:29:36
was one of the most important methods of propaganda in general.
00:29:38
Why Russians cannot
00:29:42
dig up any sources in Russia in the north,
00:29:45
because all they find there is
00:29:47
no monumental construction
00:29:48
there. If there is some kind of wall, it is so
00:29:50
that the Elk does not break into the hut
00:29:52
in the evening, just well, there are no
00:29:55
temples or feature and monumental
00:29:57
construction is a symbol of a kind of
00:29:58
demonstration of power.
00:30:00
But what we see is that construction is going on all over Rome.
00:30:03
This is Decius Trojan, he died as
00:30:06
a result of the Gothic invasion due to the fact that he saved
00:30:09
money so as not to make an
00:30:12
additional recruitment of troops since he
00:30:15
needed it more important to build temples there
00:30:18
and that’s why they built there again, well,
00:30:20
in addition to the aqueducts, baths and everything else, the temple
00:30:22
was built, this again is a connection, it’s like a
00:30:26
Divine mandate that needed to be
00:30:28
received. But this is all the diversity,
00:30:31
if we look at the third century, it’s right in the
00:30:34
middle ideological
00:30:37
spiritual crisis in Rome It’s just that when the
00:30:39
most diverse
00:30:42
sects and cults appear there, and the emperors of
00:30:45
all these, as if rulers, found it
00:30:47
difficult to behave somehow. Well, in general, it’s
00:30:51
simply impossible to confirm your power, that’s what
00:30:53
I
00:30:55
said, the association operates either in
00:30:58
some way a small society either needs
00:31:01
an ideology that will identify
00:31:04
this power
00:31:06
and gradually the advent of
00:31:10
Christianity occurs, a crisis, this is
00:31:12
all polytheism in later
00:31:17
stages, it is close to monotheism like the
00:31:20
same Hinduism where the gods are the most
00:31:22
diverse avatars, this is how in the century
00:31:25
all these Roman deities were perceived by
00:31:28
Rino simply take the sun out with your feet,
00:31:31
so all these complex incomprehensible structures
00:31:33
came just Christians,
00:31:35
our scheme is much simpler, as if it
00:31:38
was much easier for a person to
00:31:41
understand in general, and it is important to realize that a
00:31:45
person generally had
00:31:46
psychological
00:31:48
tension with all these cults, this
00:31:50
was the basis of
00:31:55
Egor’s
00:31:56
almost half of the existence of the empire is the
00:32:00
so-called
00:32:02
principate. The point is that when we
00:32:04
identify the emperor as the emperor,
00:32:07
it is a sub-military
00:32:09
title of his developer, starting from Octavian
00:32:12
Augustus, he combined several actually
00:32:15
senatorial positions in his hands there
00:32:18
And as a certain priest there, it was one of
00:32:21
he would also have
00:32:24
powers and there constantly passes. That
00:32:28
is, every emperor when he came,
00:32:30
his power rested on how he
00:32:32
actually came to an agreement with the elites. If we
00:32:35
look at the same Parthians there, in
00:32:37
fact, the Parthians, these Persians there after the
00:32:39
Sassanids, they defeated the Romans much more often
00:32:42
e Palmyra this is a kingdom of
00:32:45
tragedy under the desa, the emperor
00:32:47
Valerian Shahin Shah dies, this one kind of destroyed
00:32:51
everything, he cannot invade the
00:32:53
territory of Rome, he actually went beyond the threshold,
00:32:55
his elites are all rioting, he is
00:32:58
why Shahin Shah is the King of kings because
00:33:00
each of these provinces it’s like a
00:33:03
satrapy there - it’s actually a kingdom and he
00:33:05
rules over them and all the local elites they
00:33:08
know directly their king and
00:33:11
as soon as he comes out
00:33:13
some kind of constant chaos begins, this Adena,
00:33:16
they’re just throwing in money there,
00:33:18
collecting some kind of militia and He
00:33:20
plundered completely all of Mesopotamia, he
00:33:23
even plundered the capital of those siphon with
00:33:25
sanito as the Shahin Shah
00:33:27
decided on his own head to invade Rome,
00:33:29
a mess came out there and
00:33:32
another Catavasia began
00:33:34
and this battle near Odessa is the
00:33:38
moment when the Romans begin to borrow a lot of things from the
00:33:43
East Principate it
00:33:45
ends with the appearance of such an
00:33:48
emperor,
00:33:50
Diocletian, who, as
00:33:52
you know, the
00:33:56
law is an emperor who rose there from
00:33:59
below, eventually abandoned power and the
00:34:02
same lyri, as if this is Dalmatia
00:34:05
lyria And when he was asked to return,
00:34:07
when after him another crisis began there, a
00:34:09
civil war, he said if if
00:34:11
only they could see what kind of cabbage they grow,
00:34:13
no matter if you even call me Well, he
00:34:16
forms this system of dominance and he
00:34:19
begins for the first time. And now the search for
00:34:23
this ideology begins, some kind begins
00:34:26
under Diocletian, e.g.,
00:34:57
his attempt is there, relatively speaking, two
00:35:00
deputies are worn by emperors in general -the title of
00:35:02
the Augusti And their deputies are the title Caesar,
00:35:06
if we remember that the emperor
00:35:07
is the highest executive power.
00:35:10
He has a deputy, and now we look at this
00:35:15
whole oil painting in 212, everyone is
00:35:18
given the right to vote,
00:35:22
supposedly the senate. Yes, we have it here, as it were. the
00:35:28
highest executive power is, as it were, the
00:35:32
one who exercises it, he has a deputy
00:35:34
who, in the event of something, seems to take it all
00:35:37
in. Well, this is our one beautiful
00:35:41
modern state that now
00:35:44
dominates the world, the model is the
00:35:47
same thing, the fact is that Rome is the
00:35:51
maximum Pragmatically, it was
00:35:54
a state, it was gradually constantly
00:35:57
changing somehow, being transformed, and these are
00:35:59
the forms of the model that
00:36:01
arose there. The West did not
00:36:05
run far, the Senate sits in the Capitol, as it were,
00:36:09
yes, this is the
00:36:12
US system. Yes, it is clear that
00:36:15
the context has changed, but the general model remains and
00:36:19
that we see this whole crisis, while it
00:36:22
ends with
00:36:24
Christianity being accepted in the future, Christianity is
00:36:26
being transformed by this
00:36:28
rethinking of the city of God, that yes,
00:36:30
the Empire has fallen, but the church accepts it all
00:36:32
in the future, this is the whole
00:36:34
concept of the city of God, as if it were
00:36:36
coming. We have Protestantism after we are
00:36:39
sailing there, as it were, to explore the New World,
00:36:44
each settlement is us, too, people there
00:36:47
are building some kind of their own City on a hill,
00:36:49
then this whole idea is gradually
00:36:51
transformed. Why does a
00:36:53
civil war arise? Yes, it’s just that the vision of a
00:36:54
city on a hill has changed, as if it was
00:36:58
initially perceived by everyone sailed
00:37:01
to the USA Well, as it were, it will be
00:37:03
a territory, as it were, an agrarian
00:37:05
superstate, it’s just that
00:37:07
production has arisen in the north, as if
00:37:08
new forms have arisen, a new vision, and this is
00:37:12
exactly the moment when there
00:37:14
is a large, diverse, as it were,
00:37:17
society and the whole thing is happening. It’s just an
00:37:19
ideological split. the same thing that happened
00:37:22
Well, over the course of T centuries there was a question
00:37:24
that Rome was solving and now he solved it with
00:37:27
my
00:37:28
Christianity
00:37:30
and suddenly all these
00:37:34
modern ideas begin that
00:37:36
the empire is some kind of unique thing, there’s
00:37:39
something else Well, we see there are these galas
00:37:42
who live there in this galia slaughter
00:37:45
each other there to go to the toilet, as if in
00:37:48
some ditch above it, you sit there,
00:37:50
God forbid that you don’t fall into that ditch, as it were, or
00:37:52
God forbid that some regular raiders don’t shoot you in this
00:37:54
whitewash. Yes, later
00:37:55
some kind of another black from behind a pine tree
00:37:58
to steal your hat or slippers there,
00:38:00
as it were, and Well, that’s it And then suddenly some aqueducts are
00:38:06
being built there, also
00:38:09
fountains before Diocletian, the main part of the
00:38:12
finances It always remained in place,
00:38:14
this is the so-called Flight of the Kuriles,
00:38:16
which is happening in essence was what the
00:38:19
local elites were all striving for. Well, they
00:38:22
perceived all this Roman culture and
00:38:25
they began to adopt
00:38:28
if the city seemed to be developing very
00:38:30
actively, it could get this status of a
00:38:32
colony. They could become senators there,
00:38:35
as it were, that is, the inhabitants of the city there, of
00:38:37
course, not all But to get the right to
00:38:39
vote, that is, they
00:38:41
always tried to join this culture because
00:38:44
it was profitable, in the end it
00:38:46
was profitable and Yes, it’s just
00:38:51
impressive and all the
00:38:56
cities that were built in Constantinople
00:38:59
also played such a function
00:39:02
when these Barbarians came there there are the
00:39:04
next ones who are there from the North
00:39:07
there from the East and instantly they were
00:39:11
brought to this in this temple of Hagia
00:39:13
Sophia and there a beautiful emperor
00:39:16
clothed in the finest silk, as if all the
00:39:19
choirs were singing, it
00:39:21
means the rays of Light were falling, and the man
00:39:24
who sat there spent his whole life in
00:39:26
some wagon he was just, yes,
00:39:28
everyone here is clean, everyone smells fragrant there And
00:39:31
you here, as if not washed, something came out, as
00:39:34
if the north had arrived How to
00:39:36
nail this what’s-his-name on
00:39:39
Constantinople, the
00:39:41
gates of Constantinople, a shield of show-offs, these are all Yes, yes, yes
00:39:45
like we nailed a
00:39:47
Shield on the gates of Constantinople and these are
00:39:50
spinning Tae who are you from the fortress
00:39:53
walls there that are impossible to take such
00:39:55
you look at some kind of 1000 year
00:39:59
prize the next Brigade came to the
00:40:02
disassembly as it were yes Go with
00:40:04
God Here you are sacrifices go over there again
00:40:07
Well, how is it that they gave Ale? There are 5 tons of
00:40:12
gold there is something like that, then if I’m
00:40:14
not mistaken there were 205 tons of gold in
00:40:16
Constantinople, they just gave 5 tons
00:40:19
to make it easier to count them, like
00:40:21
Nati with God, as if get out of here like that’s it
00:40:24
well, like a problem
00:40:26
and then it comes Victory Victory and
00:40:29
also after that Constantinople
00:40:31
stood there for how many centuries in
00:40:34
common Well, who are these Hungarians there as
00:40:37
always They are there It seems they are trying to attil
00:40:39
there somehow this myth
00:40:42
Involve such funny guys They are
00:40:44
of course and so We imagine Yes, it’s
00:40:48
understandable that the gals began to make a fuss, they were
00:40:51
cleared out there,
00:40:53
but in the century time lived a quarter of the
00:40:59
Earth before that,
00:41:01
this empire doesn’t exist, what a grace we all
00:41:05
run around each other, as if wetting each other in order to
00:41:07
steal a goat, and here comes Rome,
00:41:10
which says so everything it’s all over,
00:41:12
another four lived in India, another quarter lived
00:41:14
in China, yes. Well, what’s happening is a
00:41:17
demographic explosion. In addition, there is a
00:41:20
huge colossal
00:41:22
market, for example, North Africa, it actually
00:41:24
specialized in the production of
00:41:26
pots, it was like, well, like salafan
00:41:29
bags, now it’s like this, besides
00:41:32
there are some of these mines there, let’s say there, oh, it’s
00:41:35
also terrible. What a terrible
00:41:37
exploitation. Well, who would exploit these mines
00:41:38
and
00:41:40
how to dig something out there
00:41:43
and start getting something from there,
00:41:44
this one, and they had slaves for
00:41:47
this in the form of who after conquests, well,
00:41:50
in large numbers, by the way, in Gaul
00:41:52
throughout history, the percentage of slaves there was more than
00:41:54
2%, well, it didn’t rise, that’s
00:41:58
why Rome captured the East in the first place, there was
00:42:00
already this whole
00:42:03
slave-owning economy in a state of crisis, there, one
00:42:05
of the kings of these Sasanians, he died
00:42:08
when he wanted plunder the temple the crisis of this
00:42:12
economy has led to the fact that very
00:42:13
often the armies there are simply rioting, in fact, in the 20th
00:42:17
century it was already Rome cdi Well, we read there Yes,
00:42:21
this is a civil war, for some reason
00:42:22
everyone here is running to Egypt like Why the hell did they
00:42:24
run there so Egypt already sat on
00:42:27
loans from Rome, as if the breadbasket that they
00:42:30
represent there Well, it was completely
00:42:33
completely dependent on Rome even then Rome,
00:42:36
here it was initially on all these well-
00:42:38
principal conquests there, and there seemed to be a
00:42:40
slave-owning boom, but
00:42:43
starting from the 1st century they are already starting
00:42:46
just these let all the freedmen go,
00:42:48
go work, as if
00:42:50
because you are of no use there, sometimes
00:42:52
when the next devils came,
00:42:54
they were captured, as always,
00:42:57
put on the market like that. It’s easy
00:42:59
to collapse the prices of all these slaves. Well, it’s
00:43:03
as if no one needed them
00:43:05
starting from the 1st century there, well, all this is the percentage
00:43:10
of slaveholding, it’s just constantly. Well, it seemed to
00:43:12
be declining very quickly, this is also
00:43:14
like one of these myths. But the emergence of
00:43:18
this entire empire, it just
00:43:20
produces this whole boom, as it were,
00:43:22
this whole technological explosion it is
00:43:25
supported by what, as always, there is a
00:43:28
colossal combination of the most
00:43:31
diverse ideas of cultures of views, but the
00:43:36
empire is not even like there is
00:43:38
inbreeding for some kind of health, it’s
00:43:42
like a population, it’s a
00:43:45
banal mixture of ideas, always at the junction of ideas the
00:43:48
biggest
00:43:50
discoveries happen and that’s how it is as if we
00:43:53
look at the same China, here we are,
00:43:56
eight Chinese, they supposedly imposed their
00:43:58
culture, yes, again, some devils are invading,
00:44:01
they look at all this
00:44:03
splendor, they themselves became
00:44:04
Chinese, but they always brought something
00:44:07
new of their own, and that’s why China also seemed to
00:44:10
dominate, as if he too Well, there was
00:44:12
this technological progress Well, like
00:44:14
Byzantium was there for well, for the
00:44:16
surrounding barbarians there Well, in principle, he
00:44:18
was like that, that there was simply not a
00:44:21
single territory around that was
00:44:22
comparable in technological terms, in
00:44:25
organizational terms cultural potential,
00:44:27
so when some Jur
00:44:29
came there, I don’t know, or the Mongols there
00:44:32
later, well, this is one of the That’s
00:44:34
why China, too, seems to me to
00:44:37
have begun to decline over time, there were
00:44:39
gradually some invasions there,
00:44:41
that is, somehow they came and this gave
00:44:45
some new ideas, new views on
00:44:47
China, but its decline begins
00:44:49
just when around Well, the entire
00:44:51
Western state, as if they
00:44:54
had put all these nomads in their place, and Well, it’s just
00:44:58
also the geographical position of China, there are
00:45:01
some strange dudes there in the south
00:45:03
there in the North there are some people running around on horses
00:45:04
there on
00:45:06
our right there are mountains on the left the sea seems to be well
00:45:10
and we are so smart here and we ate for a long time
00:45:12
to go through the desert to the west then you can
00:45:13
come to some barbarians who
00:45:16
were ready for gold there or
00:45:19
Send silver for your silks, so if you open
00:45:22
the map of the Han Empire, by the way, there
00:45:25
is something like this somewhere in the territory of
00:45:27
modern Afghanistan, these are
00:45:30
these semi-dependent territories. Well,
00:45:32
what is China doing now there, all these
00:45:34
Turkmenistan or wherever it goes where
00:45:36
the borders are already controls This is all this is the
00:45:39
same way of moving
00:45:41
to the west, their communications are what the
00:45:43
Han Empire did Well, not even the Han, but the
00:45:45
Tang Because during the Tang dynasty It
00:45:48
was the peak when they penetrated to the west there
00:45:49
they then had an honest alliance with
00:45:51
the nomads and they just under the Tang
00:45:54
they reached a maximum when they went
00:45:55
west there into Central Asia they
00:45:58
intensively, as it were, well, the Han is just
00:46:00
forming this whole Silk Road
00:46:02
when through the Greco bacterium they somehow
00:46:04
connected there and that’s where it began
00:46:06
Well then it’s
00:46:07
just that the land route was not as
00:46:09
profitable as this whole journey by water, well,
00:46:13
what is known is that the Romans sailed there,
00:46:15
relatively speaking, to modern Macau,
00:46:17
it seems somewhere there, as if they had already
00:46:20
been brought there, and all this trade through India is
00:46:22
how it all went and the Red Sea,
00:46:25
what I already told about these Huts there,
00:46:28
as if Emperor Troyan
00:46:30
had killed them all when he wanted to build
00:46:32
communication, he was planning a campaign
00:46:34
in general against India, he just got
00:46:36
stuck in Persia and died, that’s what
00:46:40
happened, that is, all this
00:46:42
diversity Well in China it’s as if it’s
00:46:44
just now Why China is so
00:46:46
monolithic Yes, the influx there just stopped
00:46:48
and but this didn’t happen in Europe Where
00:46:52
further some why a
00:46:55
very large
00:46:59
cultural and technological exchange
00:47:00
happened there just changed but
00:47:02
the form changed Well, I’m just saying oh
00:47:05
monolithically and China, mind you Sorry for
00:47:06
interrupting, but also note, as soon as
00:47:09
this technological influx began there and when
00:47:12
Western
00:47:19
transnationalism What happened was what
00:47:22
happened thousands of years earlier there, and
00:47:25
this exchange begins,
00:47:27
well, if before people just brought an idea,
00:47:29
now it’s like, well, technology
00:47:31
gives What I’m saying is that if we
00:47:34
look at the ethnic composition of this
00:47:35
well-known China, then it’s like the main part there.
00:47:38
Well, everyone associates themselves like the Chinese, the point is
00:47:41
simply that gradually this is the entire
00:47:44
population. Well, all these new ones are like
00:47:47
some kind of tribes there the nationalities that
00:47:48
penetrated, they simply assimilated, and
00:47:51
Europe, due to the fact that, well, as if the Roman
00:47:55
Empire fell due to its stupidity and all these devils
00:47:57
rushed there, here again they were
00:48:01
when they captured this entire territory. They did
00:48:04
n’t want to destroy anything at all. They
00:48:06
wanted to be Romans, all the elites there.
00:48:08
a long time ago there were
00:48:11
Romanivas and the entire Roman administration remained in place, it was
00:48:13
just not necessary to
00:48:15
bring the treasury to Rome, as it were, and
00:48:17
collect it locally, besides, as I said,
00:48:20
the Romans were not at all interested in your
00:48:23
culture there, religion and everything else for a very
00:48:25
long time
00:48:27
Basques modern they
00:48:30
identified themselves already then, for 1,000
00:48:32
years they practically did not succumb to Romanization,
00:48:35
here is North Macedonia, here is the modern
00:48:39
State, well, there were some, even
00:48:43
in the 6th century, the Byzantines perceived that there were some kind of
00:48:46
mountain devils sitting there and it was better
00:48:47
not to touch them, and the entire Roman Empire is
00:48:50
there was just an insane diversity of cultures,
00:48:52
many generally didn’t give a damn
00:48:54
Yes, and the Romans didn’t care there like
00:48:57
Do whatever you want, or let’s take another
00:48:59
example The
00:49:01
Incol Empire in general, if you look closely at this
00:49:04
formation, it’s also like such a
00:49:06
barbaric attitude, let’s say, of the
00:49:09
Europeans there is a control system
00:49:13
some kind of Inca family rules,
00:49:17
and power is transferred not only to the
00:49:20
eldest son in general, but to anyone
00:49:23
from this
00:49:25
family, and
00:49:27
on the contrary, they tried to preserve the
00:49:30
entire culture of everyone who obeyed them,
00:49:32
necessarily even so that
00:49:36
outer clothing, as it were, was preserved for them, clothing It
00:49:38
was like that I told about
00:49:40
civilization as a game within a game, but it is important
00:49:43
to identify yourself and in ancient times in
00:49:46
societies there was clothing, well, even up to
00:49:48
the Middle Ages. It would have been a demonstration of
00:49:51
clothing belonging to one or another
00:49:54
class, so the identity of
00:49:57
this entire hierarchy in general, if
00:49:59
you look at the Inca Empire, this very
00:50:02
close to Kievan Rus, as the Byzantines described them,
00:50:05
that there is some kind of
00:50:07
family there, they are always sailing there,
00:50:09
hell you will understand which of them is which, as
00:50:11
it were, and what I told about
00:50:14
Svyatoslav’s campaigns in the Arab Chronicles When the
00:50:17
Byzantines during the period describe
00:50:19
what Svyatoslav there in Bulgaria they have
00:50:20
Arabs running around, they write that here it is
00:50:23
as if some kind of six is ​​going to the
00:50:24
Khazar Khaganate. That is, it is even impossible to
00:50:28
accurately identify who was there, and
00:50:30
now the latest research gives an
00:50:33
idea that it was Rurik who
00:50:35
actually could have been a little hasn’t it been
00:50:36
here since some century, well, that is, this is
00:50:39
all a convention And now we see on the other
00:50:41
side of
00:50:42
the world the form of government is very similar to
00:50:45
Russia
00:50:47
and the most important point is that in those
00:50:51
past all eras before the advent of modernity,
00:50:55
man was the most important
00:50:58
resource. this is the unity of a colossal
00:51:01
number of people, what it said, it
00:51:03
gave this huge, simply
00:51:06
booster, simply colossal Europe exploded
00:51:10
due to the colossal transformation of the
00:51:14
general
00:51:15
worldview,
00:51:17
and if we don’t somehow get
00:51:20
scared like little children by the word Empire,
00:51:22
there’s a colony, these are drawing fantasies then
00:51:26
this is a natural form, in fact, the
00:51:28
unification of colossal diversity
00:51:31
under a certain single idea, and
00:51:35
nationalism is always a connection with
00:51:38
the past and, as I said, the United States retains the
00:51:43
same general framework that was
00:51:46
invented under Rome
00:51:48
and they simply begin to use it as
00:51:52
Rome had They begin
00:51:53
to use propaganda in the 20th century. Propaganda of
00:51:55
this nationalism, as it were,
00:51:58
since the end of the First World War,
00:52:00
everyone has the right to self-identity,
00:52:03
there is, as it were, independence. But the Austrians
00:52:05
wanted to join Germany, as if
00:52:08
they were told stop, someone else there wanted No,
00:52:11
Yugoslavia will be your kingdom and a
00:52:14
political nation. This is not Nationalism,
00:52:18
this is the year 212 edict of the caracals, they are something
00:52:22
new that they
00:52:24
invented if we allow the Ukrainians to
00:52:27
look at the fact that we need to form a
00:52:29
political
00:52:30
nation, this is not nationalism at all and we
00:52:34
must be well
00:52:36
aware of what it is like it
00:52:38
appeared at all And this is what is also
00:52:43
important, few people seem to me to have noticed
00:52:46
that the revolution is a phenomenon of the
00:52:49
modern era before modernity. There were no revolutions as such, a
00:52:52
revolution is generally a riot of
00:52:54
fantasy, just when Well, nationalism
00:52:57
appears in fact from the French
00:53:01
Revolution
00:53:03
17 89 and we read all these leaders Yes,
00:53:09
they were ready there in but someone wrote
00:53:12
even 12 million to spend if we
00:53:14
need to, they write nations to unite into a nation
00:53:17
because the British lived there, these
00:53:21
Basques Well, excuse me,
00:53:24
half of all modern people spoke Occitan
00:53:27
France and literary works in
00:53:28
it were written much earlier in this
00:53:30
language and that yes, the Occitan language
00:53:33
has a bunch of its own
00:53:34
dialects and all this into the furnace of 12 million if
00:53:39
necessary. Let’s put the population into the furnace then
00:53:42
in France 25 million was necessary 12 Well, not
00:53:44
a problem if we are looking at the terrible
00:53:47
Inquisition. Some kings there for
00:53:50
-6 years there could have executed 300 people.
00:53:53
Yes, 300 people for the French revolution,
00:53:56
this is in one village, as if in a day, like
00:53:59
this, this is someone there who rebelled,
00:54:02
like an orphanage in we allow them to spend
00:54:04
because these are the
00:54:06
next enemies Why did the French Revolution become the
00:54:10
Great in the Soviet Union so they
00:54:13
were inspired from there to be straight Jacobin
00:54:15
It’s not the Bolsheviks who are so
00:54:17
bad Well, those barges there somehow drank on the
00:54:20
Volga where did they come up with Well, how they pressed
00:54:23
Vande Moreover, the Vendée is not alone there,
00:54:25
half of France is like a bustle of Brittany. There all the
00:54:29
people were simply drowned in full,
00:54:31
as if they were trying to
00:54:33
get out on the barge. They just
00:54:34
cut down the institute with their hands, the terrible institute there of
00:54:37
these executioners is medieval Yes, people
00:54:40
just, well, the uprisings just started
00:54:42
in the process of the Jacobin dictatorship Well, people
00:54:46
just when you kill so much how
00:54:48
would you understand, well, this is generally some kind of
00:54:50
madness and the Generals report that they are there,
00:54:54
as it were, of all the children of the Old Men, women,
00:54:56
cats, dogs and chickens, they were allowed to be used up, as
00:54:58
if in the name
00:55:00
there writes what Loche we make the
00:55:05
final sacrifice In the name of a bright
00:55:07
future and blood to unite the nation Why did the
00:55:11
monarchies all rebel against this?
00:55:13
Yes, they started the campaign, so these dudes
00:55:15
were going to carry out the world revolution,
00:55:17
Danton writes there Yes, if you have to be an
00:55:20
executioner,
00:55:25
this is from the proles, this is essentially the Trotsky of that
00:55:29
time Yes And so today there was a broadcast
00:55:32
Yes there with a Polish guest This is the
00:55:34
Volyn Massacre we are what
00:55:38
this nationalism is about he is trying
00:55:41
to idealize
00:55:44
the past that we are so white fluffy
00:55:47
there is something else Yes the truth is that we are
00:55:50
all people now living on earth Since
00:55:52
our ancestors had blood on their hands, all
00:55:56
people simply
00:55:58
survived by killing others. Yes, and
00:56:01
we must admit that yes, we
00:56:04
were like that, both Poles and Ukrainians. Yes, we were all like that, everyone
00:56:07
fought all the time. And here is
00:56:12
the ideology of nationalism. Yes, there are empires.
00:56:15
Why did they go, well? began to collapse in the
00:56:18
10th century Yes, because they played with
00:56:20
nationalism with beauty. In addition, we
00:56:23
know that Germany was actually destroyed by
00:56:28
Bismarck, he was already retired
00:56:30
when he attributed to himself the myth that
00:56:32
he supposedly sought to unify
00:56:33
Germany in fact There is a lot of information about his
00:56:36
correspondence there, various Memories when they
00:56:38
communicated with him and they told him that
00:56:41
Prussia should not expand more
00:56:43
than its officer corps is able to
00:56:45
digest soldiers and Bismar said yes,
00:56:48
when they united Germany, there is
00:56:51
this one Who was there Frederick II, it seems
00:56:55
he is the first emperor he said
00:56:58
that the worst day of my
00:57:01
life is approaching, we will protect Prussia. They
00:57:03
even left Bavaria as a kingdom with
00:57:06
their army, as if they were just
00:57:09
flirting with nationalism, something that
00:57:11
Vienna could not accomplish. And if we
00:57:15
remember there, well, the end of the 19th century there
00:57:19
the horror there of Austria-Hungary, in fact, it
00:57:23
was a union State and the empire of Vienna
00:57:27
with the kingdom of Hungary, they had two
00:57:30
different
00:57:33
budgets, all the capital of the Habsburg dynasty.
00:57:36
They were generally separate. Well, that is,
00:57:38
in fact, you need to understand that among the
00:57:40
Habsburgs there were a lot of investors and
00:57:42
so then their budget was completely separated,
00:57:44
they didn’t go into any state treasury there,
00:57:46
modern Budapest, but
00:57:49
it’s just a lot of money that
00:57:51
Vienna was pouring into, as it were, for the construction of its
00:57:54
development. Besides, we remember the occupation
00:57:58
of Bosnia and Herzegovina there in
00:58:01
1908 1908 No, it seems
00:58:05
they were earlier to annex finally in
00:58:07
1908 Bosnia and Herzegovina annexation of
00:58:10
Bosnia, strictly speaking, and the cause of the war,
00:58:14
which was the First World War Well, it seems that
00:58:16
at first they occupied it there in
00:58:18
18008, it seems they filed for it for a very long time,
00:58:21
but after the Berlin Congress it seems
00:58:23
they are the ones Poly there Well, it
00:58:26
definitely belonged to the Ottoman Empire but
00:58:29
in fact, it was under the control of the
00:58:32
Bosnian Chris 198 er Bosnian kry
00:58:37
1908-1909
00:58:38
international conflict caused by
00:58:40
annexation on October 7, 1908, here is
00:58:42
Austria-Hungary Bosnia and Herzegovina
00:58:43
province of populated Serbia Croatia Well,
00:58:45
what’s interesting is that it was under the
00:58:48
occupation of Austria-Hungary on the basis of the
00:58:49
Berlin decision Congress of 1872 78
00:58:52
yes Well, they occupied e Previously, they
00:58:54
simply decided it all, what’s the trick in the
00:58:57
World Cup Vienna there, in fact, it was possible
00:59:01
there, as always, it seems to us that the Empire is
00:59:03
robbing someone, that it was possible to rob
00:59:05
these local villagers there Yes, Vienna
00:59:07
invested there all this money has been there for 40 years, in fact,
00:59:10
few people know, but the fables were the
00:59:13
bravest soldiers of Austria-Hungary,
00:59:15
they went into battle in the name of Allah and this
00:59:18
Joseph or whoever flew out. Well, that is, and it’s
00:59:22
like some kind of Habsburg as
00:59:25
a symbol Catholic Church and here
00:59:29
in the name of Allah, as if we were running when
00:59:31
they remember the Czechoslovak corps there, there
00:59:33
were only 50,000 of them, 30 of
00:59:36
which were in Russia and then after they
00:59:39
realized Well, they still forget that
00:59:41
initially the possessions of the Habsburgs were the
00:59:44
three crowns of Vienna in Prague and Budapest it
00:59:47
was just that the Bohemian
00:59:50
Uprising was a battle under the White Mountain when
00:59:52
they were smashed to smithereens and all these
00:59:55
Czech elites disappeared and Prague lost
00:59:58
its crown and the Hungarians were more
01:00:01
smart-assed and received the status of a kind of second
01:00:04
capital of a kind of union crown, well, plus
01:00:07
they still had
01:00:09
the function of the special status was directly
01:00:11
related to the function of protecting the perimeter from the
01:00:14
Ottomans and therefore Well, as if
01:00:16
they were in great need Well, they are
01:00:18
there promoting their whole scheme, it
01:00:20
seems with this with Maria Theresa or whatever her name was
01:00:22
when there was a crisis, this hereditary one
01:00:24
they have also, the Hungarian authorities seemed to
01:00:27
support her, there was also planned this
01:00:29
same fight for the Turks, this
01:00:32
inheritance then, so the first thing that Vienna
01:00:38
saw was that these Czechs were somewhere there,
01:00:40
like a dessert, well, they would redirect them all
01:00:43
to the Italian front, the most
01:00:45
successful for Austria-Hungary in 1918, the
01:00:49
commander there of this
01:00:51
front is a Serb by
01:00:54
nationality, a Serb, let's think with whom
01:00:57
they fought here, a Serb by nationality
01:00:59
writes there a dispatch to this Charles I, the
01:01:01
new emperor, that a revolution
01:01:03
is planned, he writes loyal troops are ready
01:01:06
to move to Vienna, as if to protect the
01:01:09
official power but they tell us
01:01:12
that this is a prison of peoples There’s no one there, well,
01:01:16
there’s nationalism supposedly everyone had
01:01:18
an identity Everyone wanted to run away
01:01:20
somewhere Well, they destroyed
01:01:22
Austria-Hungary well Well, the Balkans are still kind of what’s
01:01:25
going on there We have all these
01:01:29
consequences Well, the empire - this is always a
01:01:32
huge concentration That the most important thing is that
01:01:34
people are united by the sense of
01:01:38
moving into the future of creating something, and
01:01:41
here we are, too, there were broadcasts. Let’s say we
01:01:44
came to the conclusion that humanity is moving
01:01:47
into space.
01:01:49
So what small state can
01:01:53
somehow rule the world in this competition
01:01:57
ideas and stronger ideas,
01:02:00
these are the states that
01:02:01
lead them, they begin to dominate and
01:02:04
the reality is that you are sitting strong
01:02:06
ideas always extend strong capital
01:02:09
Yes, because capital sees for itself in
01:02:11
this a form of its reproduction,
01:02:13
distribution and protection, including
01:02:16
if we have there they say why We
01:02:17
Ukrainians can’t live just
01:02:21
like ordinary people there on their Merke there
01:02:23
house work vacation there to go somewhere like that
01:02:26
Well, this is a good life for an ordinary
01:02:28
person, as it were, yes, but this good life for
01:02:31
this simple good person depends
01:02:34
on how many of these kind of ideological madmen will there be in this state to
01:02:38
do something because otherwise they will
01:02:40
leave from here
01:02:42
we are either
01:02:46
competing in the Terrible Colony being,
01:02:50
as it were, de jure independent But from us
01:02:53
they will always be saying goodbye We have long been a
01:02:54
colony already in essence Well, that’s if look
01:02:57
at the future if we really want
01:02:58
something Wait For the future we are
01:03:01
actually a colony Many institutions are
01:03:03
controlled Sorry, well then even if the
01:03:07
word there scares us there Empire Well,
01:03:10
I said it’s a wonderful comrade
01:03:12
Bernays
01:03:13
we won’t say the word propaganda
01:03:15
it causes negative emotions we
01:03:17
will say
01:03:18
Feast Empire is bad, this is evil But
01:03:22
Nationalism is all wonderful And we have a
01:03:24
political nation there, we have a
01:03:27
kind of Freeze in the whole world, we are
01:03:29
fluffy whites, but only at first we sort of
01:03:31
decided that the Western Hemisphere is
01:03:33
ours no one will rock the boat here and after Well,
01:03:37
it’s not like a reproach, well, there was such a
01:03:40
real policy, the state behaved
01:03:42
like that and the United States was not
01:03:45
fluffy white. They were the same
01:03:49
pragmatic players in the international
01:03:51
arena,
01:03:53
but when all this Propaganda
01:03:57
developed throughout the 20th century
01:03:59
Well, in general - the Soviet Union, too, they
01:04:02
seemed to accuse each other of
01:04:04
some kind of imperialism and everything else. But it
01:04:06
was just Propaganda and why now, well,
01:04:10
we see some kind of crisis in the USA,
01:04:13
firstly, this is just an idea
01:04:15
of ​​it city ​​on a hill, here it is, it's gone.
01:04:18
Besides, all this criticism of the USA is
01:04:22
not just because someone there
01:04:24
came up with it, relatively speaking, they caught
01:04:27
us because the USA told us we are white
01:04:30
fluffy But they are told Well, guys, This is
01:04:32
something not so, let’s say the same
01:04:36
crisis is there in
01:04:39
Palestine, but the First World War, the West,
01:04:42
in order to ruin the Ottomans, promised everyone
01:04:44
anything is
01:04:46
possible, and when the West tries to
01:04:49
put it all out with money, well, it doesn’t work
01:04:52
because the West doesn’t try to understand
01:04:54
why it’s the West, as it were who is trying,
01:04:57
we are white fluffy, as if yes, we are
01:04:59
democracy there, that’s all. Guys, this is a Western school
01:05:03
and here we really need to, well, somehow
01:05:06
recognize and understand all this. Why do these people
01:05:08
behave this way
01:05:12
and when we get scared by the word
01:05:15
Empire Well, listen to us before the
01:05:17
Twenty-four Twenty-second
01:05:19
speak Well, all the forecasts are against us and
01:05:22
now we will talk about No, what’s there, well,
01:05:25
I’m talking about what we need to comprehend
01:05:28
Who we are, the truth is that the Ukrainians
01:05:32
created
01:05:33
empires, if we look at the
01:05:36
Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, but this is also such a
01:05:38
diversity that was united as
01:05:41
soon as the rulers there began to flirt with
01:05:45
some kind of
01:05:47
monotheism, a certain everyone to the same
01:05:50
tune. Well, a colossal crisis began,
01:05:52
and so in 1569 in Lublin the
01:05:56
Empire of the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth was essentially created. And the
01:05:59
Ukrainians have always taken a
01:06:01
direct part in this, but if we
01:06:03
start be afraid of words, if we continue to
01:06:06
behave as if we need someone to
01:06:08
put on diapers because we do
01:06:10
n’t have a mine, it’s like a fiasco, we have a
01:06:13
complete fiasco,
01:06:14
then we wo
01:06:16
n’t
01:06:18
come up with anything new if we must fully
01:06:22
understand our history and, moreover, understand
01:06:24
e in the context of human history,
01:06:27
Napoleon was no longer such a fool when,
01:06:29
on the basis of the Code of Justinian there in the 6th
01:06:32
century, he wrote the current
01:06:34
civil code of
01:06:35
France, everything always has some kind of
01:06:38
Forerunners and we must understand it all and
01:06:55
Well, what we are now, our
01:06:58
situation is the result of rosy
01:07:01
fantasies and we have to start thinking
01:07:04
pink ponies Sorry for interrupting pink
01:07:07
ponies in history they never create
01:07:10
anything Well with NU there are no unicorns they were
01:07:13
devoured as it were Sorry all this is the first one to saw
01:07:15
someone as if in the first place
01:07:17
because it’s fun to catch a unicorn
01:07:18
as if it’s a break off moro and secondly
01:07:22
because it is big enough and tasty. Well,
01:07:25
now it begins. Well, humanity
01:07:27
is reaching a new level of confrontation, as it were,
01:07:30
and now what I have already
01:07:35
said.
01:07:36
No fantasies, no models
01:07:40
in such a dynamic world, they
01:07:44
will be. Well, that is, as long as you try to
01:07:47
model something idealized,
01:07:49
it will all just be demolished to
01:07:52
smithereens, we again return simply to
01:07:55
this whole Modernity, relatively speaking, we are
01:07:58
so carried away by fantasies that
01:08:00
when we now say postmodernity, this is a
01:08:02
belch of modernity, this is no longer what this is about, this is the
01:08:04
decomposition of a dead corpse and We
01:08:06
are returning again to the
01:08:08
fact that the most valuable thing is the person,
01:08:11
no technology can replace anything,
01:08:14
before we called and we understood that there was a
01:08:16
person on the other side of the world and the world
01:08:18
seemed smaller to us. But now we will
01:08:20
call there and we can be sure
01:08:22
whether this person is talking to us
01:08:26
interaction, as it were, personal Trust
01:08:29
thinking is the basis of everything, it’s so
01:08:32
trivial in business, but everyone says it’s
01:08:35
built on trust, as it were, and this is a
01:08:37
constant movement, that’s when I say that the
01:08:39
most valuable thing for us should be
01:08:42
creativity,
01:08:45
people create business - it’s a creative process
01:08:48
You I didn’t create that you are sitting there, as if
01:08:50
drinking tea, you are constantly in
01:08:53
tension in the dynamics, yes. On this score, I
01:08:56
advise you to watch yesterday’s broadcast.
01:08:58
Just when we were talking about branding,
01:08:59
yes, with Dmitry Nikiforov, I
01:09:02
advise everyone to watch it, I will put a link at the end
01:09:08
now in the video itself But I’m throwing it in the chat
01:09:11
Here’s a link to the broadcast about branding And in general here’s
01:09:14
how to develop a business correctly and there
01:09:17
he clearly talked about what’s key Here’s
01:09:19
your idea you formulated an idea Why are
01:09:22
you different with this idea
01:09:26
NOC Well, the whole history of mankind is a
01:09:29
confrontation of ideas, if earlier we
01:09:31
were told that there is democracy and a
01:09:33
free market, but we are looking at China,
01:09:36
that is, the economy - this does not mean
01:09:38
democracy. Besides, we are looking at the countries of the
01:09:40
Persian Gulf. Well, the most stable
01:09:43
countries are monarchies and we are there maybe you do
01:09:46
n’t like something, don’t arrange it, but the most important thing
01:09:48
is that these are stable societies that
01:09:51
develop in the context of their worldview of
01:09:53
what they are, this book of
01:09:59
sagas Well, yes, like yes, where the story is told of
01:10:02
how they
01:10:05
actually returned this
01:10:08
Saudi Corporation to the ownership of the frame yes And when we Well,
01:10:11
now there is also a myth that Well, this is
01:10:13
oil and dollars Well, look at this
01:10:15
state Well, that is, there are now
01:10:17
colossal investments in the future.
01:10:19
They understand that you won’t get far on oil anyway
01:10:22
and we need to look at What we are I
01:10:27
will even say more, that is, we must
01:10:32
be
01:10:33
prepared for the worst possible developments
01:10:36
and be ready for something that we cannot even
01:10:38
imagine. If we look at the
01:10:41
modern political map of the world, this is the
01:10:43
same creation of the West when it was on horseback
01:10:45
in the modern era, all these borders
01:10:47
painted, but the Greeks had the concept
01:10:50
that some society is in
01:10:52
the status of civilist and some are in the status of
01:10:54
natural, and that’s what I repeat a lot of times
01:10:57
Iraq Well, they thought there would be democracy,
01:11:00
there would be prosperity, no, it’s not a
01:11:03
modern society, it’s split, that’s the
01:11:05
status of natural and if for
01:11:10
a moment we just throw away our rose-colored
01:11:12
fantasies about the inviolability of borders and we
01:11:16
look at how the Chinese act there and
01:11:18
other
01:11:19
states, then the fact is that we are
01:11:22
entering an era when everything depends on
01:11:24
your personal
01:11:26
organization; this will determine your
01:11:28
borders and not some political ones
01:11:31
borders on the world map, all this can
01:11:34
really just fly away into the furnace, well, our
01:11:37
modern war already
01:11:39
confirms this. Yes, this is the beginning. Yes,
01:11:42
colossal processes have begun in the world, we must
01:11:43
be ready for this, and there will be such a
01:11:45
struggle for peace that
01:11:47
no stone will be left unturned. And if we are already starting
01:11:49
to draw resources from
01:11:51
the Moon, guys, or we kind of
01:11:54
join there, we will become food, we
01:11:57
will again be on the periphery. And we are at
01:11:58
the crossroads, in any case, someone
01:12:00
will always capture us because we are a
01:12:02
logistics transport hub and our
01:12:05
diversity Here we are,
01:12:07
this is our most important
01:12:09
value for us. Nationalism is
01:12:12
suicide and we must really
01:12:14
look at how we can attract
01:12:17
people here. Modern technologies, when
01:12:20
we communicate there with people from the other
01:12:22
side of the world, this is also an opportunity to gain
01:12:25
influence if we are afraid that they will
01:12:28
come here. some kind of I don’t know laster
01:12:31
workers will take away their jobs There will be
01:12:35
something else from the couriers Builders Well, we must
01:12:37
become such a state so that the
01:12:39
elites from these states come here.
01:12:42
We must become a
01:12:44
predator and drag in as many
01:12:46
people as possible here in general, regardless of any
01:12:48
grievances or We like someone we don’t
01:12:51
like there according to some principles and
01:12:53
this is the future, as soon as
01:12:56
such colossal capital accumulates we are able to
01:12:59
generate new projects we must
01:13:02
go beyond this even the
01:13:05
influx of these people he will, as it were,
01:13:07
complicate us, because what I said for the
01:13:09
archaic man who built
01:13:12
this temple there, it was also natural for him
01:13:14
that he influences the world, but
01:13:17
the world also influences him, if we
01:13:20
isolate a person in some sterile room,
01:13:24
his body begins to kill his
01:13:26
psyche seems to collapse if he is
01:13:27
isolated in a cell alone and what
01:13:30
is important Why is this development of
01:13:32
ideas happening because in contact with
01:13:34
others there is an exchange and
01:13:36
our housing improvement takes place, we
01:13:38
are developing Well, look how much
01:13:41
on these broadcasts with our
01:13:42
compatriots who ended up
01:13:44
abroad By the way, tomorrow at 7 o’clock there will be
01:13:46
another one from Ireland, we will have a woman coming out.
01:13:48
Well, by the way, I remind all
01:13:51
our viewers who are there in
01:13:54
Germany, in Chile, in Burkina Faso, in
01:13:57
Cambodia and other beautiful countries,
01:14:01
everyone, get in touch and Tell
01:14:04
your stories Well if there is something to tell
01:14:06
and you are ready to present it so systematically, then I will be
01:14:08
happy to take you out because well,
01:14:10
it’s real, as if these stories are really
01:14:12
interesting And even if we already had
01:14:14
stories there from Germany There or from
01:14:16
Portugal there, I still
01:14:19
bring this out I’m still I put it on the air anyway
01:14:21
because different people will see, well,
01:14:24
absolutely the same countries in different ways, and that’s
01:14:27
the value, that’s
01:14:30
why Look at this section,
01:14:33
which is the world through the eyes of Ukrainians, on the
01:14:37
main channel and on shorts too.
01:14:40
But since I’m now pouring more here
01:14:41
on the main channel then, accordingly,
01:14:44
go to this podcast through the eyes of
01:14:46
Ukrainians and there, well, I don’t know anymore,
01:14:49
probably several dozen of these broadcasts, I’ll also
01:14:52
remind you that it was so interesting, it was like a
01:14:55
theory, such a myth Yes, we all heard it there
01:14:57
Moscow is the third Rome But the same Feofan
01:15:01
Prokopovich also told about the fact that
01:15:02
Kiev is the second Jerusalem Uh-huh, in general,
01:15:05
this one here is an arrestovich about how an arrestovich
01:15:08
gets up like that and so,
01:15:10
well, by the way, this is the very concept of
01:15:14
Rome, but there is this fable there, the name Rome, a
01:15:17
fable about Romulus and Remus, but this
01:15:19
territory was inhabited by Russians And in
01:15:22
Russian This is Rum, this is this, this is the
01:15:26
symbol of the navel of the earth, as it were,
01:15:29
the most ancient archaic such
01:15:31
sacred, any elevation has always
01:15:33
been perceived as some kind of connection with the
01:15:34
transcendental here in Jerusalem Yes, the temple is
01:15:37
also located on a hill,
01:15:40
and Kiev is also on a hill
01:15:44
even the Golden Gate. They are the
01:15:47
Golden Gate in Jerusalem, and there is also such
01:15:51
interesting symbolism there, the fact that
01:15:53
Constantinople is also an evil gate,
01:15:55
Hagia Sophia was built, this is
01:15:59
such a symbolic Christian, as if there
01:16:02
was a connection, and the fact that, well, Kiev is located
01:16:04
on the hills, so here too as if there was
01:16:06
such a certain Jerusalem and there would be no
01:16:09
Jerusalem, there would be no Rome. That is, this is the
01:16:11
symbolic center that brought the idea
01:16:14
that was the most revolutionary in general
01:16:16
for Western people. It said there is
01:16:19
no Jew or Greek, there are no women or
01:16:22
men, let’s do it,
01:16:26
so here we must again to come to the conclusion
01:16:28
that Kiev should be like a
01:16:30
symbolic center There
01:16:32
Or some kind of I don’t know another capital,
01:16:35
we may have something else there, so we
01:16:37
should be a symbol of such a vision
01:16:40
for the future and we should accumulate
01:16:43
just a colossal number of people,
01:16:45
colossal capital
01:16:46
and a person must again, here is a Ukrainian,
01:16:50
who identifies himself with Ukraine, we
01:16:52
must again, as it were, step over the
01:16:55
edge and beyond the limit to face the new and
01:16:57
be ready for anything to throw away all these
01:17:01
fantasies of ours, it doesn’t matter there we will have
01:17:04
darkness there Kings Caesars who are there there are Senates, that
01:17:08
is, here To be ready for
01:17:11
anything, I think that we will
01:17:13
end with this Dmitry Posternak
01:17:15
Taranushenko can’t wait for us, we
01:17:18
will have the next topic, by the way, also very
01:17:20
interesting Why does Russia need the collapse
01:17:21
of megacities
01:17:22
in Ukraine there were some posts last
01:17:25
week I solved this to develop the topic,
01:17:28
so immediately after this broadcast,
01:17:30
tune in.
01:17:32
And that means this is the first second
01:17:35
e we are approaching the fifth, we pay for
01:17:39
the Studio for everything else, so the
01:17:41
traditional monthly payment, I
01:17:44
put all the details on my cart
01:17:47
and in the description for the broadcast,
01:17:49
all the details are also here there is a
01:17:50
PayPal bank there Well, in short, all
01:17:52
this is all in the description for the broadcast.
01:17:54
Therefore, we need 150,000 there already, I
01:17:55
look at 80 thousand, in my opinion we collected even
01:17:58
more than 85 so no no no this is not
01:18:03
reinforced concrete products Because if we die down
01:18:06
the shortage funds, then you will only
01:18:09
lose and there will be no empire, yes,
01:18:11
this is a coin for the future of our Empire So
01:18:14
like subscribe everything there, let's bark, friends,
01:18:16
subscribe like subscribe and we will
01:18:19
soon have a honey badger broadcast, as if they made a
01:18:21
channel there already our honey badgers and the cart has been made I do
01:18:25
n’t give specially links so that
01:18:26
they seem to be more motivated
01:18:29
and and angry as if Hungry angry when
01:18:32
cold angry then they seem to achieve more,
01:18:34
but slowly I will start to promote it, well,
01:18:38
and I think that all our viewers will kind of
01:18:41
agree that we have a little
01:18:44
like If only there was an intellectual monster
01:18:46
that can already be placed on the
01:18:48
chessboard, for example, against the gap, I
01:18:50
think that the gap is like cabbage
01:18:52
soup Vitya can easily compete,
01:18:56
I’ll get ready Yes, because, well, I
01:19:00
really like that
01:19:01
such a big systemic mind with a huge
01:19:04
weapon It’s always nice to hear So
01:19:07
if you have the same great systemic Mind
01:19:09
as Victor Koreniv, who by the way
01:19:12
is on Facebook, uh, and in this Feb body,
01:19:17
and on Facebook and in the cart.
01:19:19
Be kind enough to unsubscribe.
01:19:23
Suggest your interesting ideas. I will be happy to
01:19:25
put them on
01:19:26
the air. And even if this the broadcast
01:19:29
Hundreds of people will watch it first, then Well,
01:19:32
you can always lay the foundation for
01:19:34
great expansion, it all starts with
01:19:37
small steps, as the Chinese say, the path
01:19:40
how many there in
01:19:42
ssya whether it starts with the first step there yes
01:19:45
yes or around the world The journey begins
01:19:48
with one Yes, so that’s where we end
01:19:52
our broadcast with an intellectual monster
01:19:55
hihi there you can also perfectly
01:19:59
claim this status, you know in the
01:20:01
appropriate conditions When we
01:20:03
do it all, that’s
01:20:05
all we finish Dmitry Posternak
01:20:08
Taranushenko is waiting for you with the
01:20:10
next one on the next broadcast about the
01:20:13
Apocalypse that
01:20:16
Russia is now carrying out in relation to megacities and
01:20:18
be sure to watch Yesterday's broadcast with
01:20:21
Dmitry Nikiforov about brands
01:20:24
because everyone who
01:20:26
wants to develop their business, let's say,
01:20:29
or even develop their medical blogs There
01:20:32
and so on, if we talk about this,
01:20:37
then you should look to understand a simple
01:20:40
algorithm of actions How to effectively not
01:20:43
waste extra resources effort time
01:20:47
you can develop your sites your
01:20:49
business And so on he he spoke very well about
01:20:51
it so I’m putting another
01:20:55
Here’s a link to his on his on his on
01:20:59
his video
01:21:01
so I
01:21:04
give All
01:21:06
lights out
01:21:23
for now
01:21:28
Y

Description:

Понятие "империя" сейчас является одним из наиболее искаженных в сознании современного человека, из естественной и наиболее оптимальной формы организации общества оно превратилось в символ угнетения, авторитаризма и грабежа. Смерть утопических воззрений эпохи модерна и новые вызовы перед человечеством, требуют переосмысления прошлого цивилизационного опыта организации общественных связей. Вместе с Виктором Коренивским мы рассмотрим такие темы: - возникновение первых территориальных государств в истории человечества; - Римская империя как идеал организации многосложного общества, государства и символ величия власти; - США - единственная империя современности; - важность осмысления истории украинцев для формирования эффективного многосложного украинского общества в ХХІ веке Банка Монобанка на студию https://send.monobank.ua/jar/5C86fTjsiU Станьте спонсором канала, чтобы поддержать проект, который борется за будущее Украины: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXzXmDrD1R670eh6hbe-zwQ/join Вы можете поддержать канал: На мой Патреон https://www.patreon.com/romanenkoyuriy на карту Привата 4731 1856 1467 7968. на карту Монобанка 5375 4114 2205 9084 PayPal [email protected] Подписывайтесь на мой каналы в соцсетях: Мой Telegram -канал https://t.me/romanenko_dns Моя страница в Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/unsupportedbrowser Моя бизнес-страница в Facebook https://www.facebook.com/unsupportedbrowser Моя страница в Instagram: https://www.facebook.com/unsupportedbrowser Моя страница в Twitter https://twitter.com/shan_yan Моя страница в TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@yuriyrom77 Страница "Хвилі" в Facebook https://www.facebook.com/unsupportedbrowser

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