Chúng đông và quá nguy hỉm.
không quan trọng chuyện này, tôi tính hỏi tay
newbiess liệt kê những dự kiện nào chứng minh sự vĩ đại, ai ngờ Chã xóa mất ... nghe nói tay
newbiess đang làm cho một tập đoàn đa quốc gia dù với lòng chất chứa căm thù Tây, nhưng gì thì gì cũng đang là phận culi tây
Em thấy bọn mũi lõ ứng xử với quá khứ của cha ông văn minh. Putin nói: ai muốn quên cmt10 là ko có trái tim. Ai muốn quay lại là ko có khối óc.
On November 7th, the dwindling tribe of Communist Party loyalists and nostalgists will commemorate the hundredth anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution. Vladimir Putin, however, has made it clear that the centenary is not an occasion for state celebration. While the foreign press has published countless perspectives on Lenin and Trotsky, Soviet Communism, and the global influence of those revolutionary days, as far as the Kremlin is concerned, November 7th in Russia should be an ordinary working day.
https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/why-putin-wont-be-marking-the-hundredth-anniversary-of-the-bolshevik-revolution
President Vladimir Putin has put the blame for Russia’s defeat in the First World War on Bolsheviks’ policy that he called ‘national treason’.
Speaking in the Upper House of the Russian Parliament Putin said the Bolsheviks, especially the ruling elite of the party, betrayed Russia’s national interests and allowed Germany to win the war with Russia even though eventually Germany was defeated. The President added that Bolsheviks had been so reluctant to admit their mistakes that in the Soviet period the First World War was called “the Imperialist War” and the authorities deliberately ignored the heroism of Russian soldiers in art and propaganda. Putin added that in reality the First World War was not an imperialist one.
Speaking to the young people at Camp Seliger, Putin remembered the events of 1917 as a time when “some were shaking Russia from within, and shook it to the point that Russia as a state collapsed and declared itself defeated.” He likely meant it as a warning to those who might try to “shake” today’s Russia. But he also spoke of the Bolsheviks’ “betrayal of the Russian national interests.” It was the Bolsheviks, after all, who “wished to see their fatherland defeated while Russian heroic soldiers and officers shed blood on the fronts of the First World War.”
More than half of the Russian people still view Lenin as a
positive figure. Now Putin, with his signature evasiveness—and careful not to mention him by name—has called him a traitor
https://www.rt.com/politics/putin-accuses-bolsheviks-treason-877/
https://www.newyorker.com/news/news-desk/putin-disses-lenin