Comments by "Marcus Aurelius Antoninus" (@marcusaureliusantoninus2597) on "Why Americans are Moving to Russia in 2024/2025" video.
-
1
-
1
-
@KR72534 The first part about the birth of Russia being tied to Rurik in 862 AD is absolutely true. That’s a historical fact. As you said, nobody’s a saint, and history is never black and white.
The rest of this narrative—that 12 republics “escaped their oppressors”—is a tired Soviet-era trope mixed with the same Russophobia you often hear from certain circles in the West.
• Correction #1: There weren’t 12 republics; there were 15.
• Correction #2: The Communist elites were not liberators; they were opportunists. The collapse wasn’t about freedom—it was about the ruling class wanting their own playgrounds.
• Let’s not forget the 1991 referendum, where the majority of the population in these republics actually voted to preserve the unified country. The breakup didn’t reflect the people’s will.
Here’s something often overlooked: the “republics” themselves were created on purpose by the Bolsheviks. They explicitly included the right to secede as a way to undermine Russia, following Lenin’s ideological vision.
Now to the life expectancy. When you hear stats about life expectancy, remember this: it’s a lagging indicator. It doesn’t reflect quality of life in real time. By that logic, Albania would be “better” than the United States, which is clearly absurd.
Moving on to dachas. The idea that Russians grow food at their summer homes (dachas) to survive is outdated. That was true in the chaotic 1990s. Today, people do it because they prefer fresh, homegrown food—it’s a cultural choice. Plus, many Russians own a dacha in addition to a city apartment, which is a common lifestyle, not a sign of poverty.
And finally, the infamous “indoor toilet” claim. This one comes from misinterpreted stats. Not being connected to a central sewage system doesn’t mean you lack an indoor toilet. The obsession with this myth? Let’s just say it’s particularly common among certain “patriots” of a certain country southwest of Russia’s borders who have a peculiar fixation on toilets—and an even greater habit of bending the truth.
1