The Origins of Russian Authoritarianism

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Kraut makes a good video. His one on Russian alcoholism is really relevant too.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 19 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/ChunkyBrassMonkey πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Apr 06 2022 πŸ—«︎ replies

Russia is a Failed Mafia State.

Get it?

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 12 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/XX_DarkWarrior_XX πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Apr 06 2022 πŸ—«︎ replies

It does. Thanks.

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 4 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/p107r0 πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Apr 06 2022 πŸ—«︎ replies

Hah, watched this the other day. Kraut has another one on how vodka was used and is used to keep them drunk for the past 400 years.

Edit: ah shit, somebody already said this

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 3 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/NapoleonBlownapart9 πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Apr 07 2022 πŸ—«︎ replies

This one on the Helsinki accords is also great. It shows that Putin has completely destroyed the foundations for a peaceful Europe, which is completely unacceptable no matter what argument any Putin apologist may make.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NdKmOGMrzuM

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helsinki_Accords#Articles

πŸ‘οΈŽ︎ 3 πŸ‘€οΈŽ︎ u/RevenueSpirited πŸ“…οΈŽ︎ Apr 07 2022 πŸ—«︎ replies
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before we get into this video i would like to inform you that this video is sponsored by keeps keeps is a man's health subscription service that provides men with wide-ranging services and products to prevent hair loss two out of three men suffer from hair loss and the best way to combat it is to do something about it while you still have hair with keeps a licensed doctor will review your information online and build a treatment plan for you your shipments of treatment products will then be sent to you every three months your doctor will also be available for you via chat 24 hours a day for 7 days a week the reviews of their products and services are widely positive and you can check them as well as the before and after reports out yourself if you wish to convince yourself of their products and services first prevention is key to preventing hair loss and if you're ready to take action and prevent hair loss yourself you can go to keeps.com crowd or click the link in the description to receive 50 of your first order that's keeps.com crowd many thanks to keeps for sponsoring this video and now let's get into it [Music] nomadic empires were some of the most fascinating entities in human history originating from the steps of central asia most lived in isolation unbothered by neighboring empires who saw their lands as worthless this isolation allowed many nomadic tribes to specialize increasingly in aromatic life and warfare competing with other tribes in a continuous struggle that in a survival of the fittest way resulted in ever-proficient warrior tribes and once every few centuries they ventured forth from their steps to overrun and conquer settled societies that were ill-prepared to face them however as efficient and near unbeatable as these nomadic peoples were in their conquests a curious thing about them was that once they settled in the lands they had conquered the nomads turned into what they had conquered the magia tribes conquered pannonia and turned into the hungarian kingdom the slavic tribes conquered eastern europe and turned into the slavic kingdoms the seljuk turks conquered iran and became the new iranian empire the ottoman turks conquered anatolia and became the new romans the chagatai turks conquered india and became the indians the mongols conquered iran and became the new iranian empire and when the mongols conquered china they became the new chinese empire there is however one big exception in this series of historic conquests panamatic peoples and their consequent social restructuring medieval russia was not that much different from many other medieval european states at the time a collection of small duchies cities and dukedoms with no centralized overarching authority the most prominent among these were the kievan rus and the novgorod republic the kievan ruse was a princely state with deep cultural and commercial ties into europe mainly through the byzantines the novgorod republic was a city-state and an important part of the hanseatic league of cities that stretched across the baltic and north sea then came the mongols there's a tendency amongst modern historians to paint the mongol empire a positive light as an institution of trait and tolerance which though is very oversimplified and overlooks the fact that the mongol empire was an extractive institution the mongols were tribal people who had no state or legal structures that they transferred over to the people they conquered their relation with those they conquered was purely predatory they wanted to extract wealth and resources from them and those who refused paid dearly the kievan ruse was one of these places that resisted kiev was burnt to the ground and the surrounding lands pillaged with much of the population slaughtered medieval accounts tell us of fields filled with human remains for decades after the siege with the burning of kiev a substantial political and cultural transformation of what we now know as russia began the kievan ruse with its deep cultural and economic ties to the byzantians had been the cultural motherland and birthplace of russia the place where russia as a european cultural entity had been created all that was left of it now was ash the cultural and economic ties with the byzantians were now broken this resulted in the geopolitical shift of russia culturally and politically in power to the north east the mongols enforced their economic order upon the remaining russian principality states and the centre of russian political and economic power consequently shifted to the landlocked plains of smolensk rostov and chanikov these places and the princes who ruled them had been largely ignored backwaters before the mongols now they're still at the center of russia throughout the rest of europe the institution of feudalism had during this time started to be increasingly challenged new political and commercial institutions evolved in european trade cities from antwerp to hamburg to koenigsberg warsaw paris lisbon london and venice merchants barons and artists and guilds rewrote the feudal social contract additionally the black plague shook up the economic framework of europe dramatically with a third of europe's population killed there were no longer enough peasants to work the lands for lords landlords consequently started competing for the remaining peasants by offering them payment for work previously peasants had worked in exchange for a promise of protection that now became increasingly replaced by a wage-based labor system but russia remained untouched by these political and economic developments it remained under mongol rule for 250 years and went into an entirely different direction the princes of central russia were recruited by the mongols as tax collectors the mongols outsourced the process of extracting the rhesus they wanted out of the russian peasantry to the russian princes because that aristocracy had a lot to lose if they failed to appease their mongol overlords and because the mongols had brought no legal code of limited aristocratic power the russian princes extracted that wealth with increasing unopposed ruthlessness and brutality while in europe feudalism increasingly disbanded an increasingly exploitative economic framework was reinforced in russia urbanization didn't take place as it did in europe with the russian princes invested in keeping as many peasants working the lands as possible the russian princes recruited armies of cavalrymen who were paid not in money but in land and the peasants on it however because there was so much land control of the land was not as important as control of the people while in europe peasants gained access to wages and left for cities to escape feudal lords in russia the peasants became deeper tied into their land through strict rules tying them to it depth patronage and brutal punishments for attempting to flee the black plague had the opposite socio-economic outcome in russia compared to europe while in europe lords started competing for peasants by paying them wages the russian princes used the plague to tie lands into enormous statues and fiefdoms under a smaller number of lords creating an enormous peasantry working the lands of an extremely small aristocracy when nomads conquered a settled people they usually turned into who they conquered but here in a weird twist the conquered russians almost became mongols they were unshackled from any and all political accountability to their peasantry and could rule like the conquerors whom they served but because the russian princes merely served the mongols and were not mongols themselves they didn't adopt the tribal customs and nomadic lifestyle of them the power structure of the russian princely states daba became heavily centralized within the power of a singular ruler figure of a state the russian princes even adopted the warfare tactics of their conquerors rather than build stone castles as the rest of europe did they built wooden fortresses and recruited large cavalry armies when they were invaded they burnt the wooden castles down ransacked and burnt the fields of their own land and then harassed invaders from horseback while those invaders were forced to march through and suffer the vastness of russia the russians also missed out on a key development in european political development at the time where a move away from decentralized feudalism into centralized absolutist kingdoms took place creating the first large and powerful centralized european states over the 250 years of mongol rule with the shift from kiev and novgorod to central russia an economic development away from commerce and artisans to a peasant economy the most powerful russian princely state to emerge was the duchy of moscow which would eventually be the one to rise up in rebellion and kicked the mongols out to create a new russian state centered around moscow but with the mongols gone the newly independent russia kept the socio-economic and political structures that had developed under mongol rule and strengthened them absolutism is a system of governments in which all political power lies within one singular ruler beginning in the 1500s many a european monarchy embarked on efforts to construct absolutist states most famously france it is during this time that the foundations of the modern nation state were laid but the absolutism project in general was rather unsuccessful the french monarchs drove the state into bankruptcy and ended up selling government offices and thereby state power to the highest bidders the steward dynasty attempts to build absolutism in britain ended with their expulsion throughout europe urban populations lower gentry and merchants had made the establishment of the all-powerful state difficult but the conditions found in russia allowed the russian czars to create a near perfect absolutism there are three main factors that led to this first russian society of the mongol rule consisted of a monarch the army the monarch paid with land an aristocracy of boyas and a peasantry a key difference to other parts of europe was that the army was not incorporated within the aristocratic class the army had been directly recruited by the muscovite state and was dependent upon that state for its status and pay the state and thereby the monarch could use the army without constraints by any aristocrats even against those aristocrats second russia didn't experience the regionalized feudal social structures that the rest of europe did in fact there is debate among historians if russia experienced medieval feudalism at all medieval feudalism was a social system in which a peasantry submitted to a military lord and his castle in exchange for protection in russia though the regionalized structure of aristocracy didn't exist there were no castles offering protection in these vast lands and military power lay with the state the new moscowite state also introduced the mesti nestor a system of hierarchies amongst lesser nobles that pitted them up against each other in competition for the favor of the monarch in europe the lower aristocracy had an important role in the creation of parliamentary structures by forming a political bloc competing with the king for concessions privileges rights and powers in russia all power remained with the monarch and the aristocracy was set up to compete with each other for the favor of the monarch third law developed differently in russia to the rest of europe one of the key factors in the development of law in europe had been the catholic church it established almost state-like structures that competed with monarchs for authority creating standards for accountability that evolved into written codes of law kings of europe could not just do as they pleased to their subjects or their aristocracy violating the standards set by the catholic church resulted in harsh condemnation and punishment by the church medieval feudalism was not a mere exploitative social framework it was a religious social order under which systems of accountability were created by religion that limited the power of the state the russian church was derived from the byzantines and the eastern orthodox church was cesio papist meaning that the head of the church was appointed by the monarch the christian church as it came to develop in russia was an institution subservient to the state and continued to be throughout history be it to kings emperors communist party bosses or today's oligarchs the completion of the russian absolutist state occurred in the late 1500s and the tsar ivan iv he established a military district with absolute powers to himself called the oprishnina and inflicted a decade-long reign of terror upon the country ivan had asked the aristocracy permission for this undertaking and they had approved which goes to show how little the russian aristocracy could do or even wanted to do to limit the power of the monarch even though ivan's reign of terror would come at an enormous cost to them of the many aristocratic families of russia only nine survived this reign of terror this state structure of absolute unrestricted power within the monarch continued after ivan including with the establishment of the new romanov dynasty in 1613 and it is not difficult to see it continuing throughout the history of modern russia you can see the slavish capitulation of the russian aristocracy to ivan's reign of terror almost reflected in the capitulation of the soviet politburo to stalin's reign of terror and you can browse through the list of murdered russian journalists yourself to see that in many ways russia remains a country in which state power puts the ruling man above the law and removes them from any accountability to the law or the wider citizenry a mistake often made though is to assume that these developments were unavoidable and somehow part of some inner logic of russian culture itself the city of novgorod continued to prosper and was never conquered by the mongols its institutions developed to have more in common with those of european city-states it was the gateway for european goods into russia and russian goods into europe which made it incredibly rich the prince of novgorod may have commanded an army but he was accountable to the vetera a parliament of the city that all three men of the city voted for and which picked a mayor from the city aristocracy the vets and the mayor had control over taxation laws and foreign policy it even had the power to remove the prince of novgorod from power to replace him with another there was a different russian political development which evolved to have checks and balances as well as state accountability and rule of law but that development ended when ivan iii conquered novgorod had its leaders executed and its merchants and aristocrats deported to the deep plains of central russia one can only imagine what more than russia would look like if the free city of novgorod had been its founding structure instead of the zardom of moscow the only other russian representative body was the zemsky zaboor a council of aristocrats that gathered to do little more but approve the line of succession to the throne and the proof of the tsar's wars until peter the great even took those powers away from it meanwhile in the rest of europe parliamentary assemblies which in some cases were as old as the middle ages started gaining more and more power from monarchs establishing parliamentary political institutions and traditions throughout europe in russia there was no parliamentary institution until the establishment of the duma in 1906 which had its powers taken from it by the tsar again only a few years later by the 1700s the russian state was far more centralized than any of its european counterparts but far more underdeveloped in economy and bureaucracy there were no regional political structures tied in accountability to a central state instead rule of local provinces was handed out by the tsar in so-called carmelini which means feedings and the name kinda gives away the predatory nature of the political institution itself local rulers had no accountability to law either and no restraints on how much they could exploit the office for personal gain as long as they managed to appease the centralized government when you look closer at the previously mentioned list of murdered russian journalists you will notice how most are regional reporters in small towns who were investigating the corruption of a local police department or mayor what's more is that this practice of regional corruption remained in place despite being reformed by peter the great who instituted a standardized system of regionalized government which recruited the aristocracy as local servants to the state a reason for this may be found in that the new system rewarded successful local governors with tax exemptions thereby incentivizing the aristocracy to squeeze the peasantry even harder in service of the state and themselves a legacy of peter the great's reforms was that the tax burden of the state was increasingly placed upon the russian peasantry while the aristocracy were increasingly exempt in modern russia you will find an enormous contrast between the wealth of the oligarchs and your average russian pensioner whose pension is barely enough to sustain him in many ways it has been a common thread throughout russian history since the 1700s that the burden of securing the state and the ambitions of wealth of its ruler have been dumped upon the russian peasantry from the trenches to the gulags to today's pension and social security cuts an additional aspect of peter the great's reforms were the introduction of severe punishments for serfs who left their lands but also for regional rulers and aristocrats who granted more freedoms to serve some peasants and thereby incited competition with other regional rulers this bound the rulers of russia on a regional level even closer together to cooperate in their exploitative economic structure and tied them deeper to the centralized state everyone was now tied together in this and nobody could take the risk of stepping out of line centuries later those communist party members who may have disagreed with the communist politburo on something found themselves shot and today those oligarchs who step out of line with the central government find themselves dispossessed jailed or murdered russian absolutism was founded on an alliance between the central ruler of the state and the rulers of the various subdivisions of the state to enrich themselves at the expense of everyone else it is why russia never had a bourgeoisie a small business middlestand commercial trader class or any resemblance of equality before the law and public accountability as the historian john delon described it the russian government more than any other was a government of men and not of laws and that aspect of russian absolutism is what makes it so unique to show why we can compare russia to another absolutist state china which also underwent a century-long political development that resulted in a powerful centralized state institution with absolute power and a lack of public accountability but you will find a very big difference between the two chinese absolutism was built on a foundation of meritocracy in competition with patrimonialism chinese rulers continuously found themselves in positions of having to abide by some standards of accountability to state bureaucracy china has just as russia gone through periods of incredible abuse of power from the empress wu to the great leap forward to the cultural revolution but all these periods resulted in reshuffling and restructuring of the political leadership to not repeat mistakes mao zedong had to step down from the politburo after his great leap forward caused the great chinese famine and only regained political power through a populist coup with the cultural revolution and that populism was something the chinese state consequently cracked down upon after mao's death just as in russia the state is absolute in china if you wish to protest against a decision by the state or change the course of the state you have to go through the institutions of the state and just as in russia you will find corruption and abuse of power in china such as local governments that cover up the selling of poisonous baby formula but the difference in the political structure becomes very clear when you compare abuse of power and corruption in china the further you go up in ranks of government the less corrupt state officials become as a result of the meritocratic state structures in russia the further you go up in the ranks of government the more corrupt state officials become as there are no systems of accountability the only measure and restraint is that you can't be corrupt enough as a local russian politician to start bothering and annoying your superior politician which is why the government becomes more corrupt the higher the office of the state is the russian state is a system of progressively corrupting power in the next video we will be comparing china and india more specifically the millennial long developments in politics and society that created such different and even opposing state structures subscribe if you wish to see it and don't forget to like this video and leave a comment if you enjoyed it and to share it around on social media ways in which you can support this channel are also listed in the description i hope to see you all next time
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Channel: Kraut
Views: 922,364
Rating: undefined out of 5
Keywords: Kraut, Countryball, Polandball, Documentary, History, Russian, Moscow, Mongols, Mongolian, Orthodox, conquest, Empire, Tzar, Tsar, Monarchy, Medieval, Peter the Great, Duma, Novgorod, Republic, Soviet, Revolution, Gulag, Ukraine, Kiev, Dictator, Putin, Dictatorship, Democracy, absolutism, corruption, corrupt, Russia, Feudalism, Lord, Peasant, Why nations Fail, church, economy, economics, insitutions, politics
Id: f8ZqBLcIvw0
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 22min 15sec (1335 seconds)
Published: Fri Aug 20 2021
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