>"We will bury you!"
What did he mean by this?
>>475250
It's well documented he really said we will outlast you.
>>475250
"What the bourgeoisie therefore produces, above all, are its own grave-diggers. Its fall and the victory of the proletariat are equally inevitable."
- The Communist Manifesto
it means he's gonna fuck ur ass while u sleep and slice ur throat with that sickle then smash ur balls with the hammer everything while u sleep and ur blood will be as red as the soviet flag u fukin foggottoti
>>475256
https://translate.google.com/#ru/en/%D0%B7%D0%B0%D0%BA%D0%BE%D0%BF%D0%B0%D0%B5%D0%BC
When Yamato said "we would have to march into Washington and dictate the terms of peace in the White House", he was saying the US would never end the war even with set backs in the Pacific. He was an experienced rational general trying to deal with the fanatical politicians back in Japan who had a warped view of the real world.
This isn't the case here. Khrushchev was one of those fanatical politician types. He literally believed that the Soviet Union would one day annex the US and hoped that he could be the one to initiate it.
>>475259
hear, hear
>>475250
How can you say you are interested in history if you don't undertand a simple allusion to one of the most known works of Western literature ever produced?
>>475324
>When Yamato said
Yamato was the flagship, Yamamoto was the admiral desu senpai
>>475324
>he drank the kool aid
The Soviet mindset was always defensive, which is why expansion was limited to the near abroad. Anything further was part of the game of great power chess played by the US(A) and US (SR).
Kruschev thought Soviet Socialism would live long enough to see the natural demise of capitalism, hence its burial.
Khrushchev was the most flamboyant Soviet Premier and also the best one. It's a shame the hardliners threw him out, he could have done great things for the USSR during the 1960s and 1970s.
>>475345
He managed to disassemble Stalin's fearful and inefficent beauracracy and in the end, he felt pleased at this. His contributions probably led to the Soviets staying in the game longer than they did.
To bad he, just like everyone else, got a less than comfortable retirement.
>>475250
He meant "we will leave you in the dust on the roadside as we go past you (as in become better than you, more successful etc.)".
>>475336
the soviet mindset was to avoid nuclear war with the US, that is why they attempted to expand through proxy wars in the undeveloped world
>>475250
>link very related: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wHylQRVN2Qs
>>475335
thx senpai
>>475250
and here we see the man who killed leftism
>>475819
How? That's the New Left you are thinking of, famalam.