The fact that this plaque is left in this state is depressing.
Damn.
I remember a story from my grandparents’ relatives who came from Romania (they had to wait several years just for permission to enter URSS). Poor people had to be forced just to eat more than they were used to back in Romania. They were quietly eating. My grandparents tried to get at least some information out of them, but it was no use. They didn’t want to say anything (and probably weren’t allowed) about the situation in Romania. That was the last time they were seeing each other.
Screw Ceaușescu! Screw communism!
Jos Tiranul
I remember watching this on TV when I was 12 years old. I salute the courage and determination of the Romanian people to have rid themselves of these two parasites.
Kim Jong-Un is sweating every 24th of December.
This is inspirational in the struggle against lockdowns and QR passports. For freedom.
Romanian sounds and looks so strange to me, almost like an obscure Italian dialect
And yet here we are, almost 2022 and so many people in the west think communism is cool and want to reinstate it.
I felt good they shot this murderer and his wife like a rabid dogs. Then I felt ashamed nothing like this happened in Bulgaria, yet the bodyguard and ear masseuse of the former commie head of state was elected premier.
A more accurate an poignant translation would be “Here death has been given for freedom”, due to Romanian being a pro-drop language, (the pronouns or names or objects are implied by the verb conjugations so you can just omit them) there isn’t the word “people” in there because it’s implied
I remeber when he fell.
Ceaușescu may be dead, but his golden bathroom lives on
14 comments
And this started the road back to normality. Long lasting one but we should never forget the sacrifices and the hardships of extreme communism
https://youtu.be/AP07FcUYSrA
https://youtu.be/qe08_sQ0GMM
https://youtu.be/IH3vWOxoU2E
The fact that this plaque is left in this state is depressing.
Damn.
I remember a story from my grandparents’ relatives who came from Romania (they had to wait several years just for permission to enter URSS). Poor people had to be forced just to eat more than they were used to back in Romania. They were quietly eating. My grandparents tried to get at least some information out of them, but it was no use. They didn’t want to say anything (and probably weren’t allowed) about the situation in Romania. That was the last time they were seeing each other.
Screw Ceaușescu! Screw communism!
Jos Tiranul
I remember watching this on TV when I was 12 years old. I salute the courage and determination of the Romanian people to have rid themselves of these two parasites.
Kim Jong-Un is sweating every 24th of December.
This is inspirational in the struggle against lockdowns and QR passports. For freedom.
Romanian sounds and looks so strange to me, almost like an obscure Italian dialect
And yet here we are, almost 2022 and so many people in the west think communism is cool and want to reinstate it.
I felt good they shot this murderer and his wife like a rabid dogs. Then I felt ashamed nothing like this happened in Bulgaria, yet the bodyguard and ear masseuse of the former commie head of state was elected premier.
A more accurate an poignant translation would be “Here death has been given for freedom”, due to Romanian being a pro-drop language, (the pronouns or names or objects are implied by the verb conjugations so you can just omit them) there isn’t the word “people” in there because it’s implied
I remeber when he fell.
Ceaușescu may be dead, but his golden bathroom lives on