#Sovcit

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#Sovcit Reel by @crimenentertainment - Excluded from leadership, Soviet Jews turned to the black market. Clandestine skills and corruption tactics emerged under KGB surveillance. A hidden h
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CR
@crimenentertainment
Excluded from leadership, Soviet Jews turned to the black market. Clandestine skills and corruption tactics emerged under KGB surveillance. A hidden history unfolds. #SovietHistory #BlackMarket #KGB #UndergroundEconomy #HiddenHistory #SovietJews #ClandestineOps #HistoryReels
#Sovcit Reel by @travelwithscram - They called it "The Gunslinger's Gait."

During his time in the Soviet intelligence agency KGB, officers were trained to keep their dominant hand clos
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@travelwithscram
They called it “The Gunslinger’s Gait.” During his time in the Soviet intelligence agency KGB, officers were trained to keep their dominant hand close to the body so they could quickly draw a concealed weapon. After years of training, the habit stayed with him even decades later. . . . . . #geopolitics #vladmirputin #soviet #ussr #fyp
#Sovcit Reel by @explaininggeopolitics - Ever wonder how dictators stay in power amidst constant threats? Joseph Stalin famously used body doubles to avoid assassination and manage his public
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@explaininggeopolitics
Ever wonder how dictators stay in power amidst constant threats? Joseph Stalin famously used body doubles to avoid assassination and manage his public appearances. It wasn’t just about safety; it was about maintaining an image of invincibility and control, a common tactic for leaders with absolute power. This deep paranoia shaped the Soviet regime and its geopolitics. Follow @explaininggeopolitics for more insights you won’t hear anywhere else.
#Sovcit Reel by @fuck_jewish - They called it "The Gunslinger's Gait."

During his time in the Soviet intelligence agency KGB, officers were trained to keep their dominant hand clos
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@fuck_jewish
They called it "The Gunslinger's Gait." During his time in the Soviet intelligence agency KGB, officers were trained to keep their dominant hand close to the body so they could quickly draw a concealed weapon. After years of training, the habit stayed with him even decades later. #geopolitics #vladmirputin #soviet #ussr #fyp
#Sovcit Reel by @tales.shadowed - This Soviet spy saved the world but paid the ultimate price #history #spy #coldwar #nuc...
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@tales.shadowed
This Soviet spy saved the world but paid the ultimate price #history #spy #coldwar #nuc...
#Sovcit Reel by @usahistorylane - ☢️ The Man Who Prevented Nuclear War: Stanislav Petrov's Courageous Decision (1983) 🌍

On September 26, 1983, Soviet military officer Stanislav Petro
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@usahistorylane
☢️ The Man Who Prevented Nuclear War: Stanislav Petrov’s Courageous Decision (1983) 🌍 On September 26, 1983, Soviet military officer Stanislav Petrov made a decision that may have saved the world from a nuclear disaster. While on duty at a secret Soviet early-warning facility in Serpukhov‑15, near Moscow, Russia 🇷🇺, Petrov received an alarming computer alert showing that the United States 🇺🇸 had launched nuclear missiles toward the Soviet Union. 🚀⚠️ According to military protocol, he was expected to immediately report the warning, which could have triggered a devastating nuclear retaliation. But Petrov trusted his judgment over the machines. He reasoned that a real nuclear attack would involve hundreds of missiles, not just five. 🤔💭 Choosing caution, he reported it as a false alarm instead of an attack. Later, it was discovered that the satellite system had mistaken sunlight reflecting off clouds for missile launches. 🌤️ This calm decision prevented what could have become a global nuclear catastrophe. Ironically, instead of being celebrated, Petrov was initially reprimanded, and his story remained secret for years. He was later honored globally and featured in the documentary The Man Who Saved the World 🎬. He passed away in 2017, remembered as a quiet hero of the Cold War. 🕊️ 💭 Do you think you would have trusted your instincts in such a life-or-death moment? 🤔🌍 Share your thoughts below! ⬇️ 🔥 Follow for more unbelievable true stories that changed world history! 📚✨ #history #coldwar #worldhistory #usahistorylane
#Sovcit Reel by @footnotes2marx - "From the end of the seventies of the [nineteenth] century, there can be observed in all countries distinguished by modern development a turn from fre
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@footnotes2marx
“From the end of the seventies of the [nineteenth] century, there can be observed in all countries distinguished by modern development a turn from free trade to a tariff system. The latter, rapidly evolving from a system supposed to educate industry into a system safeguarding the cartels, finally becomes the high protectionism of our days. […] the United States, that classical country of trusts and of the modern tariff policy, the characteristic features of protectionism are most salient. An increase of import duties began in 1883 in connection with the growth of trusts, and reached 40 percent of the value of the imported goods; in 1873-74, the general duties were 38 percent; in 1887, 47.11 percent; in 1880 (the McKinley Bill) we had a further increase of the tariff (91 percent on woolen goods, and even as much as 150 percent [according to value] on fine grades of woolens, 40-80 percent on metals, etc.); there follow later the Dingley Bill (1897), and the Payne Tariff of 1909, which is one of the striking expressions of high protectionist tendencies.” - Nikolai Bukharin; Imperialism and World Economy (quoted from Imperialism and War: Classic Writings by V. I. Lenin and Nikolai Bukharin (p. 216)) #marxism #marxist #imperialism #tariffs #tariff
#Sovcit Reel by @thetalaslab - The KGB's Secret Gamble: Training K•llers with the Power of the Mind.

During the Cold War, both superpowers were haunted by the same terrifying quest
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@thetalaslab
The KGB’s Secret Gamble: Training K•llers with the Power of the Mind. During the Cold War, both superpowers were haunted by the same terrifying question — could the human mind be weaponized? For the Soviet KGB, the answer was worth billions of rubles and decades of secret research to find out. According to former KGB General Boris Ratnikov, the regime enlisted individuals with claimed supernatural powers to serve the Soviet cause. “Almost all the people with supernatural powers were controlled by the KGB,” Ratnikov stated. “You can’t even imagine the war of brains that unfolded.”  The KGB’s psychotronic program aimed to exploit psychic abilities for military and intelligence goals — exploring telepathy, remote influence, and mind control from classified facilities, including a secret Siberian laboratory known as “Special Department No. 8.”  Hypnosis was a centerpiece of these efforts. Soviet researchers explored sensory deprivation, hypnosis, and drugs as methods to alter perception and control human thought, often without the knowledge or consent of subjects.  The ultimate ambition was chilling — operatives conditioned to carry out missions and eliminate targets with no conscious memory of why or how. A classified 1972 report concluded the Soviet Union was pouring money into ESP and psychokinesis research for espionage purposes. Fearing a “psychic gap,” the CIA launched its own parallel program.  Army and Air Force journals soon warned of a “new mental battlefield” of “psychic warfare.”  What made the program most insidious was its deliberate blurring of science and deception. Much of what leaked West may have been disinformation — designed to drain American resources down paranormal rabbit holes. Whether the KGB’s hypnosis experiments produced real assassins or only well-funded myths, the psychological war they ignited was entirely, disturbingly real.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ 👉 @thetalaslab
#Sovcit Reel by @thetalaslab - The KGB's Secret Gamble: Training K•llers with the Power of the Mind.

During the Cold War, both superpowers were haunted by the same terrifying quest
3.8K
TH
@thetalaslab
The KGB’s Secret Gamble: Training K•llers with the Power of the Mind. During the Cold War, both superpowers were haunted by the same terrifying question — could the human mind be weaponized? For the Soviet KGB, the answer was worth billions of rubles and decades of secret research to find out. According to former KGB General Boris Ratnikov, the regime enlisted individuals with claimed supernatural powers to serve the Soviet cause. “Almost all the people with supernatural powers were controlled by the KGB,” Ratnikov stated. “You can’t even imagine the war of brains that unfolded.”  The KGB’s psychotronic program aimed to exploit psychic abilities for military and intelligence goals — exploring telepathy, remote influence, and mind control from classified facilities, including a secret Siberian laboratory known as “Special Department No. 8.”  Hypnosis was a centerpiece of these efforts. Soviet researchers explored sensory deprivation, hypnosis, and drugs as methods to alter perception and control human thought, often without the knowledge or consent of subjects.  The ultimate ambition was chilling — operatives conditioned to carry out missions and eliminate targets with no conscious memory of why or how. A classified 1972 report concluded the Soviet Union was pouring money into ESP and psychokinesis research for espionage purposes. Fearing a “psychic gap,” the CIA launched its own parallel program.  Army and Air Force journals soon warned of a “new mental battlefield” of “psychic warfare.”  What made the program most insidious was its deliberate blurring of science and deception. Much of what leaked West may have been disinformation — designed to drain American resources down paranormal rabbit holes. Whether the KGB’s hypnosis experiments produced real assassins or only well-funded myths, the psychological war they ignited was entirely, disturbingly real.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ 👉 @thetalaslab
#Sovcit Reel by @bankingvault - A man once saved the world… by doing nothing.
Not exaggeration.

Literally nothing.

His name was Stanislav Petrov, and in 1983 he was on duty inside
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@bankingvault
A man once saved the world… by doing nothing. Not exaggeration. Literally nothing. His name was Stanislav Petrov, and in 1983 he was on duty inside a Soviet early-warning bunker, monitoring systems designed to detect a nuclear attack from the United States. Then the alarm went off. The system reported that multiple US missiles had been launched and were heading toward the Soviet Union. This was the exact scenario the Cold War had been preparing for — the moment where retaliation decisions had to be made in minutes. Protocol was clear. Report it immediately. Escalate. Prepare for nuclear response. Petrov didn’t. He paused. And that pause is what matters. He looked at the data and thought something felt wrong. The system was new. The number of missiles detected was small — not what you’d expect from a full-scale US strike. There were inconsistencies. But he had no confirmation. No time. No backup. Just instinct. So instead of reporting a confirmed attack, he told his superiors it was a false alarm. He was gambling. If he was wrong, he had just delayed the Soviet response to a nuclear strike. If he was right, he had just prevented one. He was right. It turned out the system had mistaken sunlight reflecting off clouds for missile launches. A technical flaw. A glitch. But in that moment, nobody knew that. That is what makes the story hit. We imagine world-changing decisions being made in grand rooms, by powerful leaders, with full information. In reality, one of the most important decisions in modern history came down to a single officer, in a quiet room, choosing not to trust a machine. No speech. No recognition at the time. Just hesitation. And sometimes… that’s all it takes to stop everything from ending.

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