
Image courtesy of Léonard Gianadda, a Swiss photograher who visited Moscow in 1957.
This is probably one of the lengthiest and most controversial topics to attempt, yet it is very important for our blog to answer — or at least to raise this question. If you have been following us for a little while, you would know that by mid 1980s the atmosphere in Russia was tense. The miracle of doing well in the WWII had been wearing out. The total deficit of everything and the black markets did not contribute to keeping the morale up. The Chernobyl disaster as well as war action in Afghanistan had drained the country both financially and psychologically. The public resentment was growing: the common joke was that you could find truth anywhere except in Pravda and the news anywhere except in Izvestia. (both are the Russian newspapers, the first one literally meaning truth and the latter one – news). For years the govermnent had been running in the red but it did not catch up with them till late 1980s – and it was too little too late for a change.
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