His (((advisors))) were the ones that fed him terrible information which led to his ruin.
>>3238126
> Having bad advisors is now considered "did nothing wrong."
Jesus fuck, even Carlos II is less retarded than this Victorian cunt-disgrace in that regard.
>>3238126
The opposite is true. His advisors tended to beg him not to do stupid shit and he'd do it anyway, usually because Rasputin and the Tsarina wanted time alone.
>>3238126
>Believed some mystic who was cucking him
>His poor handlings of wars lead to two revolutions against him in 1917 and one in 1905
He was idiot whichever you swing it
>>3238156
>pic
Which manga is this?
>>3238156
The biggest problem with Rasputin was that he was originally from a very low-peasant class, yet was a staunch royalist who supported the monarchy 100%. This may have given the Romanovs a false impression that the entire peasantry was staunchly in favor of their monarchy, which really wasn't true, as they so tragically learned after it was already far too late.
>>3238156
Rasputin wasn't cucking him; the Okhrana investigated that and found nothing. And he didn't believe in Rasputin, but his wife did, and he knew that if he banished him, and Alexei died, that his wife would thing that he was willing to murder his son to avoid rumors.
http://novaonline.nvcc.edu/eli/evans/his242/documents/Durnovo.pdf
>A struggle between Russia and Germany is profoundly undesirable for both sides, as it amounts to a weakening of the Monarchist principle.
>Russia will be flung into hopeless anarchy, the issue of which will be hard to forsee
>Germany, in case of defeat, is destined to suffer social upheavals no less than those of Russia
What fucking terrible advice, OP.
>>3238192
It's really weird Russo Japanese war propaganda, I guess Tsar Nick is being haunted by the soldiers he sent to die (and also by the equipment?). It barely even looks like Nick.