The Soviet Union didn't even last a hundred years yet its Impact was profound. However, will its legacy live on through the ages? Will its impact continue on?
>>3239499
Hard to say just yet. It could vary from
>A failed experiment in communism that's relegated to relative obscurity as "just" a competing world power in the aftermath of WW2
to
>An incredibly significant short-lived state who set the groundwork for much longer-lived significant events (like the Qin or Sui dynasties in China)
>>3239529
I can see them being Mongols 2.0
Showed up, ruined everything, and then went to the big gulag in the sky.
>>3239499
SSSR secured a solid, but rather uncomfortable, position for Russia and destroyed any hope for Marxists.
>However, will its legacy live on through the ages?
Depends on Putin, it wasn't decided yet.
>>3239536
Putin hate the Soviet Union, or at least think it's a strai on russian history
>>3239578
Not exactly. He appreciates the USSR, not as a symbol of an ideology, but as a period in history when Russian power was at its peak. That's a common feeling among russians, among every people on the planet I would say. The ideas are forgotten, the legacy remains.