How Vodka Shaped The Course Of Muscovite History, "water of life" as they call it, Putins Vodka

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some truth and facts about always drunk Finnic - Tatar part empire of khan juchi

"n 1223, when a Mongol and Tartar expeditionary force annihilated a Russian army multiple times their size, they realized it was partly because the Muscovite had charged the battlefield drunk. The surprising ways in which the "water of life" has helped determine Russia's religious, political, and economic fate for hundreds of years.

It’s Easier To Rule If All Of Your Opposition Is Drunk

The Stalinist Drunkards In Power, And The Cracks In The Iron Curtain

Vladimir Putin’s Vodka Politics And Russia’s Future
Putin On Tv

In 1994, three years after Gorbachev’s fall from power, Russia lost 55,000 people to alcohol and male life expectancy cratered at 57.6.

Furthermore, health studies found that Russia’s vodka problem caused more than half of all premature deaths in the 1990s. Even today, Russians have a one-in-four chance of dying from an alcohol-related issue.

All of this has contributed to a demographic crisis that current Russian President Vladimir Putin calls the “the most acute problem facing our country today.”

In response, Putin introduced alcohol policy reforms in 2006 that imposed tighter regulations on the production and sale of alcohol. While changing tastes and economic fluctuations may have also had a major hand in lowering the Russians’ appreciation for vodka, Putin’s regulations may have worked: Vodka consumption fell by a third and lowered the risk of death before 55 as well.

David Zaridze, of the Russian Cancer Research Center in Moscow, told Reuters that, “The significant decline in Russian mortality rates following the introduction of moderate alcohol controls in 2006 demonstrates the reversibility [of the public health problem].”

He went on to add that although the relationship between vodka and deaths still constituted a “health crisis” for Russia, “people who drink spirits in hazardous ways greatly reduce their risk of premature death as soon as they stop.”

In 2009, Putin built on his 2006 measures by outlining a dramatic plan to halve alcohol consumption within the ensuing decade.

Still, with continued global sanctions and plummeting oil revenues, the Russian economy could see a short-term boost if it made another push for vodka sales. But who knows, perhaps a Trump presidency could make it such that Putin doesn’t need to rely on vodka addiction to make Russia great again."

How Vodka Has Shaped The Course Of Russian History

 
some truth and facts about always drunk Finnic - Tatar part empire of khan juchi

"n 1223, when a Mongol and Tartar expeditionary force annihilated a Russian army multiple times their size, they realized it was partly because the Muscovite had charged the battlefield drunk. The surprising ways in which the "water of life" has helped determine Russia's religious, political, and economic fate for hundreds of years.

It’s Easier To Rule If All Of Your Opposition Is Drunk

The Stalinist Drunkards In Power, And The Cracks In The Iron Curtain

Vladimir Putin’s Vodka Politics And Russia’s Future
Putin On Tv

In 1994, three years after Gorbachev’s fall from power, Russia lost 55,000 people to alcohol and male life expectancy cratered at 57.6.

Furthermore, health studies found that Russia’s vodka problem caused more than half of all premature deaths in the 1990s. Even today, Russians have a one-in-four chance of dying from an alcohol-related issue.

All of this has contributed to a demographic crisis that current Russian President Vladimir Putin calls the “the most acute problem facing our country today.”

In response, Putin introduced alcohol policy reforms in 2006 that imposed tighter regulations on the production and sale of alcohol. While changing tastes and economic fluctuations may have also had a major hand in lowering the Russians’ appreciation for vodka, Putin’s regulations may have worked: Vodka consumption fell by a third and lowered the risk of death before 55 as well.

David Zaridze, of the Russian Cancer Research Center in Moscow, told Reuters that, “The significant decline in Russian mortality rates following the introduction of moderate alcohol controls in 2006 demonstrates the reversibility [of the public health problem].”

He went on to add that although the relationship between vodka and deaths still constituted a “health crisis” for Russia, “people who drink spirits in hazardous ways greatly reduce their risk of premature death as soon as they stop.”

In 2009, Putin built on his 2006 measures by outlining a dramatic plan to halve alcohol consumption within the ensuing decade.

Still, with continued global sanctions and plummeting oil revenues, the Russian economy could see a short-term boost if it made another push for vodka sales. But who knows, perhaps a Trump presidency could make it such that Putin doesn’t need to rely on vodka addiction to make Russia great again."

How Vodka Has Shaped The Course Of Russian History


The Russian military has a long history of drunkenness. During WWII many Russian troops lacked the tools needed to fight, but they always had vodka.

Apparently, it’s still true today.
Russian sailor, possibly inebriated, smashes cargo ship into South Korean bridge
 
Good work, Putin.
yes , putler and you won
images


Vk39Fh-dTz8.jpg
 

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