Book a Demo!
CoCalc Logo Icon
StoreFeaturesDocsShareSupportNewsAboutPoliciesSign UpSign In
Download
29550 views
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
well you got a topic
14
15
16
well you know there's uh the uh the the the one that's burning in everybody's uh
17
in everybody's mind the uh break up of the Soviet Union and it's a
18
19
20
yeah i think i i think that's the obvious one in't it
21
22
23
ah it's it's it's effects here at home
24
i mean it's gonna have effects all over the world and uh
25
course you know i i expect uh in the next few days when uh the president gives his uh State of the Union address
26
he's got to have to uh
27
pull some uh
28
real drastic changes in what he's doing to to promote some
29
some movement and enthusiasm behind his reelection race
30
31
32
yeah well it it's truly amazing to um see how rapidly um uh the Soviet Union fell apart um uh
33
34
35
yeah
36
37
38
and it makes me wonder i'm not saying that i'm uh i'm certainly not a hawk necessarily
39
but it makes me wonder i've thought about this if the idea of uh uh the the arms race while granted it has practically practically bankrupted this country
40
uh perhaps it did bankrupt uh Russia and was you know as a as a way of making a a a political change was certainly preferable to a war
41
42
43
yeah well they they they focused all of their economic capacity on on on their military
44
45
46
right
47
48
49
i mean if they had focused the same capacity in their uh commercial stuff they would've been a lot better off as a society probably uh
50
51
52
yeah with the right kind of the Japanese for example
53
54
55
yes like the Japanese right
56
57
58
yeah
59
well
60
61
62
and
63
64
65
i don't know what we've we've seen so many changes just in the past five years uh it makes me think it reminds me of that book uh Future Shock
66
67
68
um-hum
69
70
71
where the the future is coming at us uh at such an accelerated pace day after day
72
that only the most adaptable are gonna be able to uh survive and and keep from just being overrun by the changes
73
74
75
well uh you know five five years ago could you have have imagined in your in your your wildest dreams that something as as a change as rapid as this would've occurred
76
77
78
oh no no
79
80
81
it's just you know it it's almost unthinkable but it it is hey in a i i still wonder whether you know that it's going to be stable and then what's going to happen there
82
83
84
it really is
85
well and that's just it i i have some
86
i have doubts that uh
87
that it can be ah stable number one you've got uh you know you see on the news
88
the the stories the stories and the and the sights of these these the Soviet people these Russian people that are standing in line
89
uh for hours on end and have for you know bare shelves at in these hugely you know uh higher prices that they have to pay now that that government controls are off
90
91
92
but i don't think the shelves is bare anymore
93
94
95
oh are they are they back are they have they got some um
96
97
98
i think there's now you know i think all the time there were goods
99
to to be distributed that were being held off
100
101
102
but they're on the black market
103
yeah
104
105
106
and uh
107
you know i i i think that uh
108
there's still but but you know the the people don't have a lot of money to pay for them there there's a tremendous uh
109
gap in their ability to to supply themselves uh uh that could create a tremendous amount of political stability instability in fact they said tonight on the on the radio uh that
110
111
112
yeah
113
114
115
uh
116
some some leader in in in of of the parliament in in Russia is calling for Yeltsin to essentially throw out all of his ministers and replace them
117
118
119
120
121
hm
122
123
124
because of this this tremendous supply demand uh type gap that they have there
125
126
127
yeah
128
129
130
uh
131
i don't know it it's it's
132
it's hard to imagine managing such a rapid change
133
134
135
yeah and i don't i don't that's just it it's funny it's inconceivable inconceivable to me to think that anyone or any entity i don't care
136
what it is could actually manage i mean it would it's kind of like damage control and maybe putting out the biggest fires but i don't think that it's really a manageable uh of set of circumstances
137
138
139
well and and i think that you know we we stand uh
140
in in in the possibility of of in of of being confronted with a similar kind of thing here uh everybody is is calling for you know this this this this
141
uh peace dividend and
142
it the with with an election year coming up there's the uh that there's the the
143
the possibility of everybody proposing something radical to to
144
appeal to the voters to to to get elected but you know how how rapidly can they change and how rapid can they move
145
146
147
well as far as i'm concerned i can change pretty doggone rapidly and i'm all for something radical because i think it's gonna take something radical to turn this country around um
148
149
150
151