Yuri Loza told how he would have lived well without the USSR and the Iron Curtain
Musician Yuri Loza criticized the Soviet government and the USSR in response to a message from one of his subscribers. He said that the performer “would have played in bast shoes in taverns if not for the Bolsheviks,” the PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
About this he wrote on his page on Facebook.
“There would be no Iron Curtain, and, taking into account the raw material capabilities, the intellectual potential of the people and the pre-revolutionary economic growth rates, by the time I was born (1954 - Ed.), the country would have been developed, rich and civilized,” - Loza believes.
He also talked about the history of his family: both of the musician’s grandfathers, according to the singer, were shot.
“My father, even if he had been in the same accident, would not have become disabled, because the paid attending physician would have fought for his leg and would not have cut it off just in case, as the representative of the vaunted free medicine did,” noted executor. He also complained that his father was unable to achieve success in his career due to the stigma of being “the son of an enemy of the people.” The musician’s mother, according to him, fell under a fabricated case.
Yuri Loza also made a number of assumptions regarding his fate. He stated that if it were not for the USSR and the Soviet regime, he would have remained a musician, but “he would have received not 12 rubles from a concert, but a significant part of the fees.” At the same time, he believes that in the current situation he would be able to earn a significant amount of money, since copyrights would be better protected.
“I would provide for my descendants up to the fifth generation and look to the future with confidence,” Loza assures.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.