⏳ Historical Nicolae Ceaușescu - The Self-Titled "Genius of the Carpathians". Went to North Korea Once and Decided to Copy it Verbatim. Forced Scientists to Credit his Wife in Their Research Papers. Made Hunting Practically Illegal Just so he Could Kill a Bigger Bear Than Tito.

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DoNotFeedTheSneed

A FANCY GERMAN CAR DOES NOT FUCKIN STOP IT
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General Secretary of the Romanian Communist Party (1965-1989)
President of the Socialist Republic of Romania (1974-1989)
"Tovarășul Conducător" - "Comrade Conductor"
"The Genius of the Carpathians"



Nowadays, sites like Reddit are filled with mentally disturbed individuals who devote every moment of their lives to two things: seeking validation and screaming about murdering "le heckin fascists" (everyone who disagrees with them). Now, you may be asking yourself, What would happen if one of these people was handed the reins of power over an entire country? It would probably look like Nicolae Ceaușescu's tenure as the leader of Romania, marked by a feverish cult of personality dedicated to him and his beloved wife, Elena (we'll get to her later), the construction of countless vanity projects at the expense of the Romanian people, brutal political repression, and Ceaușescu's own massive ego - one so large that he couldn't even comprehend that his people were revolting against him in 1989. Today, the fallout of Ceaușescu's retarded policies can still be felt in Romania, and his story serves as an important lesson - NEVER let a Cluster B personality run your country.

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Nicolae A. Ceaușescu
was born on January 26th, 1918 (although his birth certificate claims he was born 3 days earlier - the first screw up in a life chock-full of them) in the village of Scornicești in southern Romania. His father, Andruță, was a peasant farmer who owned a couple of acres of land in the countryside, which was the family's main source of income. Ceaușescu's childhood was largely spent in two places; His village's school, where he received decently high marks, and a local tailoring shop where he worked to help his family out financially. Like all communists, Ceaușescu had severe daddy issues growing up. As one would expect from a working class farmer, Andruță was very religious and ran a strict house, something that the young Ceaușescu was unable to tolerate. He left the family household when he was 11, moving to Bucharest with his sister Niculina.

Ceaușescu would put his tailoring talents to work in a shoemaking shop owned by Alexandru Săndulescu, a dissident communist. Săndulescu groomed Ceaușescu into being a communist educated Ceaușescu on Marxism, which he quickly adopted as his own philosophy. Ceaușescu officially joined the Romanian Communist Party when he was 14, and it wouldn't be long before he would rack up a criminal record working for the organization. When he was 15, he was arrested for unleashing his tard rage during a labor strike. The next year, he would be arrested for illegally collecting signatures and attending other communist party events. By 1936, he had been arrested several times. On June 6th of that year, Ceaușescu was convicted for distributing Communist propaganda, which earned him 2 years in prison, an additional 6 months for contempt, and, most cruel of all, 1 year of confinement to his home village of Scornicești, meaning that he would have to live with his dad. Upon the conclusion of his sentences, Ceaușescu returned to Bucharest, where he would meet his future wife Elena. Reportedly, Ceaușescu was instantly infatuated with Elena and never showed romantic interest in any other woman (which is really funny considering that she was by no means a looker.) However, their relationship would be repeatedly interrupted by Ceaușescu's frequent arrests.

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1944soviet1.png During World War 2, with Romania under fascist influence, Ceaușescu would be transferred from prison to a series of different internment camps. His fortunes would change dramatically in 1943 when he was transferred to the Târgu Jiu internment camp, where he was put in the same cell as Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, a very influential member of the Communist Party of Romania who would later become its leader. Ceaușescu and Gheorghiu-Dej quickly became close friends. Using his connections in the party, Gheorghiu-Dej was able to front considerable bribes to the camp guards in exchange for a considerable degree of freedom. Gheorghiu-Dej used this freedom to host "self criticism" sessions, where party members were expected to report their ideological failures. Gheorghiu-Dej entrusted Ceaușescu with an important job during these sessions - to go collect a big stick and beat any party member who refused to criticize themselves with said stick. Ceaușescu delighted in this job, which also served the purpose of demonstrating his undying loyalty to Gheorghiu-Dej.

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Romania quickly fell under Soviet influence after World War 2, experiencing a falsified election in 1946 with an overwhelming communist victory. Gheorghiu-Dej would head this new government. Around this time, Ceaușescu would marry Elena, which had the effect of cementing both of their positions in the new government. Soon after, the Monarchy was abolished, and the soviets had succeeded in establishing yet another satellite state. Ceaușescu, being a close friend of the most powerful man in the country, quickly rose through the ranks due to nepotism. Every year brought a new title. in 1947, Ceaușescu was a member of the national assembly. The next year, he was named Secretary to the Minister of Agriculture, only to become the Minister of Agriculture himself the next year. From there, Gheorghiu-Dej made him deputy minister of the armed forces (despite having no military experience or knowledge of tactics), and later promoted him to serve on the communist party's Central Committee. Was he qualified for any of these jobs? No, but he was qualified to beat dissidents. Using his position in the party, Ceaușescu would personally enforce the collectivization of the country's agricultural sector (most likely spurred by his disdain for his dad), often sending hundreds to labor camps on a whim.

In 1965, Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej died of cancer because he kept a piece of uranium on his desk. No I am not kidding. Ceaușescu was not his first choice for leader, but he emerged on top because Gheorghiu-Dej's prime minister hated the front runner for the job, Gheorghe Apostol. At long last, on March 22nd, 1965, Ceaușescu finally achieved what he had always wanted - total control.

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a1-582402871.jpg Initially, Ceaușescu's reign wasn't as batshit insane as it would later become. Early decisions and decrees were small, such as changing the nomenclature of the party and the country's official designation. This makes sense - Ceaușescu was the leader of a satellite state, so he had a wrangler in the form of the USSR. However, his wranglers in Moscow had little say over how he conducted personal and national affairs, which would lead Ceaușescu to take one of the first actions that would later define his neurotic ruling style. Elena Ceaușescu, who was functionally illiterate, was obsessed with being seen as a great chemist. Nicolae, both being completely obsessed with her and having complete control, decided to oblige her fantasy. Numerous chemistry professors in Romania were coerced - under threat of imprisonment or death - to write papers in her name (including a thesis which would earn her a PhD), to award her honorary degrees, and to name her as a co-inventor on any new Romanian chemistry equipment. This policy would last right up until the end of Ceaușescu's regime, and Elena's name can still be found cited in hundreds of Romanian language chemistry papers to this day. Another such policy was Decree 770. Wanting to massively increase the population of his country so that Romania could one day rival both Moscow and the western powers, he outlawed abortion and all forms of contraception. This caused the population to swell as intended, but it also created two problems for the regime: Massive rates of child abandonment, and an entire generation born in an environment of discontent. This will come up later. Personality_Cult_Romania_1986.jpg

Later in the 60s, Ceaușescu began the process of officially breaking away from his wranglers. In 1968, he condemned the Warsaw Pact's intervention in Czechoslovakia and offered aid to the government. After that, he began to establish diplomatic ties with many western countries, culminating with the recognition of West Germany in 1971. For a brief time in the early months of 1971, Western observers saw Ceaușescu's Romania as an eastern bloc country that they could actually work with to thaw global tensions. That all ended on July 6th. Earlier in the summer, Ceaușescu and his wife had travelled to North Korea, and they absolutely adored what they saw. From the beginning, the couple had wanted absolute power, and that's what they saw there. After returning home, Ceaușescu delivered a speech condemning the liberalization of government that he had helped to herald in. What little political freedom was offered in Romania was instantly relinquished. Book bans were reinstated en masse, the Securitate secret police grew massively in scale and influence, and Ceaușescu took what remaining power the national assembly had for himself. Additionally, a state sponsored cult of personality surrounding him sprung up almost overnight. Every household was to have a portrait of him hung on display (specifically his 1965 portrait, as to make him appear as youthful as possible), statues and murals of him and Elena and slogans from his speeches were propped up all over the country, and citizens were forced by the police to attend his rallies.
Ceaușescu's palace, pictured in 2024.

To cement his image, Ceaușescu also grew obsessed with urban planning. His perfect Romania couldn't be a series of villages in the mountains - it had to be a highly urbanized society with metropolises to rival that of New York and Moscow. To accomplish this, Ceaușescu ordered the demolition of vast swaths of existing homes and businesses so that the government could build shitty commieblocks. Additionally, any moderately sized village would be redesignated as a town and become host to rows and rows of even more commieblocks. No historic buildings were spared from demolition either. After all, Ceaușescu needed homes for the millions of new souls that would carry out the will of his world power-status Romania. A single exception was granted during Ceaușescu's entire urbanization program, which was his own childhood home in Scornicești. Speaking of homes, the 1980s saw Ceaușescu growing obsessed with the idea of having a massive palace for him and his wife in the center of Bucharest. To make room for it, Ceaușescu demolished countless homes, 3 monasteries, 20 churches, 3 synagogues, 3 hospitals, 2 theatres, and a sports stadium. What replaced all of those is the building you see to your right, which now serves as Romania's parliament. It is the heaviest building in the world. Of course, Elena held massive sway over the country's infrastructure as well. Romania's television network, TVR, which was color capable in 1972, did not broadcast in color until 1983 because Elena didn't like color TV, and an entire metro station near one of Bucharest's major universities was shelved because she thought the students were "fat" and thought they should walk.

ceausescu shat his pants.png When he wasn't busy implementing his braindead policies, Ceaușescu liked to fashion himself as a sporting man. In particular, he loved hunting. Romania is a country with excellent game, something which Ceaușescu took a lot of pride in and worked tirelessly to preserve. How did he do this? Well, besides passing standard conservation laws, Ceaușescu also made it so that he and his friends were basically the only people in the country who could hunt. Technically, it wasn't outright illegal to hunt in Ceaușescu's Romania, but the amount of legal hoops one would have to jump through made it impossible for the average Romanian worker. To own a basic hunting rifle or shotgun, Romanian citizens would have to pay for pricey licenses, account for every single cartridge fired by keeping both a physical manifest and every spent shell casing, and be subject to weekly visits from both local police forces and the Securitate to ensure compliance with the law and their loyalty to the state. Those who failed to do so would have their firearms confiscated, with many facing arrest afterward. Because basically no one else was allowed to hunt for around 25 years, Ceaușescu holds many hunting records in both Romania and Europe as a whole, including the record for the largest bear ever killed in Europe. 23_1980_Vizita-presedintelui-Zairului-Mobutu-Sese-Seko-in-Romania-1-3857497736.jpg

Of course, Ceaușescu rarely hunted alone. He was often joined by his family, friends in the country, and his friends from abroad. Many of the Eastern Bloc's leaders also shared a love for hunting and often competed against Ceaușescu for his records. However, Ceaușescu had no friend closer than Mobutu Sese Seko Kuku Ngbendu wa za Banga, the dictator of Zaire. After all, they both could bond over their shared love for killing things and making pointless, retarded decisions that were to the detriment of their people. When Ceaușescu was hard at work making scientists credit their work to Elena, Mobutu was sending people to jail for having "European" names. Even when Mobutu drifted away from Communism, their personal friendship remained so strong that Ceaușescu set up a diplomatic mission between the parties of Romania and Zaire, which allowed the two to collaborate on as many bad policies as possible. Ceaușescu also shared a friendship/hunting rivalry with Josip Broz Tito of Yugoslavia, but that wasn't nearly as close as his friendship with Mobutu. Tito setting Europe's bear record shortly before his death caused Ceaușescu to seethe so much that he made the restrictions on hunting harsher for a few years until he could bag a better bear himself to one up him.

With Ceaușescu spending all of the country's money on vanity projects like his palace and hunting, Romania rapidly fell into debt throughout the 1980s. This had the effect of making workers angrier, which caused the government to add tax after tax to their paychecks. By the end of the decade, the conditions created by Ceaușescu were brewing a perfect storm. The new generation of Romanians fostered by Decree 770 were left discontent by having nowhere to go, all of Ceaușescu's expensive construction projects were both demolishing all the homes in the country and wasting the entire budget, and his iconography everywhere gave the people something to rally against. This storm exploded into the Romanian Revolution of 1989.

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By 1989, the communist satellite states across Europe were all collapsing. The Berlin wall was coming down, the hardliners in Europe had all either resigned or were being actively pressured out, and the Soviet Union was in no position to prop the regimes up anymore. Ceaușescu was entirely alone, but the decade and a half he had spent building his cult of personality meant he was starting to drink his own Kool-Aid. When demonstrations against his treatment of the Hungarian minority and his urbanization plans sprung up in the city of Timișoara, he assumed that all he would need to do was send in local law enforcement to crack down. After all, Ceaușescu was no stranger to beating protestors with sticks. When this failed to quell the riots, he sent in the military. When this failed, he fucked off to Iran for a few days and had local officials (and Elena) deal with it. Elena's genius response was to take a bunch of random factory workers from rural Romania, give them clubs, and send them to Timișoara to go beat the "Hungarian hooligans". Instead of beating the protestors, the underpaid factory workers turned their clubs on the police and military. Despite heavy state media censorship, the word of the Timișoara protests spread throughout the country rapidly, and a protest was scheduled for December 21st - the day after Ceaușescu's return from Iran.

On the morning of December 21st, Ceaușescu took to the stage in the center of Bucharest to condemn the events in Timișoara. As usual for his events, tens of thousands were bussed in and given flags and the pictures of the dear leader to wave around. However, this would just add fuel to the fire. A minute into his speech, screams could be heard in the crowd, which intensified as the disgruntled populace joined in to interrupt Ceaușescu's speech. loud cracks of supposed gunfire could also be heard. Completely dumbfounded, Ceaușescu just stood there and waved his hand.

Ceaușescu tried to regain control of the crowd, but it was already too late. It was clear to him that the people had turned against him. The protests across Bucharest turned into a riot. Ceaușescu retreated to his palace and ordered the military to fire on the demonstrators. His defense minister, Vasile Milea, did not want to do this, so he "committed suicide" under suspicious circumstances the next day. Milea's death caused the military to turn on Ceaușescu, even at the highest level. Milea's replacement, Victor Stănculescu, ordered his soldiers to stand down and to not oppose the rioters. Many defected and joined forces with them as they stormed Ceaușescu's palace.


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The Ceaușescus, scared shitless, escaped on their private helicopter along with two senior officials.
Ceaușescu's helicopter had to make numerous stops to avoid being shot down by the rogue Romanian air force. On one of these stops, he leveraged what little power he still had to get the senior officials off of the overcrowded helicopter. This would be one of his last acts. The helicopter made a final stop on the road to Târgoviște, where a doctor offered to drive the couple into the city under false pretenses of safety. The army was informed of this, and they intercepted the couple at an agricultural institute. the couple was taken to the city's military garrison and held for 3 days pending a trial. At the trial, which took place on Christmas day, Ceaușescu's defense attorney told Ceaușescu that his best outcome would be a life sentence, which led Ceaușescu to berate him relentlessly. Not that it would matter, though. The trial, in which Ceaușescu was charged with genocide, was always a foregone conclusion. Guilty. Both Nicolae and Elena Ceaușescu received the death sentence and were executed not long afterward.



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If any lesson can be learned from Ceaușescu's life, it's that believing too strongly in something can swallow you whole. Whether it be his devotion to his wife or to the teachings of Marx, Ceaușescu took things to such an extreme degree that they were to the detriment of millions. He wanted to build a great power to rival the US and USSR, but all he got in the end was 120 rounds of 7.62x39 dumped into his chest. Also Elena is fat and I would not have sex with her.

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And he ended up becoming a good communist.
Love it when a story has a happy ending, shame so much harm has been caused up to that point
 
he didn't issue decree 770 because he saw all lives as sacred, he did it because he wanted more workers to build statues of his wife. Therefore it's cringe
I know but I mean it's better than nothing. But yeah he utterly botched the implementation, as evidenced by the fact so many children were abandoned.
 
Fun fact: He was a pretty big hunter. He holds the record for the largest number of bears hunted by a single hunter at something like 3k brown bears. He pretty much made hunting illegal (at least when it came to larger game) except for himself and close allies and accomplices. Plenty of other commie leaders came to Romania to hunt by his invitation.

Edit: His rifle recently got a feature by Gun Jesus and he speaks about the hunting and stuff


Another communist lolcow worthy of a thread might be Enver Hoxha. He was stupid dedicaded to Stalinism/Marxism-Leninism, to the point of breaking off with the USSR to befriend his new bro Mao, and then later abandoning China when they got closer to the USA and mellowed out a bit. Also was obsessed with building bunkers, basically coping about the Italian invasion of Albania during WW2 and trying to fight it again and resulting in hilariously useless bunkers which were only really up to the standards of 1930s warfare at best.
 
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Another communist lolcow worthy of a thread might be Enver Hoxha. He was stupid dedicaded to Stalinism/Marxism-Leninism, to the point of breaking off with the USSR to befriend his new bro Mao, and then later abandoning China when they got closer to the USA and mellowed out a bit. Also was obsessed with building bunkers, basically coping about the Italian invasion of Albania during WW2 and trying to fight it again and resulting in hilariously useless bunkers which were only really up to the standards of 1930s warfare at best.
Francisco Macias Nguema is another big contender. He said that Hitler's main objective was to end colonialism and that the holocaust "was just him getting confused", His campaign strategy was basically pointing at mansions and asking if the people of Equatorial Guinea wanted them, he used to eat marijuana leaves and drop acid, and he brought all of his political opponents to the country's main stadium and had his guards dress up in Santa costumes and gun them down while Those Were The Days by Mary Hopkins played on the loudspeakers. Count Dankula made an excellent video on him.
 
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Nicolae Ceausescu was one of the first dictators I ever read about that wasn't Hitler or Stalin. The thing that stood out to me the most was his speech where the revolution kicked off but I didn't know there was video of it until I saw Dankula's video.

And since people are talking about dictators getting threads, I'd be more than happy to write a thread about Mao if someone could donate some banners like the ones in the OP. Those are incredibly well done.
 
Cool looking AK's were made under his rule but everything else sucked and he got what he fucking deserved. You know you've failed as a dictator when your own army turns against you.
 
On archive.org there is a video of their execution.
 
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