tv Fakti RUSSIA24 May 19, 2022 7:00pm-8:03pm MSK
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uh, many guys, uh, defending a country in the donbass that says we are of different nationalities, but we are russians and this, in general, if you like, is the most important story, when this external pressure can allow us not only to withstand, leave much stronger. let's move on to the seventh principle. eh, very often you come across the fact that when there is a big serious task, then there is a risk that you, well, it’s not clear where to start the huge task. and you don't have many resources. you can not immediately take a step that will be felt this is why this principle is formulated so the scale of the goal matters. but the size of the first step on the example of a little turtle going to the sea is of no importance. it doesn't really only have direction and, uh, determination. well, here's an example. i took it again. ah, the russian movement. together, this is something from which only this story is from
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two years ago, a the twentieth year, when the pandemic began and which threatens everyone, but people began to appear who decided that this concerns me. it's my business. i remember here the first guys nizhny novgorod entrepreneur alexei kegi, who in a small bakery understands how difficult it was for business then, but he suddenly decided that he would bake part of the bread and give it away for free, to those who find it harder and as a result the russian movement. together we are 250,000 volunteers who have been delivering food and medicine for 2 years, helping elderly people who are at home, helping doctors in the red zones, sitting on the hotline phones and were able to help more than seven million people. the eighth principle is that no matter how difficult it is, one must learn to enjoy these difficulties, because in general, uh, any challenge and any difficulty is always
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an opportunity. we have already talked about this. ah, a crisis is a time of opportunity. well, i'll take examples here are just a few short examples. well, for example, look, it means that it is clear that sanctions there will now limit the supply of small components there for cars for some kind of equipment. why is this a unique opportunity? what options? a promising technology industry for which this a unique opportunity today is 3d printers. well , because for you 3d printers. today i understand that those same laboratories that had a sufficient number of 3d metal printers or plastic printers. today they receive
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an incredible amount of orders. well, because they can do it all. this makes it possible to deploy additive technologies. so called. yes, of course, russian it software products are great, while global demand was low. here's a few months of demand grew on russian software products. e by more than 300%, and the same covid that we just recalled the challenge, when movement restrictions, it means ka yes, well, for which the window of the possible has opened up sharply. internet delivery delivery services. just skyrocketed because it opens up unique opportunities, so you know any difficulties we face in life. they er, well, it's either an opportunity, or a lesson, or more of both. how can you take advantage of these opportunities? and how much you can learn this lesson. well, the people who are depicted here show an example of this.
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well, this is a continuation of the question about rejoice in difficulties, because well, in fact, emotions are contagious, they are transmitted. the ninth principle once told me this principle. uh, wrestling coach back in high school. e years. ah, when he said that even if you understand that you are already losing. try to be patient, because it's hard for you, yes, it hurts, yes, well, maybe your opponent at this moment is even more difficult and more it hurts more if you manage to overcome yourself without even setting a task. that you will finally win there, even if you just get over yourself for at least a few seconds. well, it's almost always possible. maybe that's enough. well, a few examples. who remembers although now, i think many people remember, because this event is immortalized in the film mashkov moving up. this is
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the 1972 munich olympics. put a video, there is a video turn on the video, please. ahead of the united states team america's ball goes into the game the americans were undefeated by that time, alexandra begovaya damn, victory, so they lost 3 seconds before the end. and the ball was thrown at the last second. well, the same. i have it there. this picture, probably, the eighteenth year , everyone already remembers the olympics of the eighteenth year, our hockey, playing in the final, losing in 2 minutes. well, at the fifty-ninth minute we
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lose to nikita gusev and he is that, uh, we often come across the fact that we are told that something impossible, well, there are objective difficulties with which nothing can be done, there are, after all, the laws of nature. well, you ca n't really do anything with them. yes, i tried to take some examples that show that this is not so. well , in this case, it's not a dispute with the laws of nature. and s. e human opinion. yes, we very often turn off our path, because everyone around says that this is impossible. we need to stop doing nonsense, which means, uh, experienced people say it's impossible. there you see flying machines weighing heavier than air is not possible. and this was said by no one, the president of the royal scientific
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society. but aleksandrovich mozhaisky, ah, 1882, and that's when the plane with a man briefly, but broke away from the runway, and then the wright brothers and their first flight. well, this means about the beatles, uh, well, sergey pavlovich korolev is really when the task arose of placing missiles on submarines . this is his real quote is absurd it is impossible, but therefore i will undertake to do it and did it in the fifty-fifth year. uh, ballistic missiles began to launch submarines. well, behind this telling story is very often, uh, the reason for doing the impossible is not knowing that it's impossible. uh, someone says that who is george danzon, yes, well, tell me how not everyone reacted to tell. uh, this is a famous mathematician who studies the theory of statistics, he is known for being late for a lecture at the university during his student years. well, i came late to the end of the pair, which means i managed to
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notice two tasks on the board according to statistics, a statistics lessons. and he saw two problems. he wrote them off to himself in a notebook, deciding that this was homework. he did them, in my opinion, he cursed terribly for two days, as he himself recalls, because what kind of stupid tasks they give. well, no way, well, it's not solved, and that's it, well, in two days. he decided and handed over to his professor, and the next morning he's there at 7:00 in the morning, which means that the doorbell is ringing. and his professor with trembling. hands, because it turned out that george danson solved two absolutely unsolvable problems in history statistics. well, for comparison, albert einstein tried to do it in front of him and refused. he said that it was impossible. adam as a student. he just did not know that they were not solvable and he solved them. well moving on and one more example a little bit about the other
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talking about how much understanding that it's possible can do, this is the story of roger bannister. it was the first person who ran such a challenge in his time. so who will be the first to run, uh, a mile faster than in 4 minutes 50 years - no one has been able to do this for 50 years a task. and it didn't work out, scientists formulated a whole, well, set of studies that said it's physically impossible, but human biomechanics. such that a human being cannot run, so, uh, a mile faster than four minutes, and george danson did it rogerbanister did it. this is may 6, 1954, and then attention. how long do you think his record was broken? no, he beat his record. after that was beaten in 6 weeks 50 years, no one
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could do it in six weeks after like rogerbanister did, his record was broken, what has changed is that the biomechanics of people have not changed. this is in six weeks. this was beaten by athletes who had previously run with him, but they simply believed that it was impossible, they were held back by the understanding that it was impossible. and when he showed that it was possible, they crossed this barrier. therefore, this is the question of what e does to e people. uh, vera, you know, i'll give you another example. i, in my opinion, became this e did not set. yes, i didn’t set it now, and another example is the fifties harvard so one of the scientists decided to do this. well, a bit of a tough experiment. but it means, uh, that gave an amazing result. we all know the famous example of frogs being thrown into milk, yes, well, if she beats her paws for a long time, she will churn butter, but this is another example , he took mice, and he threw them a bucket of water
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half filled with water. well, when he saw that the mouse was giving up, he pulled it out. well, here it is. in fact, he conducted an experiment with a large number of mice. that is, how much are they time they try to swim, and then they start to give up and sink. but we held out, well, on average, he checked a certain number of mice; mice lasted no more than 15 minutes. after 15 minutes, the mice gave up, and then he tried the next one. that he was a mouse that was already beginning to give up and drown, he pulled it out. she came to her senses, and he put her in the bucket again. how many mice do you think swam the second time? 60 hours 60 15 minutes and 60 hours, yes, the reason, but because they had a belief that they did not adapt. they are more likely because they were saved from them there was a hope that they would be saved by everything, that their physical abilities
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did not change, nothing changed, but faith appeared. but if it works like this, on a small gray mouse, imagine what vera can do from a human point of view. well, i conclude with two quotes. e sergei pavlovich koroleva is one such , well, for people, remember, there was once a sport. lyric physicists. the first, rather, for physicists in terms of daring and the ability to realize pipe dreams, and the second, probably, for the lyricist, that a person who believes in a fairy tale will definitely fall into it one day, because he has a youth parliament under the state duma,
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firstly, i want to thank you for a wonderful lecture. she inspired us a lot and thank you. i want to ask you to convey to our president vladimir vladimirovich putin the words of our support. guys, let's support the president. thanks guys, the question concerns the youth movement. today the news was published that another children's movement is starting. there are schoolchildren. here we have several such movements in the country. and on the one hand, they are all disparate and we would like to unite them, something unified, and in connection with this
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question. or maybe the time has come. remove here the ban on some common goals of the state of the country and enter into the basic law. here is our state program, our common goal. eh, how we want to live, where we want to go, what we want to do, we were told that we are patriotic, but this is not on paper. and now we want it to be in law and officially. thank you. look. well, firstly, i, uh, believe that the goals of the constitution of the russian federation are formulated and quite accurately formulated from the point of view. sit down please take a seat both from the point of view of patriotism and from the point of view of the country's development goals and from the point of view of people. so they are
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formulated exactly, but er, what are you talking about, i will now move on to the children's movement. yes, first you know, i really liked it. oh, i saw it yesterday. uh, ramzan akhmatovich kadyrov spoke here, which i think gave a very good formulation. him asked about mobilization. he said no one should be mobilized. artificially. we ourselves must mobilize and unite. the conversation, moreover, most importantly, is that this conversation is being conducted by the children's organizations themselves in the country, a large number of children's organizations and movements. many of them are developing very dynamically and rapidly, yunarmiya. uh, the russian movement of schoolchildren. the guys are doing great. they already have over 2 million students. and over the past 2 years,
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the movement has grown dramatically. a big change is i feel the support of a big change you guys are great, because what do you really know, how is it that you are not on the instructions of you, no one sent you for this , parents do not give grades, neither teachers, nor school directors drive you anywhere, and 2.5 million people took part in the competition. big change last year. and i have a suspicion that, well, until the first of june, applications are still being accepted. there is a suspicion that we can go beyond 3 million people. here. and as for the unification, you know, here my approach here is this, so there is no need to impose anything. it seems to me that this one here, well, such an effect of a big change, and success lies in the fact that no one imposes anything on the participants. you choose you choose. in what direction do you want to develop. moreover, you can change direction , even the whole program of the big change competition and even the design there, starting from the lighthouse and ending there with the
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billboard. the guys did it and they did it. in my opinion, absolutely incredible, i must confess to you that when we were preparing the second season of the big change, we called the winners of the first season uh, participate in the work of designers for the preparation. well, here are the brands, there are pictures of the second season, but honestly, now i can confess. so we suspected to ourselves that, well, the guys will make their contribution, but the main work, of course, will be done by adults and professional designers. well , the guys will just make their contribution, it will turn out no, everything is honest without deceit, what is called yes, they will learn and gain experience. but still they will feel a little with the authors. now guys. don't hold your hands uncomfortable. yes i am now i agree, pick it up again, i, we, in my opinion, we have the final story today. therefore, if you have enough patience, then i will not run away anywhere. oh yes, what happened in reality in reality turned out everything exactly, on the contrary, 99% of the decisions that were eventually made were made by the schoolchildren themselves, and including not only
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artistic decisions. but honestly, i’ll tell you, you know, i still have, i have some incredible respect, i was directly hooked by the slogan that you yourself came up with for the second season. big big change think about who has not heard. a big change here is not appreciated. well, tell me it's cool. therefore, it seems to me that in answering your question about the children's movement. if the guys themselves want to do it, if uh, they will be ready. and now, as i understand it, we have a festival on the first of june, children's day. a big break opens and then and then summer summer summer period children's summer camps throughout the country artek orlyonok there and all regional camps. which guys to you and we need to discuss this and decide for ourselves. how do you want to do it, because, of course, there is a unique experience of the soviet children's organization, and there was a lot of good and useful things in it. i was
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a pioneer and i remember this time with pleasure. but only to repeat it with that is, it is impossible to make a complete tracing paper for another time. everything has changed, the world is changing. but let's come up with what you come up with, and we will help you. thank you let's have someone pull his hand for a long time. thank you. here is sergey the owner. hello, grab the microphone. and my name is loshkarev nikolai i am from the lipetsk region and i want, firstly, to express my gratitude to you for your lecture. i am sure that all the people who are now on the other side of the screen and those who are now here in the hall will follow your rules throughout their lives and i have been worried about the question all my conscious life. what is a miracle? uh, for me, for example, it's a miracle to be here, and next to talan value-oriented guys of our country in the future of our country. listen to the world's best speakers to recruit experience of knowledge and in the future to become a worthy citizen of
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our motherland, and most importantly, to fight to seek and find and not give up and i want to ask you. what is a miracle for you? i would probably say that for me. well, first of all, i am a believer. i am an orthodox believer and for me. a miracle ah. it's ah, when you suddenly see, uh, in some things happening in our lives. but you know, maybe even i'll say it differently. up to a certain point it seemed to me that
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there is a way of faith, and when hard evidence is not required, here is the work, uh, 11 years in dewy having that's how you just talked about the happiness of being close friends and working with amazing scientists. there is the highest level of world-class people. for me, at some point, it was a miracle that at some level of this knowledge of the world - this is a line, it does not disappear, yes, because, in my opinion, einstein at some point was asked a question to the brilliant physicist himself. eh, xx century he was asked a question. and what is your goal? and he said that the highest goal for this is to understand, the plan of god, this was for me, you know,
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such a direct revelation. but in ordinary life. uh, the source of the miracle is the people, when you face the fact that people are in a difficult situation. absolutely amazing people live, but i can tell you the last example, here is the one i still have it for me, so it hooked us on march 18, maybe you remember there was a rally-concert, uh in support of the presidents support more than 200,000 people gathered there at the luzhniki stadium, and then two people came from the hospital to speak. uh, the girls are very young, one ensign
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of the medical service, the other lieutenant, medical service, that means, uh, who by comparison were in the hospital. they took out the wounded soldiers, the shelling began. and these two girls are in their early 20s. they covered the wounded soldiers with them, received shrapnel wounds, and they were treated from hospitals. and they came, among other things, to participate in this rally to speak. i see that the girls are standing and and well they are worried. i approached somehow means to try to support. i say the girls will start to get scared. they say very scary. i say it's okay to speak at a rally scary. ok then. as did you try to calm down? i say, well maybe, maybe something to help. what do we have to do? that's right. or you can negotiate with our command, otherwise in our hospital it is possible to keep us faster on the front line. you know, here's me.
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girls, you are afraid to speak at a rally, but it’s not scary to fight, they say no, because our guys are there. because they need our help. here. well, i'm telling you now, i have goosebumps running down my back. yes, when you see such people, yes, this is the feeling of amazingness people and e. well, in general, this is, in general, this is a miracle, for me people. it is. the main miracle, thank you very much. and now they've got the microphone. introduce youreself. hello. tell me there are tugans here. anton, a social entrepreneur, is now a director of kindergartens and the head of the russian commonwealth college , the founder, and the software championship, the skill of russia, and the question next what is the russian commonwealth college, if it says it in
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a nutshell, while developing yourself, but helps others. that is this is the kind of help that one way or another, we provide to people. well, for example, how we develop communication skills are developing. this is someone's, uh, that we negotiate with stylists , makeup artists, hairdressers, psychologists, and we take mom, and, accordingly, we carry out all these services. it's unusual. a mother is a mother who brings up children with disabilities. health. mom is filled with energy, and again with a desire she gives it to this, and to her child. and actually, and then we even understood for ourselves that the key question that goes on is this history of upbringing. what is upbringing? for us, this is the axis of nutrition, that is, a person, like us, like those people who, one way or another, here they are in their moments. write in the fifth principle that some things cannot be measured. but we still decided to approach the projectile. well, i don’t know that it can’t be measured, too, your last tenth thesis there after that but how to measure upbringing. is it possible to measure, but we thought that it is very expensive for a seswant and so on, and we realized that we should probably measure possible through the influence that is exerted on this person, and we have developed a platform that on the
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one hand is now so the developer of the program with food. we just met there with the director of the department. he told us, listen and tell the guys. you, he says, have a few mistakes there. it says to you it perceives it as a superstructure, but it is necessary that you entered the working programs of education in the database and this is excellent. try asking a question . yes, and here is the main question itself, and the key story, when we talk about e here is this story related to the platform. i would like you to imagine how it can be done. here, and the most important question, here we do. and on i know that the lpr is watching us, you guys are from there, and we are doing conditionally regional nipple championships in russia a. i would like to ask for your organizational support in holding these same championships on their territory, be sure to thank you. absolutely absolutely absolutely obligatory history, look we uh now uh, well, almost all the projects that are being implemented in russia are all unfolding on territory of the donetsk and luhansk people's republics on monday. there began a big change. tomorrow. it starts there. your move
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for the students. representations of russian social studies are opening there , a platform is opening its representative office. presidential russia is a country of opportunities. and the russian historical society, well, and so is the military historical society. everything means, that is, we are deploying, you know, for people living in the donbass, all the opportunities that exist for citizens of the russian federation should be available. here is the first and second. you know an important thing, and using perhaps, i also wanted to say about it. and here, uh, right now, the president has made a decision that the russian regions take patronage over the e districts, the municipalities of the donetsk people's republic of the lugansk people's republic, we have it right now. they went there from the regions to help, and we were with them not so long ago in rostov just at the volunteer headquarters they were talking about the fact that and we must all the time, and hmm remember that, probably in
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terms of financial resources there, which today russia allocates assistance to the donbass in terms of material resources, what kind of human resources that we allocate there, it is we who help. yes, but from the point of view of an example of patriotism , an example. uh, this is a real sense of pride and responsibility for one's destiny because of one's country. uh, we have a lot to learn, do you know from the people in the donbass and who gives more to whom now from this work? this is a big question. to be honest, yes, thank you very much. thank you to send you a business card. thank you yes, good sergey vladimirovich yes, thank you sergei vladimirovich, we still have questions if there is an online broadcast. let's read one of them and ask my colleagues to display alexander soldiers on the screen. he asks what dan you have now in aikido often goes to the total? ah on gait in sight, that often honestly. unfortunately. what
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is the name of the man who is a soldier yes alexander unfortunately, alexander is very sorry that rarely er, well, since february, i almost do not have time to go out on the tatami. but uh, i really managed to get the sixth in january. yes, i already do aikido and kido 30 years is almost unbelievable. i like a. you know, just in my opinion, aikido judo is just such types of martial arts, which are the same, uh, principle that the solution is in the problem. but they are embedded in these types of martial arts. uh, because uh, the main one, unlike let's say there, i don't know from karate, in which the key task. i somehow studied at school and at the institute for quite a long time. started doing karate. it was back in the period when karate was banned in russia in the soviet union, it ’s forbidden, here a and e, it’s clear that e is in karate
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your task is to find the enemy's weakest point and apply there with maximum force. task in ekido and judo, but she does not. well, especially in judo aikido. i'm not an expert, i won't undertake to comment, but in aikido the task is to catch the strongest e, the enemy's point, to apply your strength to it. and slightly change the direction and then everything that happens is 90% done by the strength of the enemy. and you need to apply only a little bit to strengthen and a little bit and a little bit to change the direction. the paradox is in that the stronger applied. uh, in the external aggressive impact on those, well, in general , the one who uses it will get worse. to be honest, i really liked this once, first of all from the point of view of philosophy, and then from the point of view of martial art. this is very applicable to life. let's continue to communicate with our internet audience the next
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question is from ksenia chudina, do you think there will be more interest in the military profession in the future? yes , of course, it seems to me that the main thing is that now happening. this has been happening for a long time, because the revival of the army. uh, our president started at the beginning of the 2000s and now, you see what is happening in the world. uh, you understand how correctly he understood and felt it then, not everyone felt it, but he already understood then, investing in the development of the defense industry, because if all this had not been done, but today the situation would be completely different. and, of course, what is happening. uh, today, uh, a sense of pride here is the same feeling of pride for our guys for officers for a soldier e, it, of course, increases the prestige of the profession of officers the prestige of the profession of a defender and i think that a large number of guys looking at heroes e today make an internal decision for themselves that they want to become
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military personnel or law enforcement officers, that is choose to be a defense attorney. that, yes, prestige is definitely growing and authority and pride are growing. and it is right. thank you. during these two days of work, we already have tens of millions of views on the internet of all our lectures, so the number of questions also i strongly suggest another one from online and back to our audience. elizaveta startseva asks what book a good manager should have on his desk. oh no, there is no such answer. you know it 's called. you just want to live so you can't put one book on the table, that means. two three, let me think better. i'm ready give me the address, i'm ready. yes, send your
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recommendation there, because i can’t pick up two or three, i’m ready to pick up several dozen, but books, eh. well, on me. uh made an impression at the time. uh, very uh book. e. there is such a francois julien, his book was called a treatise on efficiency. here it is a rather rare book, it is almost impossible to find it in libraries. eh, it’s also not so easy to find it on the internet, it’s there, in my opinion, from the seventies of the last century, but at one time it made a very strong impression on me, i highly recommend reading it. thanks to this, elizabeth will write down. the title of this book. let's get back to working with the hall. and here is the young one.
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