During World War II, ordinary citizens in the Soviet Union showed remarkable obedience to Stalin's ideas and orders for mainly two reasons. First, very severe repercussions would follow from disobedience. Second, soon after the Germans invaded (in 1941), it became clear that the Germans were not interested in liberating Soviet people but, rather, intent on enslaving them.
rule citizens will be easy!
It basically killed all the Old Bolsheviks that could remember Lenin, and allowed Russia to be ruled by the younger Bolsheviks who had been taught to follow Stalin. Alternative: Stalin's terror affect not too much population at all. Many people mix Stalin's terror with anti-criminal processes. For usual Russian people, Stalin's terror was no more than newspaper header.
It was terrifying to the citizens and all the people so no one wanted to do bad things. It helped the comunity become better and follow the rules.
After 1991, the USSR ceased to exist. The 15 countries that made up the USSR (Russia, Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tajikstan, Turkemistan and Kyrgystan) declared independence. About 1/2 of the population of the USSR lived in Russia, so often when people talk about the "History of Russia", they follow the fate of Russia after the union dissolved. So the person you're interested in is Boris Yeltsin, who became the President of the newly-independent Russia.
British people respect laws and disciplines because there are consequences if they don't, there are consequences. Many citizens of countries other than Britain follow their countries rules.
Follow the government.
Christianity.
They are suppose to follow the rulers.
the citizens just follow the rules made by the oligarchy. they don't have a say. it sucks.
RUSSIA
To follow laws and vote in elections.
Law Abiding Citizens.
The Russian Orthodox Church
About as far as a US airliner to Russia. They will follow about the same ground track.
In a dictatorship the citizens don’t have rights. They are told what to do, where to live. In Stalin’s Russia if he wanted a person with a particular skill he would send his state police to go get them. Often they were never seen again. In the 1990’s in Romania to have a typewriter a person needed government permission.
they therefore had to follow that law
rule citizens will be easy!