The Tucker Carlson Show - Tucker Carlson - TC Shorts: The Moscow Subway Station Aired: 2024-02-14 Duration: 01:44 === Metro Miracles (01:44) === [00:00:00] One of the ways you understand a society is through its infrastructure, the places where people gather, the places where they go to travel. [00:00:06] You've got a lot of people in one place, it tells you a lot about the people. [00:00:09] So with that in mind, we're standing in front of the Kyivskaya metro station and there's a train station next to it. [00:00:14] Now the metro station was built by Joseph Stalin 70 years ago. [00:00:18] And the question is, how's it doing now, after 70 years? [00:00:23] So we went into it to take a look, and what we found shocked us. [00:00:28] Now, that's not an endorsement of Stalin, who was bad, obviously, nor is it an endorsement of the current president, Vladimir Putin. [00:00:34] You may not like him either. [00:00:36] But it doesn't change the reality of what we saw or, more precisely, didn't see. [00:00:41] There's no graffiti. [00:00:42] There's no filth. [00:00:43] There's no foul smells. [00:00:44] There are no bums or drug addicts or rapists or people waiting to push you onto the train tracks and kill you. [00:00:50] No. [00:00:51] It's perfectly clean and orderly. [00:00:54] And how do you explain that? [00:00:56] We're not even going to guess. [00:00:57] That's not our job. [00:00:59] We're only going to ask the question. [00:01:00] And if your response is to shout at us slogans dumber than the slogans we used to call Soviet and mock, that's not really an answer. [00:01:10] How does Russia, a country we're told is a gas station with nuclear weapons, have a subway station that normal people use to get to work and home every single day that's nicer than anything in our country? [00:01:23] We're not going to speculate. [00:01:26] We're just going to raise the question and wait for someone in charge to give us an answer. [00:01:30] What is the answer? [00:01:31] So we'll stop the lecture and let you take a look for yourself at what the Kievskaya metro station in Moscow, Russia looks like today, February 2024, in the middle of a war.