To be real, I really would like to snag a bottle for myself. Preferably a bottle of Khvanchkara.
News article from Reuters, direct link to website
TBILISI, May 29 (Reuters) - Tangled cobwebs dangle from the ceiling in dim light and a pleasant, musky sweetness pervades the air in this repository of a precious wine collection, once owned by Georgia's most infamous son, Josef Stalin.
The Georgian government, which owns the roughly 40,000 French and Georgian rarities, unsealed the wine vault for the first time this week in the capital Tbilisi.
It plans to auction off the collection, some of which dates from the early 19th century, and use the funds to open a wine education school in Georgia.
Irakli Gilauri, the owner of Gilauri Wines who worked with Georgia's agriculture ministry on the project, said the auction would help to "put Georgia on the collectors' map".
The South Caucasus country sells itself as the birthplace of wine, with archaeological evidence demonstrating a continuous wine-making tradition stretching back 8,000 years.
Stalin, who was born in Georgia and led the Soviet Union from 1924 until his death in 1953, was an enthusiastic wine drinker and collector.
His trove includes wine from Bordeaux's most famous estates that were once owned by Russia's Tsar Alexander III and his son Nicholas II. The Soviets seized the Imperial Romanov collection after the 1917 Russian Revolution, and Stalin became its guardian, slowly adding his favourite Georgian varieties.
Peering into the dust-covered bottles at the amber liquid inside, collector Victor Chen, who travelled to Tbilisi from Dallas, Texas, was excited by what he saw.
"I feel like you're Indiana Jones opening up a cave: it could be nothing, it could be something," he said, referring to the fictional swashbuckling archaeologist from the film franchise.
"There's not many things that are still historical moments at this point. And this could be one of them."
I'm of the opinion personally that theres nothing wrong with the people who fight and win the revolution from enjoying the luxuries they seize a bit. I mean what are you going to do with 40,000 wine bottles? Stand on the street and be like, "Hey, anybody want some wine? Get your wine here! I promise I'm not trying to poison you! I just have a bunch of random wines I'm giving away!"
It would be like if American had a revolution. Most of these huge mcmansions aren't going to work as public housing. So you can let them sit empty, demolish perfectly functional housing, or let revolutionary war heros live in them. I forget the term but theres this term for like communists that obsess over being poor. Like everyone has to live in barracks. It's the thing that China rejected outright. There is nothing inherently wrong with abundance or luxury. The thing wrong with it is that in capitalism is is gained by exploiting others and is at the expense of their basic needs. But if the luxury already exists theres no reason people can't enjoy it. And if you have the spare resources to both have luxurious things and to raise 800 million people out of poverty like China did then your allowed to have some nice things too.