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In 1812, Napoleon Bonaparte led the largest army Europe had ever seen into Russia, convinced that victory was inevitable. This video examines how Napoleon’s overconfidence shaped the psychology of obedience inside the Grande Armée—and why certainty, more than strategy, carried hundreds of thousands of soldiers toward disaster. Rather than focusing on tactics or weather alone, this story explores how absolute belief becomes institutional power. It shows how military hierarchy transformed doubt into weakness, how obedience replaced individual judgment, and how psychological submission allowed catastrophic decisions to proceed without resistance. By tracing the invasion of Russia through letters, journals, and archival records, this video reveals how certainty creates compliance, how information that contradicts authority becomes invisible, and how systems built on obedience can turn failure into necessity. This is not only a story about Napoleon. It is a study of authority, obedience, and institutional psychology—and why humans continue to follow leaders even when evidence suggests they should stop. If you are interested in how power shapes belief, how overconfidence spreads through institutions, and how obedience can override reason, this history explains why the Russian campaign unfolded the way it did.