Toby Venables Profile picture
Feb 27, 2022 24 tweets 8 min read Read on X
We’ve all seen Putin’s bizarre references to the ‘de-nazification’ of Ukraine govt. A couple of days ago, in response, I tweeted ‘De-nazification begins at home’. But this wasn’t just empty 'back atcha' rhetoric.
It’s time we talked about Putin advisor Aleksandr Dugin. 1/22 Image
This is Dugin. He has been called ‘Putin’s Rasputin’, and not just because of the beard. He wrote the literal playbook that has shaped Putin’s foreign policy. In essence, it’s Putin’s Mein Kampf; everything laid out years before in black and white for all to see. 2/22 Image
First, a little about Dugin himself. In addition to advising Duma members and Putin, he was a founding member of the National Bolshevik Party, the National Bolshevik Front and the Eurasia Party. 3/22 Image
This is the symbol of the National Bolshevik Party. Its slogan is: ‘Russia is everything, the rest is nothing!’ 4/22 Image
And this is a symbol for National Bolshevism, designed by Dugin himself. The points of reference are clear. In his writings he has expressed admiration for the Waffen SS and says he seeks to establish a ‘radically revolutionary and consistent, fascist fascism’ in Russia. 5/22 Image
He believes the internet should be banned, and has said that chemistry and physics are demonic sciences. 6/22 Image
Dugin also founded the Eurasia Youth Union, which has carried out acts of vandalism on Ukrainian national monuments. Both the movement and Dugin himself are banned from Ukraine. 7/22 Image
If the term ‘Eurasia’ sounds familiar, it is perhaps because you’ll find it in Orwell’s 1984. For Dugin, however, this dystopian novel isn’t a warning - it’s a model to aspire to. 8/22 Image
Not surprisingly for an old Soviet philosopher, perhaps, Dugin is anti-capitalist. He is also anti-liberal, anti-democracy, pro-dictatorship. For him, Stalin, not Lenin, is the great ideological hero. 9/22 Image
Like Putin, he believes the breakup of the Soviet Union was a disaster. Through his writings, he proposes the re-establishment of the Soviet-era empire, and beyond - ‘Greater Russia’ - by force. 10/22 Image
In 2008, when Putin invaded Georgia (using almost identical political and military strategy is we are seeing now), Dugin urged him to keep up the momentum by attacking Ukraine. 11/22 Image
Dugin is also a hero and inspiration for the Western far-right. White supremacists and alt-right leaders at Charlottesville idolise him. 12/22 newsweek.com/leaders-charlo…
In 2008, he met and talked with Trump advisor and far-right activist Steve Bannon. If you wondered why Trump was soft on Putin, wonder no longer. 13/22 Image
Dugin’s written over 30 books, but by far the most significant is 1997’s Foundations of Geopolitics. This has been used as a textbook in the Academy of the General Staff of the Russian military. It has also been recommended that it be taught in Russian schools 14/22 Image
Foundations of Geopolitics sets out very specific aims for establishing the 'Greater Russia'. For example, advocates cutting off the UK, politically, from the rest of Europe. This has been achieved. 15/22
It advocates the destabilization of the West using disinformation and subversion. This has long been underway under Putin’s leadership. 16/22 Image
It advocates making use of the West’s dependence on Russian oil and gas to exert pressure. This has been a concern for years, and is undoubtedly hindering sanctions. 17/22 time.com/6151493/russia…
It advocates that Ukraine should be annexed and all trace of national identity erased. This is being attempted now. 18/22 Image
It doesn’t end there. Dugin advocates bringing most of Europe into the Russian fold in some manner, including not only obvious candidates such as Ukraine, Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, but also Finland, Romania, North Macedonia, Serbia, ‘Serbian Bosnia’ and Greece. 19/22 Image
There is a quote often (erroneously) attributed to Goebbels: ‘Accuse the other side of that which you are guilty’. It’s nonetheless a common tactic within the far-right - one used again and again by Trump (‘Fake news!’) 20/22 Image
It also explains all of Putin’s accusations regarding Ukraine - neo-nazism, threats to security, subversion, supposed expansionism... All these accurately describe Putin’s own actions and motivations. 21/22 Image
And what all this makes clear is that if not prevented, Putin will not stop at Ukraine, any more than Hitler stopped at Austria, or Czechoslovakia, or Poland. 22/22 Image
Thanks for all the incredible support for this thread. I am trying to reply/follow back but it’s been a bit crazy… One thing’s for sure; lots more people know about Dugin.
Another perspective on this: ft.com/content/2917c3…

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More from @TobyVenables

Nov 17, 2021
"These people have come to our country and abused British values, abused the values of the fabric of our country and our society," says Priti Patel.

[THREAD 1/6]

bbc.co.uk/news/uk-593089…
"And as a result of that, there’s a whole industry that thinks it’s right to defend these individuals that cause the most appalling crimes against British citizens, devastating their lives, blighting communities – and that is completely wrong." [2/6]
These are the words of the UK's Home Secretary.

The UK has had a Conservative govt and Conservative Home Secretary since 2010.

Emad Al Swealmeen lost his asylum claim around 2014. [3/6]
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Jun 2, 2020
Watch Trump's speech from last night. Note how he mentions – with emphasis – 2nd Amendment rights. Why single out protection of this right (to bear arms) and not the 1st Amendment (freedom of speech)?

There is an answer, but you won't like it. [1/11]
bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-…
Throughout his presidency, and in the campaign before that, Trump has given the nod to violent action as a means for dealing with situations. Punch 'em in the face. Grab 'em by the pussy.

Violence as an acceptable solution to a political problem is a hallmark of fascism. [2/11]
OK, so no surprises there.

But in doing so he has also been signalling to everyone - his supporters especially - that such action is justifiable. He's giving permission to punch in the face, or grab by the pussy. Or kneel on the neck until they're dead. [3/11]
Read 11 tweets
May 29, 2019
1. Fascism is a form of authoritarian nationalism which regards democracy as obsolete and seeks instead to establish a corporatist dictatorship - usually based around the idolising of a single individual.
2. It establishes itself by characterising existing systems as broken or unrepresentative of the people, and claiming itself as the only true representative of the people's will.
3. In the case of Nazism, it also tied national identity to a notion of ethnic purity, uniting 'true Germans' around a fear or mistrust of 'foreign' or 'impure' influences, upon which were heaped the entire blame for all individual and collective woes.
Read 5 tweets
May 21, 2019
I will admit, I cheered when a certain tiny hooligan got a shakeover a while ago. Whilst not condoning the throwing of things at people, the thrower was harassed and surrounded by 10 Tommybots, so it seemed proportionate - like a woman tipping her drink over a sex pest at a bar.
Then another man-of-the Paypal who had bravely vowed to don khaki (not really - he'll get someone else to do that bit) got shaked. I couldn't resist a smile, but this was different. It's been pointed out that harmless though it may be, it is technically an assault. Which it is.
Some have warned of escalation, and of acts like this providing the far rightskis with an excuse to hit back - which in the case of Milky Yobinson, it did (he responded by punching the shake thrower).
Read 11 tweets
Mar 28, 2019
Some people, tapping the (understandable) frustration with Parliament, are pushing the notion that Parliament itself is the problem.

This is the most dangerous issue we now face; the tip of the iceberg that will deliver Boris's 'titanic success' - ie dictatorship.
Attack MPs and the way they vote all you like - but if you attack Parliament itself, you're playing into the hands of those who have repeatedly sought to overrule it (May & Co) and supporting their push to make it irrelevant.

Next come emergency powers. And then we're fucked.
You'll no doubt hear many shouting about how Parliament is 'broken' in coming days. If, through your frustration with Brexit, meaningless votes etc you find yourself cheering on the overthrow of that troublesome body, just know what it is you're cheering into being.
Read 6 tweets

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