Yuriy Akopov Profile picture
Mar 2, 2022 8 tweets 2 min read Read on X
I have spent some time last night reading Russian nationalist accounts (the well versed "intellectual" ones, not normie Putin fans), and here is a quick summary of what they think:
1. The war is expected to be over in days, or weeks at most. The main bulk of Ukrainian forces in the East is going to be encircled soon, and the main cities are already under siege. The losses are admitted to be "higher than expected", but it changes nothing.
2. The possibility of resistance after the active phase of war is dismissed, they are confident that after there is a change of power and Ukrainian activists are purged by military police, most people in Ukraine will come to their senses and accept the new reality.
4. The was is existential in a way that it is supposed to destroy the Ukrainian identity. The desired outcome seems to be not friendly Ukraine with a new government, but at least partial annexation with Ukrainian culture suppressed.
5. There is no talk of a nuclear or further wars yet in these circles. This so far can only be found (albeit quite easily) in 'normie' accounts.

Europe arming Ukraine is seen like a futile exercise (too little too late) rather than casus belli.
6. Sanctions. They are widely considered to be survivable thanks to preparations made since 2014, and the most severe ones are expected to be lifted soon after when Ukraine is defeated.

Russian billionaries forced to move to Russia with their money is considered to be great.
7. Autarky is believed to be good. The focus is mostly on tech with explanations how Yandex can provide everything Russia needs. Imports from China are expected to cover all reasonable needs in goods, and domestic manufacturing is expected to boom.
***
Overall, complete dehumanisation of Ukraine, dismissal rather than aggressive challenging of the West (yesterday's hegemon) and the start of a RU golden era.

I personally think they, alas, might be right about what will happen to UA and how soon. Less confident abt the rest.

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More from @y_akopov

Feb 13, 2023
The Met has recently changed a few artists in their collection previously labelled as 'Russian' to 'Ukrainian' basing on the fact they used to live or were born on the territory of modern Ukraine, and that has of course produced a lot of discourse: Image
My personal opinion on this move (which is ofc a political statement) is that it's difficult and really depends on the person in question. E.g. the modern political borders rule makes Immanuel Kant a Russian philosopher, but the opposite purism makes James Joyce a British writer.
For the 'grey area' example see the reaction when David Frost called Edmund Burke 'one of my country's great political philosophers' a few years ago.

In short, that change was of course politically motivated, but so is much of the pushback.
Read 4 tweets
Feb 9, 2023
Far from being the most popular route, but the number of Russians fleeing to the US via Mexico has become big enough to produce a few popular and detailed YouTube reports from people who successfully pulled that off. This is how it apparently works:
1. Fly to Mexico (tickets are often funded by Russian credit cards and loans you don't plan to pay)

2. Buy a cheap car (there are no checks by Mexico if you cross the border on a vehicle)

3. Having reached an American border post, turn yourself in (might require a few attempts)
After that you go to prison, but only for like a couple of weeks, and they you wait for a decision on your case for a year if not for longer. Now what makes it worthy in comparison to Europe is that in the meanwhile you can rent a property, buy a car, work and just live your life
Read 5 tweets
Nov 17, 2022
Recommendation algos boosting hate is not news, but today I have experienced a very clear case of that on what probably is a less than usual subject. So I've liked a random tweet (already mixed into my timeline, not posted by someone I follow) abt a cyclist vs. motorist road rage
It was an easy bait for me - I am a cyclist myself, and of course have experienced confrontations with motorists. So, there was an angry like.

Since that, around a dozen of tweets about abused cyclists and aggressive motorists being idiots have been inserted into my timeline!
It was very tempting to engage with each of these suggestions and get even more angry, then getting whipped up again by the algorithm receiving feedback and dialing it up even further.

I would probably have thought then this was indeed one of the biggest ongoing issues!
Read 4 tweets
Nov 16, 2022
I registered on Mastodon 2 years ago, and although I've been using it more or less actively only recently, I witnessed the progress and have to say it is simply a better app, technically, than Twitter is. Nearly every difference in features is, at least for me, an improvement.
It is completely usable and the only problem for an average user is having to choose a server to register on - but that is a one-off, and everyone would be choosing the same popular server anyway. What it lacks (and will never catch up at) is, of course, the same wide userbase.
That being said, for healthy people not chasing the current hot discourse and politics and simply interested in following their hobby topics (art, computing etc.) there is already enough content on Mastodon to sustain it. Only going to get better.
Read 5 tweets
Apr 16, 2022
I don't entirely agree with every point made there, but this is still a good and consistent thread. The problem of explanation is not an urgent one (too little too late), but it'll become increasingly more important after the war ends.
As a side point, how much 'art supplies' does one need to work in this style? Not implying it's bad at all - if anything, I'm a 'less is more' person - but this statement from The New Yorker (newyorker.com/magazine/2022/…) is indeed weird. ImageImage
It is a common problem (not only in the West) that Russian culture is seen as the only representative of the region, with other nations only existing as geographical locations. The cracks have started to show in the last few years, but not fast enough:
Read 5 tweets

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