I will describe here who Ukrainians are and why they are resisting. This resistance has very deep historical roots, and are based upon a specific Ukrainian political culture. A thread 0/8
Ukrainian political culture is bottom-up and very decentralized. It starts from a community, which Ukrainians call “hromada”. Hromada – a key word for Ukrainian political philosophy since at least 19th century, f.e. philosophy of Mykhaylo Drahomanov 1/8
Drahomanov, trained as historian of Ancient Greece and Rome, made his philosophy of hromada based upon Greek (Aristotelian) philosophy of a city/polis. For him, politics starts from a local community, state emerges as integration of these communities, “hromada of hromadas”. 2/8
This is a sharp difference to Russian political culture which is centralized, and top-down. Unity of Russian politics is possible only around a tsar, a tyrant. In Ukraine, people are always opposed to a tsar. Zelensky is an anti-tsar: too close to the people, “one of us" 3/8
Why Ukrainian army is successful now? Because this decentralized spirit coincides with the Western techniques of military organization that Ukraine has adopted in its cooperation with NATO. Ukrainian mid-level commanders have much more freedom to act than Russian commanders. 4/8
Self-governance reform implemented since 2014 gave more powers to mayors. Mayors showed themselves positively now, organizing defense of cities. Interestingly this brings Ukraine closer to a medieval “princely” times of Kyivan Rus’, decentralized community of city-states 5/8
A leitmotiv of Ukrainian literature, historiography, philosophy is opposition to the centralized idea of state and universe. Skovoroda, Shevchenko, Kostomarov, Drahomanov, Ukrainian socialists of early 20th century. The key idea was a) anti-autocracy, b) self-organization 6/8
Also look at the spirit of freedom and emancipation of Ukrainian female writers, from Marko Vovchok to Lesia Ukrainka – female emancipation and anti-patriarchal trend was very early, in 19th century 7/8
to conclude: this freedom-loving, decentralized, anti-tyrannical spirit was in Ukraine for centuries. This is very different from Russia. Naturally, Ukrainians understand that defending this modus vivendi is an existential fight 8/8

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More from @yermolenko_v

Apr 7
My attempt to understand why Russians hate / dehumanize Ukrainians so much, -- which is a way to understand one of the major causes of this war. Thread 1/10
Ukrainian testimonies of meeting with "Russian soldiers" during the occupation are often pointing at Buryats, Bashkirs, Chechens, etc. This is a practical example to understand: Russians is not a nation, but an empire, which collected various ethnicities inside its body 2/10
Its only capacity to exist is to strip all "constituent nations" of their identity and culture, calling them "Russians". But instead of creating a "melting pot" in which these nations would enrich each other, it created a society in which humans are must forget their roots 3/10
Read 10 tweets
Apr 5
putin is worse than hitler. Here's why. A thread. 0/5
hitler was building his perverse hierarchy of human beings, in which some deserve to live, other don't. putin has no hierarchy of beings: no human life matters for him. Not even lives of his own soldiers. Not even lives of "Russian-speaking people" he declares to protect. 1/5
Nazi crimes were crimes of genocide, with the most horrible of all, the Holocaust. Extermination of a particular group of people, of all members of this group. On the contrary, 2/5
Read 6 tweets
Mar 18
Why Russia is a terrorist state. Thread. -- No place is safe in Ukraine now. You can move to Lviv but still be bombarded with missiles. You can leave your city for a datcha but then your datcha is destroyed by a Russian bomb 1/5
Destroying the space of safety is the key goal of terrorism. Nobody nowhere is safe: that's terrorist's message 2/5
I remember telling my international friends since 2014 that Russia is erasing the line between state and terorrism. This was difficult to explain because for many of my friends terrorism is against the state, against the system. How can a state be a terorrist? 3/5
Read 5 tweets
Mar 17
Thead: neo-Nazism and democracy. -- The very concept of "neo-Nazi" in Western democratic discourse is misleading. It focuses on "anti-systemic" and often marginal groups wirh their cult of all kinds of fuehrers but very little capacity to change something. 1/4
By focusing on these groups as key threat, democratic liberal discourse has been misleading itself. It was living in 1989 spirit and believing that liberal democracy will win at any circumstances, we just only have to finish with these "far-right marginals" 2/4
but the problem is deeper. Real "Neo-Nazi" is not an anti-systemic non-conformist; it is systemic and conformist. Nazism is about building state mechanisms of mass extermination. With Russia's war in Ukraine state-led systems of mass extermination are possible again. 3/4
Read 4 tweets
Mar 17
Thread: Russia as a wounded empire. 1/
Russia repeats earlier experience by Mussolini's Italy, Hitler's Germany or Franco's Spain: a syndrom of a wounded empire 2/
the wounded empire thinks that it lost its territories and past "grandeur", considers this as anormality and tries to regain them at any price. They have obsession with the past, with this "great again" thing 3/
Read 5 tweets
Mar 14
Thread on Russian perception of "Nazism". -- 1. For Russian propaganda, "Nazi" equals to national; every national movement opposing to Russian assimilation, is called "Nazi" 1/
Being Ukrainian, speaking Ukrainian language, supporting it, is already sign of "Nazism" or "Banderism". 2/
Same with other nations, for example Crimean Tatars or even Belarusians 3/
Read 7 tweets

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