On April 20, Russian MP from the Liberal-Democratic Party Sergey Leonov suggested forcing the Ukrainian POWs to donate their blood.
His exact framing is very interesting:
"There is an offer for the Ukrainian POWs to become the compulsory (в обязательном порядке) blood donours"
It's quite possible that the Liberal Democratic Party MPs are disoriented after the death of their leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky and try to keep relevance with the face of their party gone. Many perceived Zhirinovsky as "clown". And yet, Putin personally attended his funerals
Pretty much all of the Russian leadership attended his funerals. Putin, Medvedev, Kirienko, Shoigu, Naryshkin, etc. And yet, did you notice the difference between Putin and others? When Medvedev or Naryshkin approaches the body, the honorary guards are standing near the coffin
When Putin approaches the Zhirinovsky's coffin, there is no one around. Nobody is allowed near Putin. Even the honorary guards have to leave their places. That tells a lot about Putin's character. He is super cautious, suspicious and risk avoidant person
I will argue that Zhirinovsky is misunderstood. He wasn't a "clown" or an "idiot" as many presumed. He was a highly intelligent and educated person. He finished a reputable school ИСАА, The Institute of Asian and African Countries, majoring in Turkish language and literature
Zhirinovsky was a trained orientalist. And oriental studies were probably *the* main cadre pool of intellectuals for the state security & intelligence. That's why so many Russian rulers have a degree of a "historian-orientalist". Like another trained Turkologist Dmitry Peskov
Due to this intelligence headhunting practice, a degree of a historian-orientalist (историк-востоковед) is a good marker of intelligence agents among the Russian elites. A degree of a philologist can be another marker. Consider Sechin, a Philologist of the Romance languages
In this particular case, a Philologist of the Romance languages means "translator from the Portuguese". The USSR was heavily involved in African conflicts in general and in the wars in the Portuguese colonies such as Angola and Mozambique in particular. Sechin served in Angola
There are *lots* of great sources on the Russian ruling class. But you need to contextualise them to understand their meaning correctly. Consider a great interview with Sergey Dorenko - a person largely responsible for boosting Putin. Another philologist of Spanish and Portuguese
"We are governed by the very enlightened people. You just don't know it. We are not governed by the Chechens, yet. We are governed by the St Petersburg intelligentsia - lawyers and linguists... Once you'll cry over the linguists"
That's an amazing* insight. But you need to contextualize it in order to understand correctly. It does not mean that Russia is governed by the humanitarian intelligentsia per se. But it gives a lot of insight about the social elevators that brought up the current rulers of Russia
Why did the Oriental & African Studies majors serve as social elevators back then? It was largely a side effect of the Cold War. With so many hot and cold proxy wars going all over the globe the USSR needed to train orientalists and incorporate them into the intelligence
Intelligence and state security was not the Soviet elite. The Party nomenklatura was. Intelligence was the counterelite. And for practical reasons, such as waging the Cold War, the counterelite had to recruit those who majored in the Third World. They joined the elevator going up
It's not that the humanities grads are overrepresented among the Russian ruling class. It is that studies of the Third World were considered strategically important by the intelligence. That's why they recommended there their proteges and recruited heavily among those majors
As a general rule any Oriental or African studies major who wanted could pretty easily join the broadly understood security apparatus and integrate into the Soviet system on pretty decent conditions. And with the state security renaissance of 1990s those grads became the elite
I've already posted this video of Putin and Sechin moving to Moscow in 1996 for their first job in the federal government. But I'll post again. I like it very much. Notice Putin's humility and his name-dropping manner, like "I know Boris Abramovich [Berezovsky], too"
Those who studied the Third World were easily incorporated to the system. After 1998 when what remained of the Party nomenklatura decided to give all the power to the intelligence, some of these guys literally skyrocketed. They had no reason to fight the system
Now who had the reason to fight the system? Well, those who were left out. Primarily those members of the Soviet ethnicities who studied their own cultures, languages, histories. National humanitarian intelligentsia of literally any culture and ethnicity. Consider the Caucasus
It was the humanitarian intelligentsia that led nationalist movements all over Caucasus. Elcibey studied medieval Azeri poetry. Ter-Petrosyan studied old Armenian manuscripts. Only a Georgian president Gamsakhurdia was somewhat of an exception. He studied & translated Shakespeare
You can read a more elaborate argument here. I very much like Derluguian - he's an author with deep and very specific expertise on Caucasus. One of his central argument is exactly about the disenchanted hommes de lettres being the driver of Caucasian wars and unrests
Paradoxically enough the argument about the native humanitarian intelligentsia studying *domestic* culture and history being the driver of chaos and unrest is true not only regarding the minorities but about Russians, too. Consider Strelkov, a grad of History & Archives Institute
Let's sum up. The argument about the government or a political system being overthrown by "the people" is not technically wrong. It's just too ideologically painted, normative and literally crusade-ish to work as a useful model. Don't do that!
Elites are not endangered by "the people", only by the counter elites. Some counter elite elements were incorporated in the Soviet system, sucg as the KGB. The KGB being a counter elite sounds less strange if you consider how many out of the box thinkers worked under its umbrella
If we reframe the KGB as the legitimate Soviet counter elite, it could be easier to understand why pretty much all of the plans of the radical economic reforms of 1990s were designed under its patronage and often with its funding
Still, there were lots of counter elites which could not be realistically incorporated into the system. Pretty much all of native humanitarian intelligentsia studying their own cultures was locked down on the social ladder without any realistic perspectives of social rise
It would be an exaggeration to say that it was the ethnic humanitarian intelligentsia that overthrew the USSR. Not quite. But it was a major factor of instability. And this general instability was a prerequisite for its future downfall
I think that analysts trying to predict the future of Russia may be focusing too much on the current elites. Yes, they hold power here and now. Will they hold it forever? Doubt. Analysts might be focusing less on the systemic counterelites who are well integrated into the regime
For example, Western think tanks might be focusing too much on Putin's courtiers, especially on those who launched successful PR campaigns in the West. Like Surkov. But they pay way less attention to the regional barons and interest groups. I think it's a mistake
As a general rule courtiers are strong only as long as the centralised regime is strong. The moment its power grip weakens, the balance of power gonna be renegotiated. It is the potential power redistributions that we miss overfocusing on the elites and ignoring the counterelites
What we pay almost no attention to however, is the non-systemic counterelites that have nearly zero influence within the current political regime. And yet it will be probably them who are gonna play the disproportionate role once the system gonna start spiralling into chaos
As a general rule, I think that political analysis and commentary is suffering from three problems. First of all, it's too normative and not descriptive enough. It focuses too much on BS categories like "democracy vs autocracy, "corruption", etc. That's mostly the moral crusade
Second, with a few exceptions it focuses on the current balance of power, resources, influence in a country or region. That's great. But this balance is changing quickly and sometimes very abruptly. And the final result almost always comes as a big surprise. Nobody saw it coming
Finally, I suspect that it might have a certain epistemological bias. Moscow with all its liberal and patriotic, pro-regime and anti-regime interest groups in incredibly overrepresented as the source of both lived experience and conceptual frameworks Western analysts rely on
This epistemological bias reflects a power asymmetry in the modern Russia, power being understood not only as the formal authority but also as the cultural hegemony. The epistemological bias is itself a reflection of the existing power balance. Which can be renegotiated. End of🧵
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For decades, any resistance to the Reaganomics has been suppressed using the false dichotomy: it is either “capitalism” (= which meant Reaganomics) or socialism, and socialism doesn’t work
Now, as there is the growing feeling that Reaganomics don’t work, the full rehabilitation of socialism looks pretty much inevitable
I find it oddly similar to how it worked in the USSR. For decades, the whole propaganda apparatus had been advancing the false dichotomy: it is either socialism, or capitalism (= meaning robber barons)
Now, as there is a growing feeling that the current model does not work, we must try out capitalism instead. And, as capitalism means robber barons, we must create robber barons
We have to distribute all the large enterprises between the organized crime members. This is the way
Truth is: the words like Rus/Russian had many and many ambiguous and often mutually exclusive meanings, and not only throughout history, but, like, simultaneously.
For example, in the middle ages, the word "Rus" could mean:
1. All the lands that use Church Slavonic in liturgy. That is pretty much everything from what is now Central Russia, to what is now Romania. Wallachians, being the speakers of a Romance language were Orthodox, and used Slavonic in church -> they're a part of Rus, too
2. Some ambiguous, undefined region that encompasses what is now northwest Russia & Ukraine, but does not include lands further east. So, Kiev & Novgorod are a part of Rus, but Vladimir (-> region of Moscow) isn't
These two mutually exclusive notions exist simultaneously
The greatest Western delusion about China is, and always has been, greatly exaggerating the importance of plan. Like, in this case, for example. It sounds as if there is some kind of continuous industrial policy, for decades
1. Mao Zedong dies. His successors be like, wow, he is dead. Now we can build a normal, sane economy. That means, like in the Soviet Union
2. Fuck, we run out of oil. And the entire development plan was based upon an assumption that we have huge deposits of it
3. All the prior plans of development, and all the prior industrial policies go into the trashbin. Because again, they were based upon an assumption that we will be soon exporting more oil than Saudi Arabia, and without that revenue we cannot fund our mega-projects
Yes. Behind all the breaking news about the capture of small villages, we are missing the bigger pattern which is:
The Soviet American war was supposed to be fought to somewhere to the west of Rhine. What you got instead is a Soviet Civil War happening to the east of Dnieper
If you said that the battles of the great European war will not be fought in Dunkirk and La Rochelle, but somewhere in Kupyansk (that is here) and Rabotino, you would have been once put into a psych ward, or, at least, not taken as a serious person
The behemoth military machine had been built, once, for a thunderbolt strike towards the English Channel. Whatever remained from it, is now decimating itself in the useless battles over the useless coal towns of the Donetsk Oblast
Yes, and that is super duper quadruper important to understand
Koreans are poor (don't have an empire) and, therefore, must do productive work to earn their living. So, if the Americans want to learn how to do anything productive they must learn it from Koreans etc
There is this stupid idea that the ultra high level of life and consumption in the United States has something to do with their productivity. That is of course a complete sham. An average American doesn't do anything useful or important to justify (or earn!) his kingly lifestyle
The kingly lifestyle of an average American is not based on his "productivity" (what a BS, lol) but on the global empire Americans are holding currently. Part of the imperial dynamics being, all the actually useful work, all the material production is getting outsourced abroad
Reading Tess of the d'Urbervilles. Set in southwest England, somewhere in the late 1800s. And the first thing you need to know is that Tess is bilingual. He speaks a local dialect she learnt at home, and the standard English she picked at school from a London-trained teacher
So, basically, "normal" language doesn't come out of nowhere. Under the normal conditions, people on the ground speak all the incomprehensible patois, wildly different from each other
"Regular", "correct" English is the creation of state
So, basically, the state chooses a standard (usually, based on one of the dialects), cleanses it a bit, and then shoves down everyone's throats via the standardized education
Purely artificial construct, of a super mega state that really appeared only by the late 1800s