Kamil Galeev Profile picture
Jun 12 24 tweets 9 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
Very good thread, I actually mostly agree with what is said here. Still, I will outline my own perspective on it:

First, it is of crucial importance to understand that the "popular uprising", generally speaking, is not a category of politics. It is a category of *theology* 🧵
We often see the debates on whether this or that upheaval constituts an "uprising" or a "coup". But the truth is that a successful uprising usually has at least an element of a military coup in it. If the military/paramilitary stands united for the regime, the regime will stand
In the popular perception a revolution is a miracle, a magic, when the impossible happens: the people defeat the regime. Hence, its theological significance. Credo quia absurdum

The element of absurdity is very important. If it is not absurd, it won't make a miracle Image
Consequently, criticising a revolt, usually a successful revolt as a "coup" is basically pointing out that it is not a true miracle. True miracle should be absurd and what happened there is not absurd, so it is not a revolution. It does not meet our strict theological standards Image
That is why differentiating *successful* revolts as either a popular uprising or a coup makes little sense outside of the field of political theology. If it was successful, it had both elements in it.

It wouldn't work with just one Image
Like having an angry mob in Paris is nice. But to actually take the Bastille you may need the French Guard. Having an angry mob in St Petersburg is nice, too. But you probably won't overthrow the regime without the St Petersburg garrison and the nearly based Baltic Navy Image
Popular will is not a category of political science, but of political theology. The former deals with mechanics, the latter - with miracles. These two are inherently contradictory. So, if you pay too much attention to the mechanics, the miracle may look less miraculous Image
I personally very much like Ivan Vladimirov's caricatures on the 1917 revolution and the Civil war. They visualise what you can read in so many diaries and memories of the era. Not so much the popular upheaval as the people in grey coats running amok

See tipolog.livejournal.com/23449.html Image
An idea that civilians in any numbers can defeat the organised military force if this force stands united behind the regime is purely delusional. If we don't see it, that is because we are used to think in categories of theology and ignore the mechanics Image
So let's talk about the mechanics

There is another theological category that only seems to be political. It is the "democracy vs autocracy" distinction. When framed in binary terms, it has little usage except to distinguish the saved from the damned, the lambs from the goats Image
If we presume that:

Autocrat = damned
Democrat = saved

discussions like this start making sense. Putin, Erdogan, Duda (Kaczynski?) are all autocrats -> will burn in hell

There's nothing wrong with this kind of thinking. It's just that it is theology

nytimes.com/2023/06/06/opi… Image
If we are theologists, then what we should care about is probably about drawing a correct line between the lambs and the goats. Hence, the heavy focus on the normative over the positive

And that is exactly how much of the media and often the academic discourse looks like Image
So let's forget about the normative for a while and focus on the positive. Under normal circumstances, the transfer of power comes as a result of the civil war.

Democracy is supposed to provide an alternative to the civil war - a mechanism of peaceful transition of power Image
So the key test for democracy is: does this mechanism work? And, as we cannot answer it otherwise than based on the past, what we should be asking is - did it ever work? In other words:

"Did the supreme executive power in this country ever change as a result of elections?" Image
"Did the supreme executive power ever change as a result of elections?"

Poland - Yes
Turkey - Yes
Russia - No

The prospect of the supreme executive power in Russia changing as a result of elections is purely hypothetical (not to say made up). It never materialised in reality Image
Russia does not have elections and never had. Elections have a least a chance of the supreme executive power changing = the sitting President losing. As the sitting President in Moscow never loses, then it is not elections at all, but rather the acclammations. A ritual Image
The foreign analysts' autistic obsession with "approval" is just laughable. Approval matters when you have to be elected. But when you only need to be acclaimed it does not matter much. Yeltsin was successfully acclaimed with about 6% rate of approval

"Approval" does not matter Image
The undervalued fact:

In 1999, Putin was a nobody elevated from nothing. Totally unknown, having little reputation or credibility even in the security apparatus. Not to say in the masses who just did not know who he was. With the supreme power backing him, it did not matter Image
The Putin's rule is not an aberration from normality. It is the normality. Because the normality is:

1. The acting ruler never failed to be elected
2. Therefore, Russia never had elections, only acclamations
3. Consequently, it has no working alternative to the civil war Image
When the Russian oppositionaries discuss the prospect of the "fair elections", keep in mind that they discuss something purely hypothetical that has never materialised in reality

An alternative to the civil war in form of "elections" does not exist here and never did Image
"Did the supreme executive power ever change as a result of elections?"

So in other words: "Have you ever had any elections at all?"

Is not a bad litmus test for the democratic institutions of a country. If the answer is no, they probably do not exist and never did Image
If the democratic institutions never existed in the first place, then building such institutions will require a fundamental change, rather than replacing a bad ruler with a good one. Those who advocate for the latter solution are hardly aiming to change the system
They are most probably aiming to keep it intact.

The end of thread 🧵
PS As @elonmusk or the managerial hivemind in general are suppressing my outreach here, I will be gradually increasing my presence on other platforms. If you want to read my content, add yourself to the email list in the description of the profile

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More from @kamilkazani

Jun 8
You unironically have some logical reasoning capabilities. Yes, that is exactly what happened. If in the 1960s the USSR still tried to compete, by the 1970s it essentially gave up. Consequently, Western imports comprised the ever increasing share of its high end consumption Image
By the 1970s Soviets could machine precise parts -> produce sophisticated weaponry either:

a) conventionally = essentially manually
b) on imported NC/CNC tools

That's it basically
And "manually" is not nearly as sexy as it sounds. First, supply of machinists that can do precision machining manually is highly inelastic. There's simply no way to train more in the short term perspective. At any given moment their quantity is given and you can't increase it
Read 5 tweets
Jun 8
Retrospectively, the greatest crime of the Western European governments was not cutting the supplies of the metal-cutting, specifically machining equipment, machine parts and expendables into the Russian Federation. Would this happen, the war would not have lasted that long
It's kinda ironic that the war impoverishing Europe is critically dependent upon the Western European (German, Austrian, Swiss, Italian, etc.) supplies to continue Image
But first and foremost German. Contrary to the popular opinion, the Russian military manufacturing base was not formed by the mainland Chinese import as China was unable to satisfy the demand of the Russian military on the high end equipment

The U.S. allies could Image
Read 5 tweets
Jun 6
To be fair, USSR was also famous for its scorched earth tactics. In August 1941, Soviets blown up the Dnieper Dam, aiming to halt the German advance. Tends of thousands civilians & Soviet soldiers were killed as a result Image
Btw this is the Colonel Hugh Lincoln Cooper, of the US Army Corps of Engineers who supervised construction of the dam. Soviet industrialisation was not just planned by the American industrialists: it was managed and supervised directly Image
More on the American role in the Soviet industrialisation:

Read 4 tweets
May 27
New Industrial Power + New Industrial Power

is structurally different from:

New Industrial Power + Old Industrial Power

Russia and China are too similar in too many important respects. They share too many chokepoints (though to a different degree). They're kinda the same
If Russia was looking for alternatives to Western Europe, it would look at Japan - the old industrial power. If Japan was politically problematic (as it is), it would look at Taiwan and South Korea, new industrial powers on the very advanced stages of their learning process
Read 4 tweets
May 27
As I said previously, there is a difference between the:

a) argumentative space
b) real space

You can "reorganise and be self-sufficient" in the former, but not in the latter. In reality, the option of "self-sufficiency" just doesn't exist
The USSR was never "self-sufficient". The initial Stalinist industrialisation was planned and managed by Americans, and based on the import of American + to the lesser extent German equipment.

1920-1930s - US + Germany
WIth the start of the Cold War, America semi-excluded itself from the Soviet market. So it was monopolised by the Western Europe. E.g. in the 1970s Western Europe counted for like 90% of Soviet imports, Western Germany alone counting for 45%

1950-1970s - Germany + Rest of Europe
Read 6 tweets
May 22
Opposition Trap

On Twitter, you see not dumb people falling into the Grilling Trap

There are two problems with grilling

1. It gives you cheap dopamine -> very addictive

2. It destroys your brain

In this regard Grilling Trap is just a particular case of the Opposition Trap🧵
Grilling is a social game taking place in the argumentative space. Now the thing about the argumentative space is that it is not identical to the real space. A true zealot of course, believes that his own argumentative space is (more or less) identical to the real space

It's not
There is always a gap between what makes a good argument and what makes a good decision. It may be wider or narrower, depending on circumstances, but it always exists

Making a decision =/= justifying a decision

First is optimised for the real space, second for the argumentative
Read 16 tweets

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