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RE: Why Putin Wins

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RE: Why Putin Wins
by Lost at 1:06 pm EST, Nov 8, 2007

noteworthy wrote:

What should be done if one can-not accept the Byzantine system of power? Retreat into the catacombs? Wait until enough energy for another revolt has been accumulated? Try to hurry along revolt, thereby posing another "orange threat," which Putin and his allies have used, since the 2004 Ukrainian elections, to frighten the people and themselves? Attempt to focus on the demand for honest elections? Carry on painstaking educational work, in order to gradually change citizens' views?

Each person will have to decide in his or her own way. I imagine -- with both sorrow and certainty -- that the Byzantine system of power has triumphed for the foreseeable future in Russia. It's too late to remove it from power by a normal democratic process, for democratic mechanisms have been liquidated, transformed into pure imitation. I am afraid that few of us will live to see the reinstatement of freedom and democracy in Russia. Nevertheless, we should keep in mind that "the mole of history burrows away unnoticed."

RE-instatement? More romanticism. A complete fantasy of the west. Freedom never existed in Russia.

"You're free! You have no money to act on this freedom! Oligarchs stole everything! Rejoice!"

RE: Why Putin Wins


 
 
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