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Michael's avatar

Being Russian and actually having recently been to Russia - my best analysis is that Russia and perception of Russia in the West is currently undergoing a mini version of what the West is undergoing itself and its perception of Ukraine conflict. Let me unpack. I firmly believe that Western actions in Ukraine, and its perception of Ukraine, are determined by internal Western matters, i.e. an interplay between Western economy, Western lobbying groups, and Western problems. Ukraine and perception of Ukraine is important only insofar they affect the above.

Now, current set up in Russia is such that a large portion of the economy and lobby groups attached to it are getting killed by high interest rates. It is a very real problem, obviously, but as the author points out, it's manageable. However, this situation is unbearable for those lobby groups, and they create an artificial reality/narrative, exactly the same way their counterparts on the West do with regards to Ukraine. And since this narrative plugs in seamlesly into what those Western counterparts NEED to hear in order to continue pushing their interests in Ukraine, it gets lifted wholesale out of Russian discourse and presented as something real in the Western discourse. It is not real, it is simulacrum squared, reality's cousin twice removed,

It is a tale

Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,

Signifying nothing.

Naturally, the same happens on the Russian side, when bits and pieces of Western narratives, created for internal purposes, fit current interests of this or that power group with control over some sort of media.

Sorry for the long winded post, I didn't intend for it to read as a piece out of a French philopher text.

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vohl's avatar

Our foreign policy vis a vis Russia is characterized by a lack of understanding as to the size, wealth, and national character of Russia. (In that order.) This failure has been firmly entrenched here for over one hundred years. In our common American government perception Russia is a nasty little central European country like Hungary or Bulgaria. Decade after decade we miss he point. We got into Afghanistan because we failed to realize that when Russia met defeat there it was not due to any inherent weakness on Russia's part. Size does matter. We simply and mistakenly thought, "We can do better."

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