Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 28 – Valery
Fedorov, director general of the VTsIOM polling agency, says that the people of
the Russian Federaaation “have become a much more ‘varied’ and heterogeneous
society,” a development that frightens many of them and leads them to want
“unification and the destruction of this diversity.”
In an interview taken by Vladimir
Rudakov and posted on the “Profile” portal yesterday, Fedorov compared the
situation in the late Soviet Union when his polling agency was founded in 1987
and the very different situation in the Russian Federation in the year just
passed (www.profile.ru/article/obshchestvo-kotoroe-boitsya-samogo-sebya-73786),
Asked to compare the situation among
Russians in 1987 and that among them now, Fedorov that in the first year,
“despite the total deficit and other daily life problems, it seemed to people
that [they] were moving forward to freedom and the light and that in the future
all would only be well because the worse was already in the past.”
In short, that was a time “of great
illusions and great hopes,” but “now [Russians] are experiencing a time of
pragmatism,” a time “when no one believes words or hopes either for a great
country or a wide party or a far-sighted leader.” Instead, as polls show,
people rely on themselves and on “a narrow circle of relatives and the closest
friends.”
In addition, in the earlier year,
Fedorov says, Russians “were full of pride for our great power which if not
everyone loved at least all took it into account. Yes, we did not have
sausages, but we were flying in the cosmos and without us not a single tank in
Europe could move from where it was parked.”
“But today, [Russians] think” that
they are not an object of interest for anyone and that “no one takes [them]
into account.
A third change is that earlier
people thought that “life whether you liked it or not was more or less
understandable and programmed for many decades ahead. This pleased the majority,” but now, “each
creates his own fate and the majority doesn’t like that” because one has to
take responsibility for what happens and not complain if things go wrong.”
Moreover, Fedorov argues, “the
‘higher plan,’ the ideal dimension of thought has disappeared. People in the
USSR thought that one had to live for the achievement of high ideals, for
building things up.” But “today instead of this, there is emptiness. The old ideals have been trampled in the
dirt, and the new have been discredited.”
Even more important, the VTsIOM head
says, Russians “have become much more ‘varied’ and a more heterogeneous
society. In Soviet times, an engineer
and a representative of the party nomenklatura lived on more or less the same
amount of money.” But now “class and
property” differentiation has “grown sharply.”
Initially, Russians reacted to this
with irony as with their talk about “new Russians” in the 1990s. But now, this
variety has become fixed and it offends many.” Consequently, many feel a pull
toward “unification and toward the destruction or at least the reduction or
camouflage of this diversity.”
“It has turned out,” Fedorov says,
that “society is afraid of itself, of its varied and internal differentiation.”
On the one hand, many are angry about a regime that has allowed this diversity
to emerge. But on the other, others see any push for change as reflecting not
society as a whole but only narrow group interests.
The regime has been able to exploit
that attitude and the fact that federal elections will not take place for
another four years. The protest leaders cannot wait, and they must thus work
for change outside of the electoral system.
The only way they can succeed is if the authorities fail to appear to
respond to broad social demands or if they make serious mistakes.
That explains, Fedorov concludes,
why the Kremlin is now working to present itself as a serious opponent of
corruption, and it also explains why the population wants someone to be
punished, albeit “not in the spirit of 1937.” Which side is going to win out
depends then on the accidents of history rather than on some easily
identifiable long-term trend.
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