Staunton,
January 27 – For more than 150 years, the Anglo-Saxon world has been the main
competitor and threat to the Russian way of life, and today, the United States
is carrying out ‘a ‘quiet’ and bloodless’ war against Russia by promoting the
Americanization of its language and culture, according to a Moscow military
writer.
In an
article featured on Topwar.ru, Aleksey Dyomin defines “Americanization” as “the
process of the gradual change of social relations and culture toward the norms
of models used in the US” and thus toward what people there call “’the American
way of life’” (topwar.ru/67421-modnye-uvlecheniya-kak-ugroza-nacionalnoy-bezopasnosti.html).
What is
taken from the US “is integrated into the existing system and changes the
values, traditions, behavioral and legal norms and institutions of particular
societies,” he continues, sometimes “on the initiative” of those absorbing it
but often unilaterally and supported by the US as such.
“Since the moment of the disintegration
of the USSR,” not only Russia but “many of the countries of the former
socialist bloc have been subjected to Americanization,” Dyomin says, noting
that there are many manifestations of this process.
In economics, he argues,
Americanization involves the taking over of American rules and management
styles in major companies, the privatization of public institutions, and
insisting on profit as the measure of success for what had been non-commercial
entities. In technology, it includes the use of the Internet and mobile
telephones.
In the cultural and media spheres,
Dyomin says, Americanization is manifested in the adoption of American forms of
musical culture like hip hop, the domination of Hollywood films and television
programs, and “the development of unproductive forms of entrepreneurial activity
which are parasites on popular culture” such a copyright law and the like.
In these spheres, it also involved “the
creation of an enormous number of social organizations, the celebration of
American holidays like Halloween, the introduction of American types of sport, the
spread of American fast food, and the wearing of clothes that do not fit
Russian conditions. All this, Dyomin says, is leading to “a decline in public
morality.”
And in the social sphere, he
continues, Americanization has led to a contraction of welfare and social
supports, “an equalization of all social groups in terms of their rights,” a
sharp increase in the cost of education and medical services, and the adoption of
the American system of education with all the disruption that has caused.
But both the most obvious and the
most insidious – because often unrecognized – form of Americanization involves the
adoption of English words and expressions, the use of which disposes people to
think and then act along the lines of those who came up with them, Dyomin
argues.
He suggests that there are eight
kinds of such borrowing going on: direct in which an English word is simply
transliterated into English, like money or weekend; hybrids in which an English
work is given a Russia suffix like “askat’” for “ask;” trace words which correspond
phonetically like virus and menu; semi-trace words like “drive;” exoticisms
where there is no possible Russian equivalent like chezburger or khot-dog;
slang like OK or second hand;” composites in which two foreign words become one
Russian one like videosalon; and jargonisms in which the word borrowed is
reshaped in Russian like “krezanutiy” or “crazy.”
The
Americanization of Russia has proceeded so far that it is a cause for alarm because
it is being carried out by “our ‘friends’ from beyond the ocean with one single
goal – the destruction of Russia as a state from within by a means which is
absolutely unnoticed and even for some acceptable.”
But
history suggests there is nonetheless reason for hope. “In 1812, all the ruling
stratum (the nobility) was under the total influence of French culture.
Nevertheless, Napoleon’s army was destroyed. I hope,” Dyomin says in
conclusion, “that in today’s undeclared war the outcome will be the same -- that
the enemy will be defeated and that victory will be ours!”
No comments:
Post a Comment