Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 15 – Just as
pornography can produce an erection but cannot do anything about the size of a
penis, so too Russian state propaganda about the hostility of the surrounding
world and the need to fight it can intensify those feelings but in no way
create them, Aleksandr Nevzorov says, arguing that Russians indeed are
predisposed to want war.
In an interview with Radio Poland’s
Artem Filatov, the former host of the Russian television program “600 Seconds”
says that it would have been impossible to “zombify” 86 percent of Russians
into supporting Vladimir Putin and his aggressive policies if they weren’t predisposed
to those positions in advance (radiopolsha.pl/6/248/Artykul/224943).
“People belief
only that which they insanely want to believe,” Nevzorov says, pointing out
that “a pornographic magazine can lead to an erection, but it is not capable of
making a penis larger.” Thus, such journals “erect that penis which always was,
is, and I suspect, will be” the case.
Kremlin propaganda intensifies the
feelings Russians have about enemies and war, he continues, but its impact
should not be “overrated. Russians wanted to believe that there are fascists in
Ukraine. Did Russians want war? Yes, they do. They need an enemy; they need
someone to hate.”
The reason is simple: “hatred is the
only thing that allows the unification and experience of an all-national orgasm
in Russia given the absence of science and culture. Anger alone unifies the
academician and the policeman, the apple polisher and the geneticist,” the
Russian commentator argues.
There is a small group of people in
Russia, some two to three percent, who are not so programmed and redisposed,
but the overwhelming majority goes along as the regime plays to its
feelings. That majority, Nevzorov says,
can reverse itself on many things “in the course of twelve hours,” but propaganda
cannot change its fundamental predispositions.
Nonetheless, he argues, foreign
broadcasting of the kind Estonia and Poland have promoted “for the same reason
that it made sense to sell jeans even when the obkoms of the party said that
wearing jeans is practically state treason. Ultimately, jeans win,” and “Poland,
Estonia, the Czech Republic and all EU countries” offer Russia an
alternative.
The Kremlin has acted quite wisely
in the way it has dealt with the minority of Russians who want that alternative
now and continue to exist in “reservations like Snob or Ekho Moskvy, he says.
There such people are given the chance to occupy themselves with what they want”
because they do not have any effect “on the 86 percent black hundreds patriotic
society.”
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