Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 22 – Given the large
number of young people taking part in the March 26 and June 12 demonstrations,
many in the Kremlin have expressed concern and many in the opposition have
expressed hope that young people now constitute a revolutionary force. But
those fears and hopes are misplaced, Dmitry Olshansky says.
The Moscow journalist lists the
factors he says preclude young Russians playing a revolutionary role (kp.ru/daily/26695.4/3718895/), including among
others the following:
·
First,
young Russians are a category too subdivided to form any united front.
Moreover, they are proud of these distinctions and don’t want to be absorbed
into some made-up notion about “youth.”
·
Second,
because of declining birthrates, the number of people in Russian who can be
classified as young is falling. There simply aren’t enough of them to become a
primary mover of society and politics.
·
Third,
Olshansky says, “from a revolutionary point of view, people now live too
well.” They aren’t interested in losing
it all on the role of the dice.
·
Fourth,
the notion that young people are set apart in believing that they have “no
future” and “no prospects” is nonsensical. Few Russians of any age group have
good prospects.
·
Fifth,
young people are mobile. They seldom stay in one place for very long or even
register to vote. Instead, they move from place to place not only within the
country but abroad as well.
·
Sixth,
most in the younger generation are impatient.
They want immediate results, but revolutions aren’t made by those who do
not work for them. And Russian young people aren’t prepared to do so.
In fact, Olshansky says, he is more
inclined to “believe in a rising of pensioners than in a revolt of temporary
apartment renters.” And there is another factor too, he suggests: the poshlost that infects not only the old
but the young, the one thing that ties them all together rather than setting
any one generation apart.
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