Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 19 – In the course of
only three years, what was unthinkable for most Russians, even the most
thoughtful, has become possible because of the constant repetition of the
media. As a result, Russians today accept ideas about Ukraine that they would
have dismissed as absurd or impossible only a brief time ago, according to
Aleksandr Morozov.
What is most important here, he
says, is not any moves toward “’re-Stalinization’” but rather the willingness
of Russians to go along with such nonsense as the notion that Ukraine “’doesn’t
exist,’” that it is ruled by a junta, that Kyiv is destroying itself, and that
it has “lost the ability to recognize its incompleteness” (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5948119B0A5FF).
In 2014, almost every Russian would
have denied what today almost every Russian now accepts as “self-evident facts,”
the Moscow commentator points out, noting that exactly the same thing happened
in Germany in the 1930s when under the impact of Hitler’s propaganda, Germans
were transformed into “political anti-Semites” who backed the Holocaust.
Eighty years ago, the unthinkable
became possible in Hitler’s Germany; now, something equally unthinkable has
become a reality in Putin’s Russia, testimony to the power of propaganda and
group think and the inability of many to stand up to this wave of hatred and
duplicity.
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