Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 27 – There have been
innumerable surveys of Russian attitudes over the last decade, but most of them
have been limited in their value by the fact that participants likely answered
some of the most important questions by saying what they believed those behind
the polls wanted to hear, Igor Yakovenko says.
But two polls, one taken in 2010 and
a second just now by the Levada Center asking Russians to identify those things
which give them the greatest satisfaction and joy do not suffer from that
limitation, he continues; and they show that “a small revolution” has taken
place in Russian preferences (ej2018.ru/?a=note&id=32512).
In the two years, Russians were asked
to identify those things that gave them the most pleasure and joy. (They could identify
more than one.) In 2010, 28 percent said watching television did; in 2018, 34
percent; in 2010, 33 percent said a good income; in 2018, 26 percent. In 2010,
17 percent said eating well; in 2018. 24 percent.
Most obviously, these results show
that “watching television instead of receiving a good income is the essence of the
mental revolution over the last years. And thus the answer to the question –
who has become the chief beneficiary of the occupation of Crimea, the war
against Ukraine and Putin genocide of Syrians? – is television.
Among the losers in this list are “the
Russian economy, business, the standard of living including the overwhelming majority
of the so-called ‘elite,’ and civil society.” Among the beneficiaries,” in
addition to television, are “the siloviki
and the defense sector.
“It is possible,” Yakovenko says, “that
the most important part of the mental consequences of ‘Crimea is Ours’ are
connected with the attitude of Russians toward work.” The share saying working at full capacity received
19 percent of the answers in 2010, putting it in fifth place, but only nine
percent eight years later landing it in 21st.
“The growth in the love of Russians
for television has even eclipsed sex.” Fifteen percent of Russians listed sex
as a favorite activity in 2010, but only 12 percent did so in 2018. Consequently, “the expression ‘Russia is
married to Putin’ is gradually losing the character of an ironic metaphor.”
Yakovenko sums up: “Television,
having become the chief joy … has sharply reduced joy from getting good money,
completely destroyed the view of work at full strength as a satisfaction and
reduced to a minimum the joy of sex.” TV
may have helped Putin build power, but it is now getting in the way of his
demographic and economic goals.
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