Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 9 – There are as yet
no mass repressions in Russia, but there is “simply no need for them,”
Ukrainian poet and translator Boris Khersonsky says. Vladimir Putin has control of television and
thus can instill terror in the population without the bother of a large number
of murders.
“In the present-day Russian
Federation, he continues, “the role of ‘the great terror’ play the means of
mass information and of television above all.” He needs only repress a handful,
show it on television, and everyone will be afraid (nv.ua/opinion/hersonskiy/bolshoj-terror-v-rossii-2480167.html).
This is in marked
contrast to Stalin’s times where far more killings were needed that people
heard about and then spread the fear they felt by rumors, Khersonsky says. Now, “the possibility of danger reproduced
via the media, extends” any particular horror far more rapidly and to a far
larger audience.
Why go to the
bother of “mass public executions?” he asks rhetorically. Television will have
the same impact more easily and more quickly.
And it will achieve the ends that Stalin sought by updated, perhaps one
can say “hybrid” means.
But both under Stalin and under
Putin, “by the unwritten laws of psychology” – including the Stockholm syndrome
in which victims come to identify with their oppressor – horror will give birth
to devotion. Deprivations will do the same. And under this devotion lies the
betrayal” of everything human.
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