Paul Goble
Staunton,
October 24 – In Western democracies, when the media expose wrongdoing among the
elite, the regimes are forced to respond because the state is ultimately
dependent on the strength of society; but in Russia, Ivan Davydov says, the
state is so much stronger than society that it simply ignores anything the
media come up with.
Indeed,
the chief consequences of such exposés like the one Novaya gazeta just did on Yevgeny Prigrozhin, the editor of the New
Ethics project says, is silence, laughter or lawsuits against the authors and
their outlet by those against those who crimes have been documented (openmedia.io/exclusive/pochemu-v-rossii-ne-rabotayut-zhurnalistskie-rassledovaniya/).
Indeed, the repeated failure of the
Russian authorities to respond as their Western counterparts would to the
watchdog role of the media is “a history of the clash of a weak society with strong
powers that be.” In Russia, “society
reacts” but the authorities don’t because they don’t have to.
It is obvious way, Davydov says. In
the existing political system of Russia, “the powers that be are in no way
dependent on society. And even if the electoral machine sometimes suffers
losses as in September of this year in the gubernatorial races, this is still
not the basis for asserting that global shifts have begun.”
Sometimes, he continues, people say
that “in Russia the institution of reputation doesn’t work. But this isn’t
true. It works perfectly; it is simply the case that it isn’t the citizens who
decide who is worthy and who is a thief, a bribe tacker or a murderer.” Rather
it is the state which chooses which facts to recognize and which to ignore.
That leads to “the sad conclusion
that the media and their analogues … cannot fulfill one of their main
functions: they do not work as an instrument of societal self-defense not
because their work isn’t of high quality … but because the powers have the strength
to ignore the media and the consumers of their production.”
Those officials or elites close to the
Kremlin who do suffer in any way after media attacks, Davydov says, in fact had
lost their standing before those attacks or behaved in response to those
attacks in ways that the powers above them judged to be a problem for
themselves and the system.
This of course doesn’t mean that
investigative journalism isn’t necessary. It heightens the awareness of society
not so much about the particular problems it exposes but rather about the fact
that the powers that be have divorced themselves from society but expect to be
paid alimony.
The
more Russians understand that reality, the better the chances for change,
Davydov says; and that makes such media exposes important, even though they don’t
play the role that some of their authors and others expect on the basis of the
experience of media in other countries.
No comments:
Post a Comment