Paul Goble
Staunton,
November 21 – One of the most noxious aspects of the Soviet system was the
encouragement the authorities gave to people to turn in anyone they suspected
of violating either the law or the party line at the time, an encouragement
that undermined social cohesion and created near universal suspiciousness that
restricted the ability of organized groups to emerge.
That
system reached its apogee under Stalin and then gradually declined in
importance although it was not rejected even at the end of Soviet times. But
since 1991, it has been viewed as something that the government should
encourage only as part of the fight against terrorism or to unmask extremist
groups.
(For
a discussion of the role snitching played in Soviet life and why most post-Soviet
officials have not viewed it as something to be broadly encouraged, see V.A. Nekhamkin,
“Snitching as a Socio-Psychological Phenomenon” (in Russian), Istoricheskaya psikhologiya i sotsiologiya
istorii 7:2 (2014): 63-79 at socionauki.ru/journal/articles/254526/.)
Now
snitching is being encouraged more widely, sometimes for what may be innocent
enough reasons such as combatting illegal parking in Moscow but other times for
less innocent ones. And even when in the case of the innocent ones, there is a
potential problem because it encourages Russians to think about turning others
in.
This
week featured two reports about the encouragement of snitching, one of the “innocent”
kind but another far more worrisome. In the first, officials reported that
Muscovites had used a mobile app available since 2015 to turn in more than 1.3
million cases of parking violations (moslenta.ru/city/moskvichi-napisali-million-donosov-20-11-2018.htm).
In the second, Moscow has been encouraging
the regions to pay for the formation of groups who will engage in snitching
about the behavior they observe online. Nominally focused on sites that may
harm children, the effort which is Russia-wide has the potential to go after anything
officials decide must be controlled (roskomsvoboda.org/43120/).
Such organized snitching almost
inevitably would have a penumbra of those interested in denouncing this or that
individual or group even if they were not formally part of these groups which
are about to be given legal form. And the existence of so many branches of this
effort will have the effect of legitimating and spreading the return of this
unfortunate phenomenon.
On the location of current groups,
their affiliations and some indication of their size, see the interactive map
prepared by Radio Liberty which is headlined by the statement that “the army of
snitchers in Russia is growing” (svoboda.org/a/armiya-donoschikov-v-rossii-rastet-chislo-kiberdruzhin/29596085.htm).
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