Paul Goble
Staunton,
January 15 – Ever more Russians are drawing analogies between their country
today and its situation in 1917 and between Vladimir Putin and the last tsar
Nicholas II, sociologist and commentator Boris Kagarlitsky says; and this is
quite “logical” given the tone deaf reaction of the powers that be in both
cases to growing popular anger.
Kagarlitsky,
who approaches these questions from the point of view of Marxist analysis, tells
Yevgeny Rychkov of the Nakanune news
agency that most officials assumed that the Russian people would swallow the
pension reform and not find any way to move from grumbling to protest (nakanune.ru/articles/114784/).
That is because
the powers that be thought that things were fine; and as a result, they did not
understand that “in fact the pension ‘reform’ was simply the last drop” that
overfilled the cup of popular anger about the regime’s failure to keep its
promises and ensure that the population’s standard of living rose instead of
fell.
Such anger was palpable already in
2016 if not earlier, Kagarlitsky says; but it came into focus because the
pension “reform” provided people with an occasion to “articulate and
consolidate” their feelings. The authorities
indeed should be pleased that things did not go beyond permitted meetings. That will happen if the powers don’t react
more adequately.
Now that the people have changed
their attitude toward the powers “in general,” each new action by the
authorities, as can be seen with the Kuriles discussion, will push them toward ever
greater radicalization. Earlier, the authorities could count on people coming
to terms or being distracted by foreign adventures; but that is no longer the case.
Until recently, he continues,
Russians viewed the government as bad but nonetheless “a close relative. He was
awful but “all the same was ours.” But “now, the attitude toward the authorities
is that toward a mortal enemy with whom one cannot come to terms or even have a
conversation.”
“And there is no path back,”
Kagarlitsky says. “This is a hopeless situation.” And curiously, “however
strange it may seem,” he continues, the protests in France and in India are prompting
the Putin regime to consider what may be ahead for them for the first
time.
Once again, Russia is finding itself
in “the paradox of revolutionary situations.” The general problem is always
more or less recognized, but what is invariably unexpected is the proximate
cause which transforms those feelings into revolutionary action. A combination of “the absolutely expected”
and “the absolutely unexpected.”
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