Paul Goble
Staunton,
February 25 – Ever more commentators as well as ordinary Russians via polls are
declaring that the Russian state exists only to enrich its officials and that
the supposed struggle against corruption is meaningless except as an attempt to
distract the country’s attention from the real problems it faces.
And
at least one analyst has said what many others have implied: the only way to
end this situation is via a revolution that will sweep away both the officials
and the informal arrangements they have which allow this situation and the
negative consequences it has on the country to continue, a logical conclusion
but likely one few Russians are prepared to act on.
In
a oft-reposted commentary today, the SerpomPo telegram channel today argues
that the near total corruption in Russia is a reflection of the fact that it is
“an inalienable part of the Putin regime … as a result, nothing will come of
‘the struggle’ against it” as manifest in the continuing charges and
convictions Moscow is pleased to announce (t.me/SerpomPo/2700).
The reason is simple, SerpomPo says,
“it is impossible to defeat bribes in a state where the entire sense of the
work of the government apparatus, beginning from the very top is personal
enrichment” rather than service to the people and where that enrichment becomes
possible only by the massive corruption the regime will never address in a
serious way.
A new poll shows that Russians
overwhelmingly agree with this: 70 percent say that bribes and corruption are evidence that the government is
not doing its nominal job but instead is falling apart (novayagazeta.ru/news/2019/02/25/149520-levada-tsentr-pochti-70-rossiyan-schitayut-vzyatki-chinovnikov-i-ih-aresty-proyavleniem-razlozheniya-vlasti).
Moreover, polls show that recent arrests
an attempt by the regime too distract them from rea problems (meduza.io/news/2019/02/25/levada-tsentr-chetvert-rossiyan-nazvali-arest-arashukovyh-sposobom-otvlech-vnimanie-ot-realnyh-problem).
And one in five think recent arrests have been really about fighting corruption
(capost.media/news/society/tolko-chetvert-rossiyan-schitayut-arest-arashukovykh-borboy-s-korruptsiey/).
Moscow commentator Dmitry Milin takes the
next step: He argues that “once again nothing depends on ‘the state machine’”
which operates for itself and takes from the society without giving back. “The
Russian official produces nothing except corruption, theft, foolishness,
disorganization and harm” (blog.newsru.com/article/25feb2019/marazm).
“Unfortunately, this is our historical
tradition,” he continues. And history shows that “the only hope for breaking
the bureaucracy is revolution, historically the poorest method of changing
rulers because of the risk that extremists will come to power. But we do not have any other means.”
“Attempts to reduce the power of the bureaucracy
by bureaucratic means are condemned to complete failure. The bureaucracy doesn’t
work that way. Like bacteria, it spreads” until there is nothing else for it to
infect. It can only be accepted with all the negative consequences or killed
off with the risk that a new bureaucracy will arise.
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