Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 16 – Given how
bad things have become for ordinary Russians, many are wondering what might
finally push them to take part in mass street demonstrations against the Putin
regime. Two developments, increasing
repression at home and the Kremlin leader’s profligate spending on military
adventures abroad, may lead to a tipping point.
One consequence of increasing
repression is that ever more people may conclude, as did one participant in the
March of Mother’s Anger, that “if today I keep quiet, tomorrow each of us may
end up in the same place” as those now being mistreated by the authorities (activist.msk.ru/2019/02/ya-ponyala-esli-seychas-smolchat-zavtra-okazhemsa-na-meste-shevchenko.html).
And another arising from Putin’s
willingness to spend enormous sums on foreign adventures while back at home is that
ever more Russians are saying that he should “stop spending billions on the war
in Ukraine and Syria and turn his attention to us” (censoru.net/33436-rossijane-putinu-hvatit-tratit-milliardy-na-vojnu-s-ukrainoj-i-siriej-obratite-vnimanie-na-nas.html).
This trend may be even more
important in getting people to take to the streets because some who feel that
way are animated only by social concerns while others are affected by the
patriotism that Putin says he supports but that in fact he is doing little to
support.
As Censoru.net puts it, “everyone remembers”
that the Soviet Union spent enormous sums abroad even as it ignored economic
and social problems at home. “For the
USSR,” the portal notes, “this situation ended in collapse. And there is hardly
an alternative way out” for Putin’s Russia now unless it changes course.
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