Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 25 – Despite the
desire of upper level managers to find intelligent and capable people to fill
administrative positions, German Sadulayev says, “the Russian system is near
collapse because of the poor quality” of those being named to them, the result
of the regime’s overriding preference for the loyal rather than the capable.
Increasingly, the Russian essayist
and KPRF activist says, the choice never even reaches that between the talented
and the loyal. Instead, the regime chooses among the loyal, often among the
sons and daughters of its current leaders or among accidental people like
guards, sportsmen and the like (publizist.ru/blogs/110167/30159/-).
This “negative selection” has the
effect of filling the regime with those who don’t know how to carry out the
regime’s own intentions, a particularly sad development because “in Russia, there
is an unbelievable quantity of smart, talented and even brilliant administrators”
as can be seen if one looks beyond “the bordello” out of which government
officials are being chosen.
Talented Russians are especially to
be found in small and mid-sized businesses where their skills have allowed
those companies to survive despite the Putin regime’s hostility to them as a
dangerous independent force, one that the regime has been doing everything it
can to destroy.
In the cultural realm in particular,
Sadulayev says, those outside the culture ministry regularly display remarkable
skills while those inside its ranks show the lack of such skills. The existence of the former helps keep
Russian culture alive, while the dead hand of the latter is doing everything it
can, even if it does not intend to, to kill
Unfortunately, this problem cannot
be solved “within the framework of the current paradigm.” The powers that be
know this is the case but those on top simply cannot allow any other outcome
except the one they have now. For them,
the system must simply serve them even if it serves them poorly and serves
Russia worse.
And therefore, Sadulayev argues, the
solution to the administrative problem lies in the political realm: Russians
must vote out those who are now in and thus destroy what is hidden “behind the
false façade of ‘sovereign democracy,” a collection of incompetents whose only
skill is thinking up new ways to steal and new “enemies of the people” to repress.
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