Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 21 – Left-wing
sociologist Boris Kagarslitsky says he is surprised by VTsIOM’s finding that
only 25 percent of Russians consider themselves “victims of perestroika,” with
the number ranging from 37 percent among those 60 and over down to eight
percent among those aged 18 to 24.
In his view, Kagarlitsky says, the
share of victims of “the greatest geopolitical disaster” of the 20th
century, to use Putin’s words, was much larger, although he acknowledges that a
very small share of Russians benefitted from the destruction of the Soviet
system and ultimately the USSR (nakanune.ru/articles/115565/).
Materially, the average Russian
lived better after perestroika than before, albeit with far greater income and
social differentiation, but almost all “lost morally in self-respect and
status.” What is the main thing, the sociologist continues, is that “they lost
their hopes for a better future” and they became fearful that anything intended
to make things better could make things worse.
“Perestroika killed hope,”
Kagarlitsky says, because it promised so much” that its failure to do so made
society suspicious of any change at all. It is this on which Russia’s current
powers that be rely, “on the state of post-perestroika shock when people are
deeply convinced that ay changes can lead only to something worse and therefore
it is better not to change.”
Instead, Russians have concluded
that they must adapt to whatever conditions they find themselves in, however
bad. This is really horrific, the
sociologist argues, “because [as a result, Russians] are not prepared to change
things” that should be changed.
He adds that when people say they
are victims of perestroika what they really mean is that they are victims of
the twin results of that program, the destruction of the Soviet Union and the
introduction of capitalism. Most Russians feel the first was a disaster, but
opinion about the latter is more divided.
One of the upshots of the VTsIOM
poll was a proposal by Boris Chernyshov, a Duma deputy, to create a special
class of Russian citizens who are victims of perestroika and then offer them
some kinds of compensatory benefits.
What those might be, he didn’t specify, but his proposal no doubt will
increase the number of Russians who feel they are victims of perestroika in
order to get what benefits they can from that (ura.news/news/1052403980).
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