Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 24 – At a recent
meeting in Skolkovo, Dmitry Peskov, Putin’s press secretary who oversees information
technology, unwittingly explained the thinking is behind some of the Kremlin’s
most notorious recent decisions: Russia’s leaders believe they can make the
future better by making the present worse, Viktoriya Voloshina says.
Peskov said that had the Russian government
not block parts of the Internet, the technology for getting around such blocking
would never have developed as quickly as it has, the Moscow journalist say, an
apparently ff the cuff remark that reveals something few had suspected (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2019/10/24/1809573.html).
In sum, what looked like obscurantism
in fact has been part of “a clever special operatinal plan for the flourishing of
Russia,” one based on the notions that “everything which doesn’t kill us will
make us stronger, more intelligent and more clever” and that “the worse things
are in the country in the present, the better they will be for its future.”
This notion, of course, rests on the
image of Russians in fairy tales as people who need to be prodded to do
anything but then are capable of miracles once they area, Voloshina says. And it
is perhaps not surprising that the country’s leaders, who like all other
Russians, were raised on such stories, would try to apply them.
If ne employs this logic, then many
things the Putin regime has done look truly inspired: aising the pension age has
forced 60-year-olds to look after their health, giving money to Africa means
that Russians have less and must figure out how to cope, and eliminating governmental
social supports is forcing Russians to organize themselves to help one another.
This approach, Voloshina says,
promises some even more remarkable breakthroughs in the future: banning the
study of English now will mean in the future “we will speak it better than the
English,” closing borders will mean “we will invent teleportation,” and “prohibiting
breathing” will be the basis for new “interesting decisions, startups and
investigations.’”
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