Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 18 – Something
important has happened in Russian public opinion over the last few months: the
most anti-Putin age cohort is now those aged 18 to 30 and not those 31 to 45, a
shift the Kremlin clearly does not understand and believes that the only option
it has is to try to intimidate them because it has nothing to offer that they
want, Sergey Shelin says.
The Putin regime certainly feels,
the Rosbalt commentator says, that “in the eyes of those who are under 30, it
looks like a perversion. However, it cannot offer such people anything besides
militarization and repression,” things that may intimidate some but are certain
to infuriate others (rosbalt.ru/blogs/2019/10/18/1808588.html).
This lack of understanding is not so
much the result of the rise of a gerontocracy in Russia as happened in Brezhnev’s
times, Shelin says. Instead, “the system
now is old not so much because of the age of its typical representatives as
because of its spirit of aggressive archaic ideas which they are imposing on those
who have grown up already in this century.”
As a result, like many parents
confronted by the behavior of their children, Russia’s current rulers simply do
not understand “with this essential difference: for them, these children really
are alien, and therefore there are no causes to treat them by standing on
ceremony,” the analyst continues.
Until recently, those most critical of
the regime were people aged 31 to 45. Younger people were more inclined to look
at the leaders “with somewhat greater optimism … But in recent months, a shift
has taken place.” Those 31 to 45 have not become less critical, but those 18 to
30 have become far more so.
The powers that be are responsible for
this shift, Shelin argues, because they have acted n ways that offend young
people’s sense of “dignity, honor and justice” in their treatment of Moscow
demonstrators. “It is sufficient to look at how the atmosphere in the higher educational
institutions has changed” to recognize this new reality.
The regime really can’t accept that
this change has occurred, however, although it des recognize that it has nothing
to offer young people besides propagandistic films and television programs and
knows that this may not be enough to turn things around. Consequently, it has
decided to try to frighten young people into silence by becoming even more repressive.
That may in fact make things worse,
Shelin says, adding that he won’t predict whether it will even have the effect
of shutting up the young. It certainly may not make them more favorably
inclined too the regime because forcing people t keep quiet won’t convince them
of anything except what they already believe abut to the powers that be.
Moreover, the Rosbalt commentator concludes,
even if the regime wins in the shrt term, it will lose in the longer one
because its members will pass from the scene and thus eventually yield to those
who now oppose it.
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