Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 15 – Many Russians
may think that only the Kremlin is exploiting the coronavirus pandemic to
promote the revival of obscurantism and the restoration of totalitarian-style
control, but that is not the case, US-based Russian commentator Mikhail Berg
says. All too many countries led by people on the right are doing the same
thing.
And that means in turn that this
pandemic will cast a long and dark shadow on the world long after the last
person dies from it, blocking new efforts at cooperation and strengthening those
who do not want to cooperate but rather to operate completely independently and
not remain embedded in a network of international cooperation.
Like Vladimir Putin, such leaders
are delighted to be able to hide behind “anti-virus” methods to justify closing
borders to “outsiders” and preventing people from demonstrating against them
and to use this crisis to promote obscurantist notions about the nature of the nation,
he says (newizv.ru/article/general/15-03-2020/vpered-v-proshloe-koronavirus-vozrozhdaet-mrakobesie-i-totalitarnye-praktiki).
Indeed, it seems to some that “in
Europe there is taking place a unique repetition of preparation for a parade of
totalitarianism,” something that right-of-center governments are promoting and
that some of the people in their populations are supporting believing that that
is the best or even only effective defense against the virus, despite China’s
experience.
At the same time, these regimes are
promoting and populations are accepting increasingly xenophobic approaches,
blaming the Chinese for the virus and even pushing the idea that the virus hits
some ethnic groups harder than others or that it is destroying all who do not
take up the most extreme arms against it.
What is already clear in Russia and
elsewhere, Berg says, is that “the coronavirus, like a world storm, above all
has played into the hands of right conservative politicians and right
obscurantism convictions” about the ideas they are fond of that society must be
based on “blood and soil.”
“When
Trump erects a wall against ‘aliens’ and migrants, he is attempting to erect a
border between his race and the race of those arrivals, and this wall is in no
way distinguished from the wall between his own (supposedly healthy) people and
aliens who are viewed as potentially ill.”
According
to Berg, “blood and soil by their status in conservative ideology is that these
are not simply our blood and soil but that these are healthy and can be
protected from illness only by a quarantine.” But the coronavirus, like
communism before it, is spreading across borders and becoming “a specter” and
source of fear.
Those
who think they can escape the pandemic by isolating themselves both physically
and in terms of cooperation with others to fight it will be shown to be wrong,
Berg concludes; but the illusions that this is possible are going to remain –
and those may prove to be some of the worst consequences of the coronavirus
outbreak.
That
is because such illusions, now being cultivated in Russia and so many other
places, will affect what people will do and won’t do long after this pandemic
dies out.
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