Paul Goble
Staunton, Mar. 18 – Many of the
rising generation of Russians, the so-called Zoomers resemble the raznochintsy
of the nineteenth century, increasingly convinced that they have no future in
their own country, Aleksandr Semyonov says, and thus willing to adopt radical
ideas from the streets and turn them into a revolutionary ideology.
The Ryazan political scientist who
now works as a consultant there says that allowing the younger generation to repeat
that trajectory “would be extremely dangerous,” not immediately as long as the
war in Ukraine and standoff with the West continues but when those things end
and young people begin asking what their own future will be (club-rf.ru/interview/558).
According to Semyonov, Russia was
confronted by “the same phenomenon in the 1970s and 1980s among street gangs in
working-class neighborhoods. Where did they come from? They looked at the rather
unappealing lives their parents led; and on on the streets, they found simple
answers to the question of how to navigate through life.”
“If we don’t start taking action
right now,” he continues, “we risk losing yet another generation.” The Putin
regime understands the problem and has taken some positive steps, Semyonov
says; but far more needs to be done because it is important not to “force
everyone into the Procrustean bed of a single monolithic ideology, something that
is now simply impossible.”
Instead, what is needed is “genuine
and open discourse that allows for the organic emergence of new ideologies,”
just as was the case in the 20th century. But that century’s
ideologies have failed. Unfortunately, the political scientist says, there aren’t
any examples of successful ideologies being developed anywhere.
According to Semyonov, “the old
ideologies have all died out, and nothing new has emerged anywhere. And there
is thus the risk that in 15 to 20 years, something external, something
developed ‘over there,’ will find its way to us” in Russia just as happened in the
last two centuries.
It is likely that new ideologies
will seek to answer some fundamental questions that weren’t asked as
insistently in the past.” One of the most critical of these, he continues, is
this: “what constitutes a human being? Currently, a massive global challenge in
that regard is posed by artificial intelligence and genetic engineering.”
“I believe the
future will be shaped around these issues, as they are already transforming the
labor market and society—and doing so at a breakneck pace” and in debates
rather than imposed by some fiat, Semyonov concludes. Only if Russia recognizes
that reality and adapts itself to it will it avoid losing the younger
generation and perhaps far more besides.