Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 10 – The most
striking thing that is taking place in the United States today is not the
protests themselves but rather the reaction of the American intellectual
stratum, Dimmitry Savvin says, because it is reminiscent of nothing so much as
that of the Russian intelligentsia to protests at the end of the Imperial
period.
“How that ended for the Russian
people, Europe, Asia and all humanity,” he says in an article headlined “Is Our
Past Your Future?” is something well known to all; but at the same time, he
cautions against drawing direct parallels between the two cases because the two
countries and their systems are so different (harbin.lv/nashe-proshloe-vashe-budushchee).
But despite those differences, the
editor of the Riga-based conservative Harbin portal says, there is one
worrisome similarity: the moral and ideological-worldview transformation which
the American intelligentsia and the students are undergoing are largely
identical to the evolution their counterparts in Russia in the last quarter of
the 19th century experienced.”
Despite the stereotypes many share, “in
the second half of the 19th century, socialism in Russia was
considered the single intellectual mainstream, and Marxism was considered as a
more or less obvious scientific truth.” As a result of those view, the universities
sen tout several generations of revolutionary Marxists.
Russians on the right pointed to the
following characteristics of such people: a sharp reduction in the educational
and cultural level, extreme intolerance to those having different views, a
willingness to use force against ideological opponents, a rejection of patriotism
of any kind, hatred to the Church, an entirely negative view of Russia’s history,
and “an absolute faith in the need for revolution.”
Russians with such views left the universities
and filled the ranks of the intelligentsia and government officials as well,
and both spread mass sympathy for the revolutionaries thus blocking the state,
which had sufficient resources to move against the radicals, from taking
measures in 1905 and later to prevent disaster, Savvin continues.
There is in this “a Russian lesson
for America and Europe,” the Russian conservative argues. There were no
objective reasons for a revolution in Russia in 1917, but there was a
subjective one, the attitudes of the intellectuals that more or less rapidly
spread to the population and that the government failed to counter.
“The revolution became inevitable not because an
illiterate peasant from Oryol gubernia demanded a written constitution and a parliament,”
the conservative Russian writer says. It “became inevitable because it had
taken place long before February 1917 in the consciousness of the elites and
the intelligentsia.”
“Those
people who were called upon to defend the state themselves did not believe in
its successor and thought they were defending something unjust. They had
everything needed [to protect the state] but there was no will for struggle and
as a result of this ideological and moral capitulation, political capitulation
inevitably followed.”
“Knowing
about this, it impossible [for a Russian] not to notice the obvious parallels
to what has been happening in the United States,” Savvin suggests. The
progressives of the 19th century and the progressives of the US now
resemble one another, and those who were prepared to stand up to them were
groups that in some cases have made things worse.
As
a result, the moderates yielded and are yielding to the radicals because they
find it impossible not to associate with their ideas and equally impossible to
defend a political and social system which they know suffers from real problem.
It is of course not appropriate to
be talking about “burying the US.” Its
reserves of firmness will last for a long time and unlike the Russian Empire
which depended on the monarchy alone, the US has a whole range of “comparatively stable political institutions which make the
system essentially more stable.”
“But the fact that there is a large
reserve of stability does not eliminate the fact that any reserve is by definition
limited. And what is most important, a revolution which takes place in social consciousness
easily paralyzes any, even the most reliable and effective political
institutions.” That ius a real risk.
What happens depends on the
conservative side of the American political spectrum. Too often the people there are afraid to
speak about anything “except lowering taxes;” and those who are associated with
them are “radicals and marginals” who promote conspiracy theories and everyday
xenophobia.
The only way to overcome this
problem is by “an appeal to one’s own traditions which include in legal
discourse not only a free market but Christian values, genuine freedom of
speech not tied hand and foot by leftist bans on ‘incorrect’ words and
thoughts, and the right to preserve one’s own identity, religious, ethnic and
cultural.”
Only Americans can answer the
question as to how they can move in those directions, Savvin says. If they come up with effective answers, well
and good; but if they don’t, then “the risk that the Russian past will become
the American future will become ever more real.”
No comments:
Post a Comment