Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 10 – “Two aging
dictators have come together to create a union” based on their common fear of
their two peoples and to try to ensure their own survival, Gyorgy Satarov says.
The Russian and Belarusian peoples should unite against this common two-headed
enemy, Vladimir Putin and Alyaksandr Lukashenka.
These two dictators whom others by
habit or fear call presidents are prepared to do anything up to and including
murder to retain power. They don’t like one another, but they fear their peoples
even more because they know that if they lose power, they are likely to lose
more than that, the Moscow commentator says (newsru.com/blog/10sep2020/pronas.html).
We, the two peoples who live in “two
countries from Brest to Khabarovsk, are treated by both as if we were their personal
property rather than human beings and citizens with inalienable rights. Today, the two dictators are focusing on
Belarus because the people there are in the streets, but they will turn on
Russia whenever threatened – and upcoming elections will do that.
Each of them still has significant
coercive resources, Satarov continues; but “they are doomed.” Their end cannot
come soon enough, but it is important that one or both of them don’t play
divide and rule policies against us.
They have formed a union of dictators against the people. The two nations
must form a union of peoples against dictators.
Tragically, Russians are largely
silent about Putin’s plans to move in Belarus in support of Lukashenka, the
commentator says, reminding his readers that “silence in Russia now is no less
bestial than the crimes of these dictators for it covers their criminal behavior.”
And it is absurd because Russians are as angry as the Belarusians.
Putin must be shown that this is the
case, and the best way to do that is to vote against all of his candidates in
the upcoming elections. “All of us must
take part and vote against his party and his candidates.” And we must urge
others to follow out lead. “Putin must know that we are doing this every day.”
And he must know something else,
Satarov says. He must come to recognize that “on the streets of the cities of Belarus,
we are present as well because we love the Belarusians, celebrate them, and the
devil take it, envy” their courage and their willingness to stand up to dictators,
their own and ours.
“Aleksey Navalny has come out of the
coma” Putin’s poisons put him in, Satarov concludes. “It is time for us to come
out of ours as well.”
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