R
Ridgerunner
Guest
It’s uncomfortably easy to be ignorant of Soviet ways. Yes, I knew about the “Vanguard Doctrine” and the “driving belts of the proletariat” and Lenin’s temporary embrace of the NEP, his deals with Armand Hammer, and so on. I knew about the dachas and the Zils and the incredible exploitation of the many by the few.You should have heard some of the stories that I got from recent emigres. The means of government in Moscow then was by oligarchy, and it still is.
But it never quite occurred to me that there is really no such thing as state “communism”, and, among its rulers, never was, even in theory. It’s just a way of justifying the rule of ruthless elites for their own benefit. There are other ways with different names, and “communism” is just one of them. I first saw it expressed in precisely those terms in a recent book by Ion Pacepa.
There really is no difference between the Soviet dictatorship and the current one in Russia except for the persecution of religion, which has simply gotten more selective. But even then, from WWII on, the Soviet elites were tolerant of the REO church, but only so long as it was submissive and/or complicit.
And, of course, the poverty is still there, nearly half of Putin’s apparatchiks are former KGB, and the economy is still largely based on the sale of commodities to the west. As Solzhenitsyn put it, those who believed in communism the very least were the KGB people. They knew what it was really all about; self-aggrandizement with no restraints other than the plots and machinations of others in the same position.
A terrible world. And some Russians in Ukraine are willing to go under that for $300.? Well, I guess would-be criminals in the west have given their freedom or even their lives for less.
And, of course, actual Ukrainians (and not a few ethic Russian Ukrainians) were horrified by the prospect of going under that again. They knew what it was in a way we cannot. There is a lot of corruption in the west, and I would be the first to acknowledge it. But it isn’t totally so and, being free, the west can come back from corruption if it wills to do so. Barring an absolute miracle, Russians can’t.
It’s no wonder millions turned out for the Maidan protests when they saw that Yanukovych was trying to turn them over to domination by the Putin cabal.