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| quote: | | They fully know that their options are limited, just as Americans do. They also fully realize that their government is extreeme. But in fact, how are you able to change anything if you don't even know the other options that exist because of the fact that your government is ensuring that you will not know by blocking all ways of communication? |
Even if there was complete freedom of the press, no persecution of dissenters President Putin still would have won convincingly. The Russians have a traditional respect for strong leadership and they perceive he gives it to them.
I doubt most ordinary russians care if the government cracks down on the media owners. Most of the media owners are the "oligarchs" and they are hated. When russians here the words "liberal democracy" they think of a system that benefits the rich at the expense of the state and ordinary people. The "oligarchs" by and large didnt get their vast fortunes during the Yeltsin years by hard work, they got it by colluding with the government.
The average russian doesnt view politics and business the way westerners do, the average Joe on the street thinks, quite correctly they are a bunch of swindlers.
The analogies comparing President Putin to Stalin are quite false, from all I have read about Putin, he genuinely believes in the free market( or at least a russian version of a free market, and he knows that Communism is a mistake, but he believes in Russia. I have read some of his speechs and if he means what he says, he knows what is wrong with Russia, but the problems of 70+ years dont get changed overnight, especially in a society as conservative as russia
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