Post by account_disabled on Mar 5, 2024 4:08:57 GMT
That Said, Far-right Ideology and the Typical Tendencies of Right-wing Populism, and Even Fascism, Are Present in Both Countries. In Terms of Their Political and Social Content, Both Sides Are Not That Different. Of Course There Are Differences. For Example, Ukraine Has a Much Weaker State. This Creates Spaces in Which the Far Right Can Carry Out Repressive Activities Not Controlled by the State, in Some Cases With the Support of Elements of the Ukrainian Security Services. The Russian State Does.
Not Allow These Things to Happen. Paramilitary Repressive Apparatuses Because the Russian State Has an Absolute Monopoly on Repression. In Russia, Repression is Centralized, While in Ukraine It is Decentralized. At the Same Time, Unlike UK Mobile Database Russia, Ukraine Has a Civil Society That is Not Repressed, Precisely Because the State is Weaker. The State Has Not Repressed Civil Society in Ukraine Because It Does Not Have the Capacity to Do So as in Russia. Another Difference is That the Ukrainian Oligarchy is Not Consolidated, While the Russian One is Consolidated Around Putin, or at Least It Was Until Recently.
The Ukrainian Oligarchy Never Consolidated Because It Did Not Have the Amount of Oil or Other Resources That Could Be Sold on the World Market to Generate Easy Income as is the Case in Russia. Instead, Ukrainian Oligarchs Systematically Fought Among Themselves. This Created an Image of Ukraine as a Pluralistic Democracy, Which It is Not. Rather, It is a Weak State, With Oligarchies That Compete With Each Other. So There Are Differences, but That Does Not Change the Fact That the Ideological Content of Russian and Ukrainian Nationalism is Very Similar and the Social Nature of the State and Capitalism in Both Countries is Very Similar. Both Are Dominated by Oligarchic and Peripheral Capitalism.
Not Allow These Things to Happen. Paramilitary Repressive Apparatuses Because the Russian State Has an Absolute Monopoly on Repression. In Russia, Repression is Centralized, While in Ukraine It is Decentralized. At the Same Time, Unlike UK Mobile Database Russia, Ukraine Has a Civil Society That is Not Repressed, Precisely Because the State is Weaker. The State Has Not Repressed Civil Society in Ukraine Because It Does Not Have the Capacity to Do So as in Russia. Another Difference is That the Ukrainian Oligarchy is Not Consolidated, While the Russian One is Consolidated Around Putin, or at Least It Was Until Recently.
The Ukrainian Oligarchy Never Consolidated Because It Did Not Have the Amount of Oil or Other Resources That Could Be Sold on the World Market to Generate Easy Income as is the Case in Russia. Instead, Ukrainian Oligarchs Systematically Fought Among Themselves. This Created an Image of Ukraine as a Pluralistic Democracy, Which It is Not. Rather, It is a Weak State, With Oligarchies That Compete With Each Other. So There Are Differences, but That Does Not Change the Fact That the Ideological Content of Russian and Ukrainian Nationalism is Very Similar and the Social Nature of the State and Capitalism in Both Countries is Very Similar. Both Are Dominated by Oligarchic and Peripheral Capitalism.