A popular pro-Russian politician in #Poland once again amplifies the popular #Russia narrative about “languages spoken in #Ukraine”, trying to demonstrate that “majority of people speak Russian”.
But apart of using old and manipulated data, he distracts the debate from simple international law facts to vague “common sense” heuristics, where speaking a language automatically means belonging to some culture or country and - above all - gives those countries some moral or political right over other countries. Following this line, one would have to conclude that the US automatically has a right to the UK, Australia or Ireland (and anyone can come up with a dozen of such examples from their region). For starters, the fact that I speak fluent Russian does not imply that I’m culturally Russian or expect “protection” from Russia.
Ukraine’s defense against Russian invasion is 100% cultural and civilisation war between two competing models of governance - the archaic feudal-autocratic model of Russia, and the “democracy of peers” model which has been always widespread among Slavs in the form of veche assemblies.
@kravietz
There are two core logical errors with this line of thinking. First of all, Russia is not and never was a Russian nation state — and as such, it cannot act as an envoy of all Russians, "defending" them. It could take this turn during the last decade of Russian Empire, but failed — and Bolsheviks made it turn back to the feudal-autocratic model, effectively restoring the worst of tsarist practices.
@kravietz
It might sound absurd — and that is exactly what they want, that is why they mess with semantics in the first place: first and foremost Russia is the greatest thread and is the enemy of Russians — not Ukraine or US or anyone else. None of what's happening now is in the interest of Russians. Just like with Nazis and Germany, beside foreign nations, the damage is being dealt to the future generations of Russians.
@kravietz
Russia indeed sometimes likes to put on the nation state cloak and unfortunately it's not uncommon for westerners, including the media to be pulled into this game and call what's happening in Russia nationalism — they should take a step back and see that Russia only treats the nation as a resource it can exploit. Propaganda might've made them believe it, but in no scenario Russians have anything to gain at all from what's happening.