My dream headstone would say "Fuck off" on it.
Why? Do you hate the world that much? Do you have any family?
Spelling things out would reveal what I disapprove of, and that wouldn't be safe. Canada isn't a free country.
As the only Englishman, and one of the few westerners, living permanently in the city where I live, I would be very surprised if I were not being
watched to a certain degree. Does this bother me? Well, I would prefer it if I weren't being watched obviously, but I don't go out of my way to take any special precautions. What am I supposed to do?
Before I could get permanent residency here I had to have an interview with the local FSB (the major successor to the KGB). The man sat across from the table asked me many questions and wondered if it wouldn't be better if I went to live in the UK with my wife. He saw trouble brewing...
However, I say what I want and when I want on the internet and in my daily activities. But as I am not very political things that would maybe get me in trouble do not arise. And if the authorities here wanted to do anything against me they could anyway, even if I have not done anything wrong (which, in my eyes, I have not).
I'm not going through life scared of such things!! Tinnitus and my health and that of my children are of much greater concern to me.
But who knows, maybe the FSB guy was right.
Let's just say that I can't think of any recent movies or TV shows shot in Canada and the US that wouldn't be approved by the Soviet censors.
I can think of many, if not most, films that would not have gotten approved by the Soviet censors. The current Russian censors though are something different.
Some Russians believe that the West is attempting to force Russia to join it, which these days amounts to restoring that Soviet system with some minor changes (for the worst) (they might be wrong or they might be right about that; they probably don't recognize the current system in the West as being equivalent to the system in the USSR). Some of those Russians believe that Putin might be the only politician standing between them and those "reforms" (they might be wrong or they might be right about That).
I know many Russians, obviously, and they come in all different shapes and sizes. I have met plenty who are in real wonder that there is an Englishman living among them. I have often heard, "Most Russians want to move abroad, but here you are! Is it really better here than there? Surely not?" Reading between the lines, what many of these people really want to hear is, "Yes, it's better here!"
Russia and many Russians like to see themselves as special, which I suppose all nations and peoples do. I have often heard, "We aren't like Europeans, we are more from the East". All very well, but I think you'll find that Slavs are Europeans.
What I'm saying is that Russia and some (maybe many) Russians like to set themselves apart from the rest of the world and a law unto themselves. They at once want to be both part of the group but at the same time do not want to follow the rules set by the group.
As I see it, the little fella wants knowing more than to return to the good ol days of the Soviet Union (but one that is even better). He will be deeply ashamed that the Soviet Union lost the Cold War, when he was in the KGB, and will do anything to see a return to glory for Russia. I would think that he probably doesn't even see the Soviet Union as having
truly lost and that it is just all part of the ongoing war between East and West, ie that Russia will eventually win. He has already taken back, if that's the right way of phrasing it, Crimea and already has a foothold in the main part of Ukraine. Parts of Georgia are now basically parts of Russia. When Lukashenko dies in Belarus, he will swiftly move in there, too. And then there is the Arctic.
The West is fractured, whereas Russia is led by one man. This gives Russia, in many ways, the advantage of being swift in its actions rather than having to wait for a chain of command from many different countries. The EU has tried to become a superstate, but it is failing greatly. The UK leaving it falls directly into Russia's hands and weakens the EU more.
It is sometimes said that the Russian military and the powers that be are following the work of Alexandr Dugin, ie The Foundations of Geopolitics: The Geopolitical Future of Russia (
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundations_of_Geopolitics). Whether this is true or not, I do not know, but some of the events that have occured have a strong resemblance to the plan laid out in that book (here is a Russian version of it -
https://docviewer.yandex.ru/view/0/...3YmM4OWNmZTk3ZjcyYjY1OCZrZXlubz0wIn0=&lang=ru
At the moment, Russia is playing a blinder and will keep doing so until somebody really wants to stop it or do the same back. That does not necessarily mean that the people of Russia are seeing better days though, but you would have to ask them about that.
I think in essence we are saying the same thing but from
slightly different positions.
p.s.
In pretty much every way imaginable. The two differences I can come up with is that international travel hasn't been banned yet and the people in the West are still relatively wealthy. International travel was banned in USSR to ensure that the people wouldn't see what happens when people are free of the Soviet dogma. Since most developed countries aren't free from the modern dogma, there is no reason to ban international travel (we'll see what happens to international travel after COVID-19 is under control). As for people in the West being relatively wealthy that has been changing pretty fast.
I do agree that there is a lot of dogma.
However, members of the military here are not allowed to travel abroad, and most of the general population is still too poor to afford travel to western countries.
I think we should maybe leave this discussion and let Chit Chat to go back to how it was