| There is a huge different between Ukraine and Russian in the 1930s. How is it that people don't know this? Because Ukraine was part of the USSR? |
I’m not an expert on ethnic minorities. Do any of these minorities, whatever their number, have at least one scientist, world known novelist, composer, architect, philosopher, Nobel prize winner, inventor - at least one per each minority? The daughter is not an equivalent comparison. The fact is former colonies are now better off than the never colonized countries. I will leave out your racie-related remarks. You can look at some native human sacrifice rituals and cannibalism that were no longer in place after colonization. You intellectually can’t understand apples to apples comparison. |
Did you live in the same USSR? Everyone had to work, even military wives. If there was a housewife that was the exception, perhaps, some nomenclature wife with connections. Maternity leave was about eight months and I’m not sure what it was for the rural people who lived on collective farms. |
You aren't? What else aren't you an expert on and yet have confidently opined on? You're saying an ethnic group has to produce a Nobel prize winner to be counted as human in your book? Perhaps the daughter remark was too subtle for you, so here's the blunt version: roads, hospitals and schools aren't a good price for getting colonized. And since you're getting all "intellectual", let's not forget a basic truth that colonizers weren't in the colonies to build roads, schools or hospitals, they were there to get stuff. To extract resources they didn't own. To steal, pillage and plunder, by force if necessary. Schools and hospitals (and prisons and amputated thumbs) were just a side effect. |
I don't know what to tell you. I grew up in the North Caucasus. In my recollection, at least 25% women were homemakers. For some ethnic groups, it was seen as unseemly for married women to work you know. |
Again you are having a hard time with comparison. This is not Russia vs. anywhere in the world, but Russia vs Europe because my original premise is that Russians are European in many ways, just poorer, more superstitious, more corrupt, more intolerant, more violent than other Europeans (not the world, we are not talking about anywhere else). |
I am not familiar with that part of Russia. Perhaps, ethnic minorities had concessions, not the core populace, which further proves my point that Russian government really loved oppressing its own people the most. |
You'd have to get more granular with Europe because I can think of some places in Eastern Europe that are just as corrupt, intolerant or violent. Of course, Russia is a huge country and as such, will have areas that are less or more violent, or less or more intolerant. Incidentally, I think you're missing the mark on tolerance - compared to many European countries, Russia is more diverse both ethnically and religiously. Certainly, ethnic minorities in Russia fared much better than ethnic Russians in post-USSR republics! It's much nicer to be a Kazakh in Moscow than a Russian in Astana, believe me. But no matter. Russia can be all these things, and she's still OK with me. |
Could it possibly be two Russians had different experiences? And that no one person really understood what life was like EVERYWHERE in Russia? |
I never claimed I know all of the ethniciminorities of Russia and their exact numbers. OP can let us know if that is what he or she meant by understanding Russians. And I never said they were not humans, they are not relevant to this discussion, as colonization is not relevant. Colonization had a civilizing effect, although this is not even the point of this discussion. This is about how the state treats its own people. Russia has treated its own people horribly, often worse than other people. And Europeans treated its own people comparatively way better. Colonization was abandoned because it was a net loss, not a net gain for Europe. If Europe never had colonies, Europeans would not have lost anything. Colonization enriched some people, not Europe as a whole. Do some research. The argument that Europe is richer because of colonization is not true. Europe is and was richer because it was a freer and more open society, had trade, had to constantly evolve and survive. Only one city Florence, which had 60,000 people in the 15-16 century produced an incredible number of artists, inventors, scholars, philosophers whose works are studied today. That means they were doing something to make it happen. Russia produced a lot less artists, scientists, philosophers, etc. in comparison to its population, but at least it did give something the world admires and respects it for. Everyone is human, just not everyone contributes to the world. |
Which one would that be? Name one European country that was not part of the Russian Empire or USSR that is more violent, corrupt, intolerant, superstitious, poorer - all of that combined - than Russia. Ukraine does not count, it was part of Russia in the 19th and 20th century. I’m talking Europe in a sense of England, Germany, Austria, France, Italy, Switzerland and, to some extent, Poland, Hungary, Romania, former Yugoslavia. The rich and educated Russians aspired to be on par with the wealthiest and most cultured part of Europe, with England, France, Germany and Italy at the core. Other European states, including Russia, were part of that realm. We have Russian composers, and we have Hungarian and Polish composers, as well as the masters like Bach, Beethoven, Mozart and Vivaldi. We have numerous scientists from England and Germany and also Nikola Tesla who was a Serbian and a Russian Mendeleev and Lomonosov. England has the most novelists and writers - Shakespeare, Milton, Austen, Dickens, Thackeray, Trollope, Elliott, and on and on. Russia is known for Chekhov, Dostoyevsky and Tolstoy and, to some extent, Pushkin and Bulgakov. Many Russian novels were written in Europe, as Russian writers loved to vacation there, St Petersburg was built by an Italian architect, opera singers learned from Italian masters. Russia learned the ropes from Europe and added its own layer. Russia had and has smart people, but many were either not valued or succeeded in spite of oppression, like it was with Bulgakov. Russia has a lot of unnecessary suffering and tragedy, the sense of doom built into its psyche because of this. |
You are stunningly ignorant - and racist - about the impact of colonization on both the colonies and the colonizers. |
That is not argument. And how is it racist? You are ignorant if you don’t know that Europe as a whole did not benefit from colonization. Colonization enriched some people, not all all of Europe combined. And not just Europe controlled lands, Russia also controlled Afghanistan and Mongolia. Mongolia even conquered and colonized Russia itself back in the day, yet did not build any roads or hospitals, just pillaged and plundered. This is not a discussion of whether Europeans were good or bad to their former colonies, this is about Russians and Europeans and their respective citizens. |
PP is not Russian, someone who lived in an ethnic minority enclave, which is part of the Russian territory. I am talking about the experience in the European part of Russia, Siberia and the Far East, something that is typically associated with Russia. Unless OP is interested in that, idk |
It appears that you’d like to read some quality Russian-bashing literature. I remember a Russian analyst on this board with ridiculous impressions , so maybe s/he could help with your search. I suggest this book https://www.amazon.com/Mastering-Art-Soviet-Cooking-Longing/dp/0307886824
Russians are different just like Americans are, with many social and cultural elements responsible for the diversity in views, life styles, etc. I was traumatized by my Russian childhood in many ways, but I appreciated a healthy dose of fun absurdity in my life and I do miss it. I find Mexico in many ways similar on some “spiritual level”, although I can never clearly conceptualize why. |