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Friendly Tomato's avatar

What’s impressed me most about this crisis is the likemindedness of European people. Despite Russian/Belarussian/Hungarian leadership that is at odds with liberal values, citizens of those countries (especially younger ones) seem to be on the same page as their counterparts in Western Europe in protesting the war and espousing European unity. Really destroys arguments claiming fundamental differences between the former USSR sphere/rest of the continent that can’t be bridged.

Dream scenario is Putin pushed out by popular protests, Navalny as interim leader, free elections soon thereafter. Then a massive Marshall-esque aid effort, allowing Ukraine to join EU/NATO first, and Russia in the medium term. Not likely, but also not impossible I hope.

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Steve Estes's avatar

Russia has been ruled by its security services, who are often venal and self-serving, since the 17th century and the days of the Tsars. If we offer to pour money into CapEx, most of it will end up lining the dachas of whatever elites survive the current scramble / reshuffling / purges after Putin.

I wrote about why that is over on Quora a few years ago, but the reasoning hasn't changed:

https://www.quora.com/Whats-the-reason-that-Russia-is-and-has-always-been-so-poor-despite-having-the-biggest-amounts-of-natural-resources-in-the-world-being-twice-the-size-of-the-USA-and-having-2-5-times-less-population-What-makes-this-country-so-miserable/answer/Steve-Estes

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