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Xavier Moss's avatar

Not being American, I've been really taken aback by the insularity of a lot of American discourse. They really have internalised, consciously or unconsciously, American hegemony as an immutable fact of the world – which is baffling given the result of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq. Imperialism can come from any country, and in fact middle powers are often little hegemons in their own region. Many countries can be imperialist, and sometimes seemingly unlikely ones – Rwandan intervention in its region's many conflicts can definitely be characterised that way.

Most of all, though, it seems like a belief that other countries cannot exist except as a relation to America, as a reflection of some part of it. The role of Europe is totally ignored, even though the path to development EU market integration provides is the biggest reason not to get sucked into Russia's impoverishing orbit. Ukraine's decision isn't seen as about its future, or about the obvious misery in Donetsk and Luhansk since 2014, but essentially a vote on how they feel about America. Surrendering would be anti-American, and therefore good, so fighting for your life must be evil. It's an insane point of view, and a morally bankrupt one at that.

It's shocking that so few people seem to be against both Russian and American aggression, when 'countries should not invade one another' seems like a pretty simple moral principle.

Bamboo Annals's avatar

"This is not to say, of course, that the socialist Left has been as bad as the Trumpist Right in this episode. It has not. "

It is this sort of soft spot for the far-left that enabled its rise. "He may be a bastard, but he's our bastard."

Ultimately it all boils down to the fact that the legacy of the Soviet Union has not been unequivocally repudiated like that of Nazi Germany. Therefore, in the post-1945 marketplace of ideas, the left has a default advantage over the right, and the far-left doesn't get you banned from Twitter like the far-right does. After all the Soviets sent the Sputnik to the space, while Nazi Germany only made V-2 rockets...

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