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Subject: Kagarlitsky / Bronze soldier takes a shot / May 28
Date: Mon, 28 May 2007 18:41:07 -0700 (PDT)
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Today's commentary:
http://www.zmag.org/sustainers/content/2007-05/23kagarlitsky.cfm

==================================

ZNet Commentary
Bronze soldier takes a shot May 28, 2007
By Boris Kagarlitsky

I learned about the riots in Tallinn during a philosophy conference in 
the south Russian city of Rostov-on-Don. Participants were deep into 
Hegel's "Phenomenology of Spirit" when a young man showed an SMS message 
on events in Estonia. During the coffee-break we didn't miss the chance 
to share first impressions from the news. "This is practice, while our 
fiefdom is theory", was the disdainful reaction.

"It is just another proof that Estonia is a European country, and the 
Russians living there did just what the European citizens would do. The 
Dutch, British or French citizens would do just the same." This 
synthesis from one theorist has set me thinking.

Indeed, massive protests are a way to express democratic conscience. 
Theorists of the XVII century listed the "right to rebellion" among the 
basic civic rights. People have the right, and sometimes it is their 
duty, to go to the streets when the authorities violate norms of 
civilized life and humiliating citizens' dignity. This is the reason why 
the general public always sympathizes with rioters and the authorities 
almost never dare to persecute them. Following the logic of social 
processes, the authorities are responsible for such events.

So, when the Estonian authorities were about to pull down the monument 
to the Soviet soldiers who died in the World War II, Tallinn dwellers 
went further than discussing the situation - they offered resistance. In 
some forty years children in Estonian schools will learn that April 2007 
was a turning point in the formation of the country's civil society. And 
the situation won't be seen as a Russian revolt against insults from the 
part of the Estonians. The fact that the majority of the discontented 
were the Russian-speaking residents of the Baltic capital testifies only 
that they were more responsive to the situation than their 
Estonian-speaking countrymen. But the Russian mass media represent the 
unrest as an ethnic conflict, only perpetuating the existing 
controversies between the Russians and Estonians.

Here in Russia we have nothing to do but to fallow the events in Tallinn 
with envy and astonishment, for our own oppositionists have repeatedly 
failed to make people hit the street. The liberal press has to focus on 
police atrocities against the participants of all sorts of "Dissenter's 
Marches", for the marches themselves are inconsiderable in number and 
can hardly make big news. So far the most successful march in St. 
Petersburg managed to gather about four thousand people, other actions 
can hardly be called mass protests at all, but for the massive presence 
of OMON, FSB, the police and the press.

However, the number of the dissenters is not the key element - what 
really matters is the qualitative differences between the social protest 
movements in Europe and in Russia.

First and foremost, social mobilization in Europe always takes place 
around a concrete issue, with clear and realistic demands being 
formulated: to abolish the "First Employment Contract" in France, to 
return the Ungdomshuset (literally "the Youth House") in Copenhagen to 
the people, to leave the bronze soldier in Tallinn at its place. These 
demands are clear, concrete and quite satisfiable. Our intellectuals 
argue if diametrically opposite political forces should unite their 
political potential in "Dissenters' Marches". These debates are due to 
speculative and demagogic nature of the Marches to unite discreet social 
forces in order to express discontent per se, not in connection to a 
concrete issue. While in Western Europe the opposition politicians 
jointly lead the people into the streets to get concrete problems 
resolved, our political movements only seek to use each other, failing 
to find consent and showing disrespect of all possible democratic values.

As for political leaders, their active role in "Dissenters' Marches" is 
another telling distinction of our protest expression from their 
spontaneous grass-roots level actions. Of course, the majority of 
protest actions in Western Europe are orchestrated. But they are not 
staged by the leading opposition politicians. Europeans hit the street 
when they disagree with some event and feel that the politicians cannot 
or don't want to represent people's will. Our situation is a paradox: it 
is not the citizens who search for the way out of the political 
stalemate but the politicians themselves, acknowledging their impotence, 
are trying to imitate the European-like social movements.

Authoritarian nature of Putin's regime partly explains this paradox. But 
the regime as authoritarian as it is doesn't deprive leaders of the 
"Other Russia" and the "United Civil Front" of alternative democratic 
strategies and methods. The authoritarian grip can be felt at the "Ford" 
or "Heineken - Petersburg" plants where workers are simply prohibited to 
hold rallies, or at the city social movements level whose demands are 
merely ignored.

The game of the "Other Russia" is to form a "broad coalition" and use 
the existing social protest for its own profit. It is nothing more than 
political manipulation. And though it might have relative success in the 
instantaneous political game, it is an obstacle for further development 
of the civil conscience in our society, for it doesn't intend to turn 
the crowd into citizens, but to make a crowd out of citizens.

Hopefully, civil conscience will develop independently of the "Other 
Russia", the president or his spin-doctors with their "sovereign 
democracy". It will happen gradually as people get more social 
experience: sooner or later, shifting way of life will change political 
behavior.

Simply, in small Estonia these processes evolve quicker than in big 
Russia. Boris Kagarlitsky is Director of the Institute of Globalization 
and Social Movements

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