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Assault on the Future

Russia person in police detention

I grew up in a country for which the future was something of a religion. The future was by definition 鈥渂right.鈥 There were official slogans about it, poems and novels were written about it. In today鈥檚 Russia, the future is presented as frightening and 鈥渄ark.鈥 It could bring revolution and chaos. How did this radical change come about?

 

鈥淲e have the world鈥檚 best rockets and factories, we live in the world鈥檚 best city, we live better than all other boys and girls on the planet,鈥 I remember myself musing during a boring class in my primary school in Moscow during the early 1980s. 鈥淲e should probably share some of these riches with those less fortunate ones. Why not help others, given that our life will only get better anyway?鈥 Conquering space, creating new technologies, living in the best social system in the world, maintaining both military might and a commitment to peace鈥攖hese were the early themes of my generation.

 

Although the 鈥渂est social system鈥 faltered right in front of our eyes, we were given not fewer but more reasons for historic optimism. Gorbachev鈥檚 perestroika and the new opportunities of the 1990s instilled in us a sense of expanding horizons. We read the books that would have gotten our parents arrested had they read them. We learned to embrace changes that led away from the Soviet past. For us, political change meant new educational opportunities, new jobs, new ways of personal advancement. 

 

Alexei Navalny was part of that generation. This is why it was strange to see that a dark view of this crucial transformative period in the past prevailed among Navalny鈥檚 circle, who are continuing his cause (see my piece about the documentary Traitors produced by the Anti-Corruption Foundation). In this view, the 1990s were nothing but chaos and corruption. This view is more natural for previous generations, including Putin鈥檚.

 

A War of Generations

 

The previous generation was different. Russians close to Putin鈥檚 age鈥攖hose born between the second half of the 1940s and the mid-1960s鈥攂elong to what the anthropologist Alexei Yurchak has called the 鈥渓ast Soviet generation.鈥 As studies show, in the USSR鈥檚 later years, the period when Putin was growing up, Soviet society lost any remnants of collectivist idealism and turned toward material well-being and the values of individualism.

 

These people had experienced deep disillusionment regarding their country鈥檚 prospects. And they were the ones who, without setting idealistic goals, buried the Soviet system, as Yurchak showed in his seminal book, . 

 

If elections and other procedures for competitive changes of power were to work in Russia, those who grew up under Brezhnev would have to be replaced by people of Navalny鈥檚 age, who grew up under Gorbachev and Yeltsin鈥攁ge cohorts roughly corresponding to Generation X. The social and cultural context of Russian Gen-Xers鈥 youth and their overall historical experience are profoundly different from those of their predecessors. Navalny鈥檚 and my own late school and college years were a period of historic change, the weakening of the totalitarian state and the expectation of Russia鈥檚 full integration into the world. 

 

For many of us, the Putin years were a time during which we were deprived of the freedoms, opportunities, and prospects that had seemed natural to us. Putin was the one who 鈥渓ost the Soviet Union,鈥 and he has worked to impose that bitterness on all his countrymen. The last Soviet generation, Putin鈥檚 generation, had disappointments; the first post-Soviet generation, Navalny鈥檚 generation, had hopes. For this reason, the murder of Alexei Navalny was not just a crime but also a symbolic killing of hopes for historic change and integration into the world.

 

Dismantling the Future 

 

A deeper reason why the current regime in Russia is so stable is that the Kremlin has succeeded in instilling in citizens a belief that the passage of time itself brings with it new threats. Putin鈥檚 real supporters do not so much support him as cling to the present, with its dwindling possibilities. They鈥攑erhaps without realizing it鈥攁re in favor of slow degradation as opposed to rapid degradation. 

 

The Kremlin鈥檚 campaign managers keep pushing Russian society into approving a leader under whom the life of society has been deteriorating for more than a decade. And they present this person as a protector against even worse deterioration, cataclysms and invasion of enemy forces. 

 

It is not so important whether the current Russian rulers share this dark view of political reality. In their rhetoric, the role of the 鈥渂right past,鈥 a golden age lost, is played either by the Russian Empire or by the Soviet Union, depending on the audience. And the 鈥渄ark future,鈥 a pending apocalypse, is the threat of crisis, the collapse of the country or its capture by enemies. 

 

But suspension does not equal prevention. If we consider that the role of the ruler is only to buy time before the end of the world鈥攖hat is, in our case, a future 鈥渃olor revolution鈥濃攊t follows that this event is inevitable anyway. The most ardent loyalists and uncompromising oppositionists essentially agree on one thing: the coming of the future can be delayed for a long time, but it will not spare the system of power Putin created. 

 

Assault on the Future in the West

 

What is difficult to understand for a person of my background is why anxiety about the future seems to prevail in the West too. Western media, the book market, and popular art are overflowing with images of catastrophes and scenes from a post-apocalyptic future. Journalists and public intellectuals speak of a climate catastrophe, a migration crisis, man-made viruses, artificial intelligence spinning out of control, and, of course, a major war.

 

The change of generations is not perceived as something positive: the millennials are sure that the boomers have stolen the future from them and things will only get worse. Against the background of unprecedented prosperity, politicians periodically come to power in the developed world, promising to prevent one or another 鈥渘ational catastrophe.鈥

 

Much of this can be explained by the way media, news cycles, and human attention are organized. But a lot of it runs deeper. The idea of progress once saw only positive aspects in the intergenerational transmission of human experience and knowledge. Today鈥檚 attitude to progress is very different from the techno-optimism characteristic of the twentieth century. Now change seems to bring us bills in need of payment or a list of 鈥渟ins鈥 to be paid for. 

 

A major rethink of the West鈥檚 pessimism about the future is in order. One suggestion is that Russia could serve as an example of what happens to a society that succumbs to the influence of preachers of a dark future. No one should repeat this experience. A second suggestion is that the anxiety about the future can only be defused by abandoning the thought trap that makes political change apocalyptically described, either negatively (鈥渢he end of the world鈥) or positively (鈥渢he new kingdom鈥).

The opinions expressed in this article are those solely of the author and do not reflect the views of the Kennan Institute.

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Kennan Institute

The Kennan Institute is the premier US center for advanced research on Eurasia and the oldest and largest regional program at the Woodrow 浪花直播 International Center for Scholars. The Kennan Institute is committed to improving American understanding of Russia, Ukraine, Central Asia, the South Caucasus, and the surrounding region through research and exchange.   Read more

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