Talk:April 2018 attack on dissent

Response

 * Academic Freedom And Setting An Example, Tim Hayward, April 20, 2018


 * In lieu of a well-written response, few points here.
 * (1) Academic freedom: it does look bad. In comparison with Russia, there was a lot of freedom in late USSR and especially in the early 90's Russia, with Sakharov back to Moscow, etc. Closer to the case at hand, Leonid Rink, Vladimir Uglev, Mirzoyanov were all able to publicly express sharply critical of the government opinions (going too far in Mirzoyanov case, revealing classified information, but still treated quite mildly and allowed to leave). Vladimir Uglev (now retired) maintains strongly pro-opposition views, without being called names, and expresses his professional opinions, deviating from those of the government, in national and British mass media. There are signs of academic freedom situation deteriorating in Russia as well, with Western ways and means followed by the state and academic leaders, but not as bad as seen here; at the level seen here, it is in the domain of fringe lowlife bloggers who may be accusing academics of treason and 5th column membership on the basis of foreign trips or grants. That does not (yet? predominantly?) reaches state levels. What's here, brings about some memories of articles in Pravda in Stalinist days (luckily, those memories could be an exaggeration, or Chekhov's  farce in place of a tragedy).
 * (2)As for myself, I am very far from being pro-Assad, against dictatorship in general, and I am not pro-Putin. I do not support Russian involvement in Syria. I would not have a particular problem with a fair power play, like a military response to a genuine weapons of mass destruction crisis, or a power play on the premise that Assad+Iran endangers regional security.  - This is all without Russia in the picture, which, as a major nuclear state, and as a value system, makes everything much more complicated and much more dangerous.   But that does not make me a supporter of idiotic fakes played in media, and unfairness and idiocy in general. If Western population is in state of mind which cannot support a frank military power play, I disagree with them being led into it by faking; something else needs to be done instead, eg developing international and intercultural mechanisms and all other things which are fair and genuine.  Instead of fake wars, it's better to invest in knowledge and well-being of  the society. Quite frankly I do not see those fakes at all helpful in promoting any fair agenda, neoconservative agenda including. (Compare with the public perceptions of the war in Iraq years after, which shrunk to the Colin Powell's UN, vial to see the point). --Resup (talk) 18:27, 23 April 2018 (UTC)