Avrelia ponders Ukrainian Affairs
Nov. 30th, 2004 12:24 pmIt is strange how everyone is talking about Ukraine on TV and newspapers nowadays. I am not sure Ukraine existed for most people a week ago.
But since it is a hot topic, I decided to talk about it, too. To be honest, I don’t care either for Yuchshenko or Yanukovich. Not at the very least. I don’t know who will be the best choice for Ukraine and its prosperity and general well-being. I do care about Ukraine, but not having followed the situation in the last years there, I cannot say what was going on there. My grandparents hated the current president, Kuchma, and that’s all I know on the subject. I can see, however, that neither of contenders are fluffy bunnies, and I guess, I would prefer someone with a cleaner past, but why should I decide who will be the president of Ukraine?
And this is the problem with these elections. Because one is the Russia-supported candidate and another is the Western-countries-supported candidate, and there are all kinds of political technologies and PR campaigns at play, and the popularity cards, and all stuff that has more to do with games than with people of Ukraine. And that is wrong.
This is old good imperial thinking – that my country has a right to rule other countries, because my country is so much better, richer, more powerful, and has more rights to do so. This thinking doesn’t belong to some one country. Everyone likes to play this game. I would say I have a smidge of imperial ambitions myself – I am not that humble – but I am of the philosophical ideal that ruling other people’s countries is wrong (even if my country is the best thing in the world.)
By the way. The divide in Ukraine on Eastern and Western parts isn’t new – it is a historical divide that existed since… I am not sure about exact century, but believe me it was long ago. Maybe always. The history of that region is fascinating, but not really a point of this post.
But since it is a hot topic, I decided to talk about it, too. To be honest, I don’t care either for Yuchshenko or Yanukovich. Not at the very least. I don’t know who will be the best choice for Ukraine and its prosperity and general well-being. I do care about Ukraine, but not having followed the situation in the last years there, I cannot say what was going on there. My grandparents hated the current president, Kuchma, and that’s all I know on the subject. I can see, however, that neither of contenders are fluffy bunnies, and I guess, I would prefer someone with a cleaner past, but why should I decide who will be the president of Ukraine?
And this is the problem with these elections. Because one is the Russia-supported candidate and another is the Western-countries-supported candidate, and there are all kinds of political technologies and PR campaigns at play, and the popularity cards, and all stuff that has more to do with games than with people of Ukraine. And that is wrong.
This is old good imperial thinking – that my country has a right to rule other countries, because my country is so much better, richer, more powerful, and has more rights to do so. This thinking doesn’t belong to some one country. Everyone likes to play this game. I would say I have a smidge of imperial ambitions myself – I am not that humble – but I am of the philosophical ideal that ruling other people’s countries is wrong (even if my country is the best thing in the world.)
By the way. The divide in Ukraine on Eastern and Western parts isn’t new – it is a historical divide that existed since… I am not sure about exact century, but believe me it was long ago. Maybe always. The history of that region is fascinating, but not really a point of this post.