this post was submitted on 19 Dec 2025
55 points (95.1% liked)
History Memes
1221 readers
1261 users here now
A place to share history memes!
Rules:
-
No sexism, racism, homophobia, transphobia, assorted bigotry, etc.
-
No fascism (including tankies/red fash), atrocity denial or apologia, etc.
-
Tag NSFW pics as NSFW.
-
Follow all Piefed.social rules.
Banner courtesy of @setsneedtofeed@lemmy.world
OTHER COMMS IN THE HISTORYVERSE:
- !historymusic@quokk.au
- !historygallery@quokk.au
- !historymemes@piefed.social
- !historyruins@piefed.social
- !historyart@piefed.social
- !historyartifacts@piefed.social
- !historyphotos@piefed.social
founded 7 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
It's just stupid to think of the Russians civilians as any less wise or decent of any other population in history. If anything they had to suffer countless crisis and turmoils. Let's also not forget that in Europe the transition from monarchy to democracy was everything but a smooth process. Did the names Napoleon, Francisco Franco, Hitler and Mussolini ring any bell??
Plus also, it does gloss over the Russian population and those under Russian occupation that did oppose these things. Russian Nihilism, Tolstoyan movement, anarcho-communism (Kropotkin), anarchism in general (Bakunin), Chernoe Znamia, the Ukrainian Black Army, Kronstadt Rebellion, portions of the Green Army, and I am sure more. Many major anarchist figures were Russian or a part of the Russian empire (like Ukrainians like Nestor Makhno), like Emma Goldman, Maria Nikiforova, and the above mentioned Kropotkin and Bakunin.
I play online games in europe for over 25 years. If i ever meet a Russian who doesn't want to rape my family and hopes i die, i'm willing to agree.
That’s just gamerz
That's probably half of military age russians.
There's no intrinsic difference. But all societies have different cultures, and cultures affect the way individuals - and thus collectives - both think and act. Societies don't differ in kind in their core, human problems. But societies do differ in the scale to which such problems are combated - or exacerbated.
I wouldn't be willing to hazard any guesses as to whether Russian culture is 'more' or 'less' prone to this sort of problem than the median major culture of the modern world, or whether it's circumstance that has screwed them into their reputation for the past 200 years. Russian culture is not my core field of interest. But the argument that there's been a cultural fuckup somewhere is not an inherently incorrect one.
As an American, for example, I can attest to any number of cultural problems of my own nation that I can trace to many of our... exceptionally scaled problems.