For a country to develop at a very quick rate it must encourage entrepreneurship, and let the economy run freely and openly. Russia isn't doing this. There's a few people who have been allowed to own a lot of resources, but small businesses have a hard time (especially small producers). The bureaucracy is too much.This might be a topic worthy of another thread; but, why isn't Russia more developed as a nation, and will it ever be for the matter? — Question
Yes, absolutely. He is centralising power, removing opposition, and directing the country towards and clear and unified goal. He is also building a very strong military, because ultimately, what decides the course of things in this world is brute force. Not money. Not influence. Not anything else. Force always has the last say. The West is failing to realise this.do you think Putin is doing a good job at restoring the power and might of the former Soviet Union? Why or why not? — Question
False. Disapproving of Putin is not a problem. Protests, etc. are another matter though.But in Russia, not approving of Putin has enormous risks — Wayfarer
Yes, because Putin is making Russia strong again. The Russian people are sick and tired of always being seconds or thirds.Russian opinion polls have a very high approval for Putin — Wayfarer
This is not true. In Communist times you were given a job, and you had to work it, whether you liked it or not. You had no freedom to move in society. This isn't the case today. You have a lot more freedom. Freedom of religious expression, etc. The problem is that many people still expect the state to give them a job. They expect to be given things. Opportunities, etc. It's a mindset problem. People want to be given. They can't take for themselves. They can't create their own jobs, etc.Now, under Putin, they have no political freedom, and high unemployment and homelessness. It looks to me like, on the whole they were better off under either the Soviets or Yeltsin. — andrewk
It looks like you failed to notice the word 'political' before the word 'freedom'.This is not true. In Communist times you were given a job, and you had to work it, whether you liked it or not. You had no freedom to move in society. This isn't the case today. You have a lot more freedom. — Agustino
But he could have your mother killed while you were having coffee with him, without batting an eyelid, and without your ever knowing what had happened. — Wayfarer
That said, The Economist says that Putin is not a terrible economic manager. They give him some marks for overall economic management and political prudence. — Wayfarer
Force always has the last say. The West is failing to realise this. — Agustino
Now, under Putin, they have no political freedom, and high unemployment and homelessness. It looks to me like, on the whole they were better off under either the Soviets or Yeltsin. — andrewk
For a country to develop at a very quick rate it must encourage entrepreneurship, and let the economy run freely and openly. Russia isn't doing this. There's a few people who have been allowed to own a lot of resources, but small businesses have a hard time (especially small producers). — Agustino
Who needs that? Politics is a bloody arena, where things are taken by force, whether that force is controlling the masses (Ghandi) or controlling the armies (Hitler) or otherwise. You have political freedom to say and think you disagree with policies and people. Someone in Russia can say they think what Putin is doing isn't good policy for Russia. You don't have political freedom to protest (if you do, then you're obviously joining in the political arena as a political player), form political parties, etc. And it doesn't seem all that unnatural that that is so. As I said, politics is a battlefield - there are consequences for actions.It looks like you failed to notice the word 'political' before the word 'freedom'. — andrewk
The development of a country's economy isn't the most important factor to a country's success. Its influence, and strategic positioning with regards to the future and its competitors - that's what matters the most. Economy is relevant only to produce sufficient resources.How do you explain the contradiction in your views for a country to develop rapidly, and the rather contradiction you see, as you described it, in terms of how Russia has been developing under Putin? — Question
And that's what made the US great in the first place. It wasn't the "free market", etc. That's all BS. The US was great because it intervened at the very end in two global conflicts (WWI and WWII) and managed to set the terms after both conflicts with everyone. It got ahold of resources, it got ahold of influence, and it loaned reparation money (Marshal Plan for ex.) to most of Europe. It's hard not to be great when you set the terms.Also, in regards to the above quote, you seem to describe that force matters in the end; but, fail to point at the US as the supreme user of force in mitigating conflicts in the past. How come? — Question
Simple. SK or China don't have centralised control. Sure, China is a dictatorship, but there is no one supreme leader of China. China is ruled by a group of strategists which decide what is best, not by a single person. Therefore power is more distributed, and when power is more distributed, it's possible to generate much faster economic growth. Whereas when you have one leader centralising control, he cannot risk things escaping out of control because (for example) someone is getting too rich. So everyone must be controlled.I have heard people say this about Russia a lot. How is South Korea, for instance, so economically successful? What is so different about China? — mcdoodle
So, I've been one of those people who always thought that Russia is one of the few countries that bona fide ought to be the richest. It has resources in abundance and a decent population. T — Question
Force always has the last say. The West is failing to realise this. — Agustino
Yes, but the problem with this approach is that the enemies of the West don't play by these rules. Therefore the West is at a disadvantage.Or, maybe the West is trying to be a little more civilized than they have been in the past. The West has had plenty of practice in the exercise of force. — Bitter Crank
The Soviet Union never fell. They relinquished some territories temporarily and opened themselves to foreign investment and trade in order to modernise themselves and come back stronger than ever before. There was nothing to gain except economic stagnation by remaining stuck with Communism, and blocked from the rest of the world. But you think the ex Soviet bloc isn't still there? Ukraine is really part of Russia, so is Estonia, etc. They are absolutely controlled, to this day.I am struggling to recall the 'bloody arena' in which the Soviet Union fell. — mcdoodle
a reborn Communist Party — Bitter Crank
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