And this brings me to the real issue here: We face the danger where debate about various policies are taken over by the larger "culture war", dumbed down to simple rhetoric which doesn't put into context the actual issues at hand. — ssu
As far as I can tell, this is the explicit part one of your thesis: that you're being constrained against discussing a particular and interesting event (a mode of warfare) because it falls under the banner of a tabboo subject (immigration). For all I know, that is the case where you are, but that isn't a global "We". Britain apparently has no problem faking mass immigration stories and both British and American leaders have enjoyed great success describing immigrants generally as dirty criminals, so I don't think anyone there would bat an eyelid at bemoaning Russian immigration into Finland as warfare. If they're not, there's three more viable reasons:
1) it didn't really happen;
2) it happened, but we didn't know;
3) we know, but we really don't care (very likely)
From where I am, far from the right-wing paranoid fantasy that you can't speak the truth about immigration without being cancelled, the right-wing press actually devotes a lot of its energy to anti-immigration propaganda in a manner that betrays the fact that, far from being a considered opinion based on evidence a la Russia, it is against immigration _even in principle_ along lines adjacent to racial purity arguments (e.g. they speak the wrong language ["I don't recognise this country any more!"], have the wrong religion ["They're trying to cancel Christmas!"] or otherwise the wrong culture.)
If dialogue about immigration is difficult and heated, that's because it's been poisoned by racist, nationalistic, traditionalistic i.e. conservative sentiment. You prove the point yourself by making the instantaneous leap from Russia's typical wrongdoing (a non-controversial topic except to the Putinbots) to Mexicans-have-the-wrong-culture arguments that have no analogy with Russian cold warfare.
Probably a better example (required since immigration-phobia in the right apparently blinds them from distinctions between immigration stories) is Syrian refugees in Germany and France. A large number of sexual assault allegations were made by women, the picture painted being that this mass influx of Syrian men brought a sexually misogynistic culture with it. I even know women personally who were so molested*. That said, we're also told this happens to all women every day anyway, and I'm not sure how strangers on a train are verifying each others' residential status*. Did the governments fail to respond to the danger they put women in because they were afraid to say anything negative against even a minority of immigrants? Or did the right very easily convince the people to accept an incredibly tenuous, unverifiable link between eeeeeeevil immigrants (or at least people who look different to me who we might arbitrarily identify as immigrants) and crimes that were supposed to be already happening? How did such crimes supposedly become caused by immigration? I have no idea and don't see any barrier to discussing it beyond there being nothing to discuss.
*And, yes, I asked the question 'How do you know they were Syrian and refugees?' and, yes, I was immediately labelled a misogynist for not being a racist, cuz they're _obviously_ immigrants, right?
The implicit part two as far as I can tell has the following logic:
1. Russian warfare via immigration against Finland is bad.
2. Therefore immigration is bad.
3. Therefore immigration of refugees is bad.
4. Therefore "silenced" (and yet ubiquitous) ab initio anti-immigration arguments are justified.
I don't think that takes a lot effort to obliterate. It's perfectly straightforward to condemn Russia's experiments with the Finnish border _and_ support helping refugees from war at the same time. This only appears contradictory if you're an extremist (i.e. have the view that immigration must always/never be supported).
On your first image btw, I'm reminded of Farage's tactics in Brexit campaigning. Photos of groups of people allegedly from abroad are no doubt extremely potent to the right wing, you guys go nuts over that stuff. They're just not all that scary to the rest of us. It's just a photo of a group of cyclists to me, and it doesn't concern me at all where they've come from.
Your second image suggests that, contrary to your assertion that people can't talk about Russian emigration, people are in fact talking about it. Even the cartoonists.
If we all just agree that, if the Russia story is true, it was a bad thing to do, does that satisfy you? Maybe do a poll? Or would that put the cancel culture fantasy too much at risk?
;)