Day 242. What's wrong with russians.
If you don't hate them, you just don't know them well enough.
Hey everyone!
I’m currently on an IV drip so will be very concise as it’s hard to type.
With this post I wanted to remind everyone the following:
There are two types of russians: 1) the russians who are killing Ukrainians 2) the russians who either support it or aren’t doing enough to stop it.
The russians who are bleating about russophobia during genocide of Ukrainians are not “good russians” - they are actually the worst ones and should be shut down the moment they open their mouth.
The russians are not aware of is that both their action and inaction have consequences. Why? Because historically they have never been accountable for any of the genocides they carried out.
The only way to stop genocide of Ukrainians and make sure russians never attack anyone again is to shame them for what they’re doing.
That needs to be done not just on an institutional level, but by every single human being who doesn’t want to become their next target.
If you do not know how to speak to russians, here is a 2 minute masterclass for you.
The below is an English translation of the tweets by Pylyp Dukhliy.
“A few days after the end of World War II, Carl Gustav Jung, a famous psychoanalyst and psychiatrist, gave an interview about the Nazis. To see how russians are now close to the Nazis in their worldview, it is enough to change Germans to russians in this.
[russians] show a special weakness in the face of these demons because of their incredible suggestibility. This is evident in their love of obedience, in their weak-willed obedience to orders, which are just another form of compulsion.
This corresponds to a general mental atrophy [of the russians], a consequence of their uncertain position between East and West. They are the only ones in the West who, in the common exodus from the eastern womb of nations, have remained with their mother the longest.
Eventually they detached, but arrived too late, whereas the mujik did not bother to break free at all. So [the russians] are deeply tormented by an inferiority complex, which they try to compensate for with delusions of grandeur.
It is also found in [russian] [spirituality]..., which in reality is nothing less than hard-heartedness, insensitivity, and callousness.“
All the accusations of heartlessness and bestiality with which [russian] propaganda has attacked [other nations] refer to [russians] themselves; [Putin's] speeches are nothing more than [russian] psychology projected onto the enemy.
All of them, consciously or unconsciously, actively or passively, were involved in the horrors; they knew nothing of what was happening, and they knew about it at the same time.
The question of collective guilt, which has and will continue to make it so difficult for politicians, is, for the psychologist, a fact beyond doubt, and one of the most important tasks of treatment is to make [them] ... admit their guilt.”