Template:Soviet mentality and Russian leadership today: Difference between revisions
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"Suvok" is a dustpan (dustbin) in Russian. | "Suvok" is a dustpan (dustbin) in Russian. | ||
[[File:dust pan why dont russians smile.png|200px]] | |||
In its simplest form, "Suvok" means to be a Soviet Citizen. The Soviet Union is "Советский Союз", Sovetskiy Soyuz "Советский Grajidin" (Soviet Union) what they used to say, a lot of old Russians took pride in that. | In its simplest form, "Suvok" means to be a Soviet Citizen. The Soviet Union is "Советский Союз", Sovetskiy Soyuz "Советский Grajidin" (Soviet Union) what they used to say, a lot of old Russians took pride in that. |
Revision as of 15:21, 24 October 2020
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"Suvok" is a dustpan (dustbin) in Russian. File:Dust pan why dont russians smile.png In its simplest form, "Suvok" means to be a Soviet Citizen. The Soviet Union is "Советский Союз", Sovetskiy Soyuz "Советский Grajidin" (Soviet Union) what they used to say, a lot of old Russians took pride in that. They old mentality Russians today say:
This is a classic line by the elderly. There were two concepts that emerged from Советский Grajidin (Soviet Citizen). One is the intelligentsia. This is the somewhat contentious book "Homo Sovieticus", written by dissident author Aleksandr Zinovyev. Homo Sovieticus is an effort to define a certain type of person. In the late 1920s and early 1930s Stalin said he was going to be the "engineer of human souls" to justify the deaths of millions. In large part he was successful. Stalin created a certain type of man. Later on with a touch of bitter humor, Homo Sovieticus came to be known in a wider circle outside of the intelligentsia as "Subor" - which is a potter. Subor was a group of people united with one goal, a collective mentality wrapped around a particular idea of a Soviet citizen. Troskti said "we will all be in the dustbin of history"
Although currently not used by the general Russian population, "Suvok" can explain heartless Muscovites today, the majority of those who have economic and political power. These "Suvok" will never say:
...They can't because it is a sign of weakness.
The most obvious historical reason behind the Suvok mentality is this: This suspicious mentality is understandable because most of the Soviet period everyone was against everyone. A Soviet citizen couldn't say anything in front of your children because they would blurt it out in school and that would be at best 25 years in the Gulag.
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