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Kurallar / How the QoD Mobile API helps you power
« on: September 05, 2023, 11:19:35 am »
By March 11, police had arrested a record number of people participating in protests: 13,913 people . In the unprecedented circumstances of scaremongering, police brutality and the blackout of most independent media, no one has been able to assemble a critical mass in a street protest that the government cannot suppress. Liberal opposition leaders who have emigrated continue to call for protest rallies to be held every day " in the main square of your city ." It's easy to understand from an emotional point of view: no day should be spent accepting war.
However, icy reason tells us that at this Phone Number List the most important thing is not an ethical stance but careful work to mobilize those strata that liberal politicians had long ignored. Only the former "Putin majority" can change the balance of power and end the war. This is where the Russian left currently sees its purpose: to work with those sections of the population. Of all the sociological reports devoted to the perception of the Russian "special operation" in Ukraine, only one It allows us to see the connection between social inequality and the attitude towards war.

Despite the common perception in Russia (mainly stemming from the dominance of the liberal narrative in the opposition media) that only the well-educated and wealthy minority oppose Putin, while the poor majority remain loyal consumers of propaganda, the Surveys show that it is the poor who perceive war most critically. "Low-income people are more concerned about the military operation because they expect a further worsening of their material conditions in this regard," the researchers observe.
However, icy reason tells us that at this Phone Number List the most important thing is not an ethical stance but careful work to mobilize those strata that liberal politicians had long ignored. Only the former "Putin majority" can change the balance of power and end the war. This is where the Russian left currently sees its purpose: to work with those sections of the population. Of all the sociological reports devoted to the perception of the Russian "special operation" in Ukraine, only one It allows us to see the connection between social inequality and the attitude towards war.

Despite the common perception in Russia (mainly stemming from the dominance of the liberal narrative in the opposition media) that only the well-educated and wealthy minority oppose Putin, while the poor majority remain loyal consumers of propaganda, the Surveys show that it is the poor who perceive war most critically. "Low-income people are more concerned about the military operation because they expect a further worsening of their material conditions in this regard," the researchers observe.