• @CriticalResist8A
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    302 years ago

    I think this is even more dehumanizing, it’s saying they have no brains of their own and just do whatever Putin tells them like he’s a cult leader.

    • @carpe_modo
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      222 years ago

      Yeah, this is how the US justified the Iraq invasion. It removes their statehood and builds the narrative that almost everyone in the country is a slave of the leader, who has ultimate power over everything in their borders. It’s part of the dehumanization of the people and the cartoon villain image of the leader.

    • Salamander
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      2 years ago

      Maybe. But I suspect that framing the narrative in a way that emphasizes “Putin” as the aggressor rather than “the Russians” can help a sow little less russophobia.

      We saw that the media’s emphasis on the providence of the 'Wuhan virus" during the early stages of the pandemic caused a sharp increase in anti-asian hate crimes. The mainstream media and politicians were blamed for this. I wouldn’t be surprised if regulators still have that mistake fresh in their mind and sent the memo not to focus on the country when reporting on this war.

      • @Mzuark
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        52 years ago

        Plus the more they villainize Russians, the more anyone with a trace of slavic heritage is going to side with “the bad guys” because the alternative is the genocidal rage of the ignorant.