Ukraine’s new authorities actually made every concession to neo‐Nazi militants because they themselves feared the monster they had armed to keep them in power.

However, nationalist and neo‐Nazi groups were systematically made mainstream by all Ukrainian governments after the collapse of the Soviet Union; they were needed to reverse the mass nostalgia for the late‐Soviet welfare state with free healthcare, education, free apartments for workers, free trips to resorts and vacation homes with very low prices for food, gas, electricity and public transport.

Now people get prison sentences for even wearing a Soviet badge, listening to Communist songs, or wearing a T‐shirt with a hammer and sickle. Most of the communists left for the rebellious republics of Donbass (where their own communist party operates), some went to Russia, and some stayed to work underground in Ukraine.

Even recently, in March 2023, the Ukrainian security services reported the detention in western Ukraine, in the city of Lviv, of a cell of the illegal Communist Party of the Soviet Union, numbering 45 people. Judging by their description, they were mostly elderly people.

  • @Shrike502
    link
    511 months ago

    they were mostly elderly people.

    That’s the sad part. Thirty years of propaganda did not pass unnoticed with the younger generations

  • @big_spoon
    link
    511 months ago

    “using nazis rather than communists to counter soviet nostalgia”

    and then they ask why their efforts doesn’t work

  • @Mzuark
    cake
    link
    411 months ago

    Because nothing bad has ever come from venerating fascist war criminals.

  • @comdev
    link
    3
    edit-2
    10 months ago

    deleted by creator