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A Handbook for Genocide.

Russia has just issued a genocide handbook for its war on Ukraine. The Russian official press agency "RIA Novosti" published last Sunday an explicit program for the complete elimination of the Ukrainian nation as such. It is still available for viewing, and has now been translated several times into English.

(https://medium.com/@kravchenko_mm/what-should-russia-do-with-ukraine-translation-of-a-propaganda-article-by-a-russian-journalist-a3e92e3cb64)

A "Nazi," as the genocide manual explains, is simply a human being who self-identifies as Ukrainian. According to the handbook, the establishment of a Ukrainian state thirty years ago was the "nazification of Ukraine." Indeed "any attempt to build such a state" has to be a "Nazi" act. Ukrainians are "Nazis" because they fail to accept "the necessity that the people support Russia."

For anyone still out there who believes that Putin's Russia opposes the extreme right in Ukraine or anywhere else, the genocide program is a chance to reconsider. Putin's Russian regime talks of “Nazis” not because it opposes the extreme right, which it most certainly does not, but as a rhetorical device to justify unprovoked war and genocidal policies. Putin’s regime is the extreme right. It is the world center of fascism. It supports fascists and extreme-right authoritarians around the world. In traducing the meaning of words like "Nazi," Putin and his propagandists are creating more rhetorical and political space for fascists in Russia and elsewhere.

The genocide handbook explains that the Russian policy of "denazification" is not directed against Nazis in the sense that the word is normally used. The handbook grants, with no hesitation, that there is no evidence that Nazism, as generally understood, is important in Ukraine. It operates within the special Russian definition of "Nazi": a Nazi is a Ukrainian who refuses to admit being a Russian. The "Nazism" in question is "amorphous and ambivalent"; one must, for example, be able to see beneath the world of appearance and decode the affinity for Ukrainian culture or for the European Union as "Nazism."
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Scribbles · 36-40, F
That is so crazy to read...it's like falling back in time decades...

Unfortunately....I am not surprised by the crazy that is Putin 😣
RodionRomanovitch · 56-60, M
@Scribbles It's one of the most astounding things I have ever read. The fact that Russian intellectuals are now propagandising for Putin , and laying out a rationale for genocide and mass extermination , should terrify all of us.
Scribbles · 36-40, F
@RodionRomanovitch A friend of ours in Mariupol (I haven't given up all hope just yet that he or someone in his family may be alive somewhere :/ ) for about a decade was convinced that one day Putin would do this. And that it'd be just like all the other invasions Ukraine has suffered through...all death, rape, starvation, deportation, and destruction. A Family member who lived in Russia for years worried about it too. So I've worried Putin would snap and do this.

I agree...It is terrifying and It needs to stop!