From the BBC:
“The Magic Mirror of Russian
Public Opinion”
Today’s Russia lacks many of the
tools characteristics of societies where citizens live in a shared reality. In
medieval Europe, the universal language was Latin; in the East, Chinese
hieroglyphs. Today, millennials the world over — this author among them — have
their own universal language: references to “Harry Potter”. The first Harry
Potter book introduced the magical Mirror of Erised, which showed a different
reflection to each person who stood before it — what that person wanted most.
For example, the saga’s hero, an orphan, saw his parents reflected in the
mirror. The Mirror of Erised may be the best metaphor for public opinion in
modern Russia under Putin. What we see in it exists and at the same time
doesn’t. That is, each person who looks into the mirror of public opinion finds
what he always expected to find. And no two people ever see the same thing.
Take the most recent high-profile
example. The large chain of fashionable supermarkets Vkusvill has operated in
Russia (mainly in large cities) for more than ten years. Oriented towards the
middle class and progressive youth, they sell locally-sourced produce with an
emphasis on the health and nutritional value of their products. Towards the end
of June, the chain posted on its website and social media materials with the
theme ‘family happiness’, with photos and stories of various families. Included
was a story about two young women hoping to marry. It was really nothing
special. For many years, LGBT activists the world over have celebrated June as
Pride Month, and every year more companies and brands show their support. There
has even emerged such a term as ‘rainbow-washing’, for when businesses use
rainbow flags as a marketing ploy with no real meaning. But for today’s Russia,
VkusVill’s act (which, I repeat, was an article on a corporate site) struck
like a lightning bolt on a hot, dry summer day. In a country where homophobia
has taken on an almost official character, where the last six months have seen
the remains of street politics and public discussion run over by a steamroller,
it prompted a real storm of emotion, both positive and negative. The progressive part of the audience (younger,
better educated, living in big cities) praised the supermarket chain’s “heroic”
act. Vkusvill was “beloved”, “the very best” grocery store around. Shoppers
pledged their eternal loyalty. The conservative part of the audience,
predictably, responded with condemnation. Brand representatives on social media
handled the response well.
Then something went wrong. On
July 4, the article and photographs were unexpectedly deleted. Something
strange appeared in their place: a statement signed by VkusVill’s founder and
eleven top managers. Here’s the relevant quote: “This page previously contained
an article which many of our customers, employees, partners, and suppliers
found offensive. We regret that this happened and consider the publication our
mistake, which resulted from the unprofessionalism of individual employees.” They
added that the purpose of their company was to provide shoppers with fresh,
tasty food, “not to publish articles expressing any sort of political or social
views.” Retail stores noted their desire “not to become sources of hate and
discord,” and offered their “sincere apologies” for what had occurred. In literal minutes, the situation was
completely reversed. Those who only yesterday had sworn the brand their undying
love and registered for its loyalty card now demonstratively tore up those
cards on camera and slammed the chain on social media, threatening a boycott. Whether there will be a boycott, and if such a
boycott would be successful, is hard to say. No previous attempt by the
progressive part of Russian society has ever succeeded.
What I find interesting here is
something else — the very different understandings of public opinion that arose
among each of the participants in this story.
The full range of possible
interpretations was on display: from those convinced that the overwhelming
majority of Russians were “caveman homophobes”, to those who thought all the
initial negative comments were written by bots and the decision to delete the
article was taken only after a certain phone call from “up top”. Few will admit it openly, but the fact is that
in Russia, every observer, blogger, journalist — any person on social media —
operates on his own idea of what public opinion is. That is, we all look into
our own Mirrors of Erised. Some might
take comfort in thinking themselves part of an enlightened minority, surrounded
on all sides by spear-shaking savages. Others might find it pleasant to believe
that everyone around them has long arrived at the same, correct understanding.
The borders of reality are
blurred because our understandings of societal norms are themselves constructed
and subject to change. Today’s Russia lacks many of the tools characteristic of
many western countries to return citizens to a shared reality. For a start,
Russia has no real elections. The parliamentary elections set to take place in
two months do not qualify, not with many candidates simply not permitted to
register and others struck down by criminal investigations. Nor is it a given
that the votes permitted will be accurately counted. If there were elections,
we could learn how many people would support a homophobic party and how many a
pro-LGBT one. So it is in Poland and Hungary, for example. But Russia doesn’t
have that. Nor does Russia have truly
independent journalism serving the whole of society. Yes, there are still some
news outlets hanging on by a thread, waiting nervously for their turn to be
pronounced ‘foreign agents’. But that is not enough to hold up a mirror to
society or establish a common understanding of life in that society. Finally,
Russia lacks normal social sciences. There are certainly good social
scientists, but no social sciences. This stems from the fact that in a
half-authoritarian society built in large part on hypocrisy and fake
information, people are loath to express their true beliefs to interviewers. Or
indeed to anyone at all, not least themselves.
Our situation is unique and
potentially very dangerous. Everyone in Russia, from ordinary citizens to
political bigwigs, has his own magical Mirror of Erised. Looking into it, each
uses his own intuition to draw conclusions about the opinions of others. We all
live with the results.
^ This gives everyone (Russians
and non-Russians) something to think about. ^
https://www.themoscowtimes.com/2021/07/12/the-magic-mirror-of-public-opinion-a74492
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