Broad, philosophical thread about how a hybrid authoritarian regime like Russia uses repression when citizens protest.
On this day of protests for #Navalny across Russia.
#RussiaProtests (1/21)
First of all, the defining ethical feature of the modern world is that each human life has equal moral worth.
Only the most extreme regimes can disregard - without consequences - that their citizens are cognisant of this.
#RussiaProtests
(2/21)
In Belarus, escalating violence against protestors caused the regime more damage than it had hoped.
Unlike Belarus, where the special police numbers a couple of thousand, the Russian special police can handle vast numbers of protestors.
#RussiaProtests
(3/21)
So could the Putin regime order the special police, the broader national guard, and regular police to round up 10,000 protestors, and adopt Gestapo-like tactics on them?
At this stage, no- the regime would consider that an act of existential self harm.
#RussiaProtests
(4/21)
The regime can take extreme steps with individuals, e.g. Navalny. But it's not ready to universalise this to all citizens.
Moreover, it can't. The bodies of state responsible for organised violence in Russia compete with one another, & aren't part of a vertical system.
(5/21)