Kremlintarianism: Difference between revisions

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* [[Roman Skaskiw]], “[http://romaninukraine.com/im-accused-of-being-a-neo-con/ I’m accused of being a Neo Con]”
* [[Roman Skaskiw]], “[http://romaninukraine.com/im-accused-of-being-a-neo-con/ I’m accused of being a Neo Con]”


* [https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-ron-paul-institute-be-afraid-very-afraid The Ron Paul Institute: Be Afraid, Very Afraid], 2017
* [[James Kirchick]], [https://www.thedailybeast.com/the-ron-paul-institute-be-afraid-very-afraid The Ron Paul Institute: Be Afraid, Very Afraid], 2017


* [[Agnieszka Płonka]], “[https://aiplonka.wordpress.com/2022/02/28/do-not-say-russia-say-the-gang/ Do not say ‘Russia’, say ‘the gang’]”, 2022
* [[Agnieszka Płonka]], “[https://aiplonka.wordpress.com/2022/02/28/do-not-say-russia-say-the-gang/ Do not say ‘Russia’, say ‘the gang’]”, 2022

Revision as of 04:44, 25 August 2022

Kremlintarianism [3] is the support of Kremlin policy (Kremlinism) by alleged libertarians.

They have crossed the line from a belief that the U.S. should “mind its own business” to explaining that the reason we should do so is because the regimes we’ve been told to be wary of by the shapers of American foreign policy are in fact righteous victims and national liberators.

What’s so ironic is that so-called libertarians are defending nationalist politicians who never hesitate to use the full powers of the state in quashing the personal freedoms of their citizenry

— James Kirchick, “The Ron Paul Institute: Be Afraid, Very Afraid: The former presidential contender is back, this time as head of a new ‘institute’ for ‘peace’ comprised of anti-Semites, 9/11 truthers, and dictator lovers.

To be so angry at your own government that you will ally yourself with tyrants abroad is … well, words fail me. But when I become very calm, one comes to mind with perfect clarity: evil.

Tom G. Palmer, "Something Is Rotting at the Periphery of the Libertarian Movement..."

Kremlinism and Kremlinophilia

Kremlintarianism is an acute form of Kremlinophilia...

🤡anti-state🤡anti-war🤡pro-market🤡

Even the falls of the British and French empires at the end of World War II do not match as geo-strategic disasters the collapse of the Soviet Empire and breakup of the Soviet Union since the end of the Cold War.

Patrick J. Buchanan, “ProWarDotCom

Why the West Hates Russia: It’s Not Woke Enough?

Ryan McMaken, Mao Tse Tung Institute

It is far easier for a political party to gain ballot status in Russia than it is in most states in the U.S.

Justin Raimondo, ProWarDotCom

... and, currently, Putinophilia:

“Putin is the leader of the world”[1]

Vladimir Putin Is The Leader Of the Moral World

Paul Craig Roberts, Lew Rockwell Cesspool

We should thank our lucky stars that Putin is a mensch.

Walter Block, Lew Rockwell Cesspool

a decisive, realistic, and nationalistic adult, in the person of Vladimir Putin ... Putin has a very clear view of Russia’s genuine national interests

Michael Scheuer, Ron Paul Infamy for War and Poverty

he is not a dictator

Scott Ritter, Ron Paul Infamy for War and Poverty

Putin is a rational statesman, with legitimate security interest

Lew Rockwell, Ron Paul Infamy for War and Poverty

Putin is a Russian nationalist, patriot, traditionalist and a cold and ruthless realist looking out to preserve Russia as the great and respected power it once was and he believes it can be again.

Patrick J. Buchanan, ProWarDotCom

Putin, a proud Russian patriot... The neocons hate Putin with a passion because he is a patriot.

Justin Raimondo, ProWarDotCom

As such it defends Kremlinism, in particular Russian Imperialism/Russian Colonialism.

Kremlin-cute.png

Characteristics

  • Moral equivalency between genocidal regimes openly advocating War Crimes[4] and (imperfect yet vastly preferrable) Western liberal democracies
  • Criticizing much more the latter than the former
  • Worse, openly considering the latter as worse than the former
  • Staunch desire for the US, NATO, the EU and any half-decent country to avoid at any price or lose wars, even defensive ones, especially when Russia, a Russian ally, a former Russian ally or Russia-supported regime is involved (Ukraine should surrender/be conquered by Russia, Taiwan should be conquered by Russia-ally China [5], the US should have stayed out of WWII [6], Israel should not defend itself against Russia-ally Iran, etc)
  • Staunch support for Russia to launch wars [7] and be successful in its wars of aggression (Russian invasion of Ukraine is to be admired[8], and Russia should be successful in it [9])
  • Denial of genocides by allies of Russia, or genocides stopped by NATO intervention [10]
  • Does not seem bothered by the fact that “self-determination” to join Russia (even were it real and not fake referenda) can only be exercised once [19]. Too bad for the next generation.
  • Or that, while secession from Russia is very illegal, Russian agents are eager to encourage secession to Russia, or any secession that could weaken Western countries: Spain[20][21], US[22][23]... (which, it just so happens, is the exact same pattern as Kremlintarians...)
  • Always sides with the most anti-libertarian, most authoritarian regime in any conflict, in particular, if that regime is or was supported by Russia at some point (China over Taiwan, Russia over Ukraine, anyone over Israel and the US, etc)
  • Support for outright tankies such as Noam Chomsky, “believed to be the greatest living intellectual of our time.” (sic) [24]
  • Of course, they will call their opponents “russophobic

Indeed, Kremlintarianism is directly correlated to residence at a safe distance from the Kremlin, lack of Russian language skills, etc:

Have you noticed that [Kremlintarian] support for Russia increases in proportion to how far the [Kremlintarian] lives from [the Kremlin]? Libertarians from Finland to Ukraine are all appalled at the betrayal. Libertarians in Russia (those who dare speak) feel similarly. Here is an appeal by the Libertarian Party of Russia. [30]

Kremlintarians will try to trick useful idiots into moving closer to the Kremlin [31], while remainining at a safe distance themselves.

The worst kind of Kremlinophilia

Arguably, Kremlintarianism is the worst type of Kremlinophilia, as its purported ideas (libertarianism, antistate, antiwar, decentralization, etc) are the complete opposite of what it is actually supporting (Reverse straw man).

Kremlintarianism is profoundly anti-liberal and anti-libertarian

Kremlintarianism is anti-American

Kremlintarians go as far as to suggest Russian dictator Vladmir Putin should become President of the US:

“Alaska is ours”[2] —When your neighbor Russia openly threatens you, yet you’re dumb enough to think its invasion of its other neighbors is not your problem

if Donald Trump doesn’t run for president in 2024 ... I’m voting for Vladimir Putin.

— Boyd D. Cathey, LewRockwell.com [ the t-shirt version ]
  • Kremlintarians also ignore Russian threats to the US[33]:
  • Kremlintarians are usually not very good in geography. [34]

Kremlintarians and geography

Nato-encircling-russia.png

Kremlintarians claim that Russia is “encircled” or “surrounded” by NATO [35]. (As if, incidentally, this were a bad thing, were it true: countries actually surrounded by NATO —Switzerland, Austria and Liechtenstein—seem to be doing just fine.)

They claim that “Geopolitical feuds between nations halfway around the globe do not require the United States to choose sides.” [36]. When actually, Russia is threatening the US, in particular Alaska [37], and Russia is not “halfway around the globe”, but in fact a neighbor of the USA [38].

Incidentally, note that while “Polish MPs vote almost unanimously to approve Sweden and Finland’s NATO accession”[39], a “no” vote is expected[40] from Kremlintarian Rand Paul (he ended up abstaining):

In October 2019, the Senate approved North Macedonia’s accession by a vote of 91-2. And in March 2017, just a few months after Russia was found to have meddled in the 2016 presidential election, the Senate voted 97-2 to admit Montenegro.
The lone “no” votes for both countries came from Sens. Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and Mike Lee (R-Utah), both of whom have expressed some skepticism over the years about NATO.
Lee is undecided on Finland and Sweden joining NATO and is considering the arguments on both sides, while Paul told POLITICO that he’s not yet ready to make a statement on the issue. Both senators voted against the $40 billion aid package for Ukraine. [41]

More Kremlinist than the Kremlin?

Its-nato-expansion.png

As the Kremlin propaganda keeps shifting, sometimes they have trouble keeping up.

  • For instance, some of them are still clinging to the lies about NATO expansion as reason for Kremlinism, even while more senior Kremlinists switched to openly embracing Imperialism. [42] [43]
  • others will blabber about how US interference overthrew a democratically-elected government... while Russian propagandists have already moved on to Russian intervention “squeezing out the democratization of Ukraine” [44]

Kremlintarians

Kremlintarians, simply put, are vatniks.

I am deeply saddened by the stance of some American [Kremlintarians] during this conflict. Now, we really do need NATO in Central-Eastern Europe. Why? Because some criminals are more criminal than others. And if you stop playing the game of war, it does not mean others will.

Agnieszka Płonka, “Do not say ‘Russia’, say ‘the gang’

Prominent Kremlintarians

If there were any justice in the world, Russia ... would have declared war on all the member nations of NATO, all of them without exception.

Walter Block

Thus, fortuitously, from a mixture of theoretical and practical grounds of their own, the Soviets arrived early at what libertarians consider to be the only proper and principled foreign policy ... Stalin and his successors strengthened and reinforced the nonaggressive, “peaceful-coexistence” policy.

Murray Rothbard

Kremlintarian Dens

Den-of-evil.png

I thought… I guess I thought some people I have met would be wiser. And now I am left with downright suspicions (there is a difference between an idiot and and agent)… I thought a certain think tank was on the side of freedom. Now I have to see them publish articles that are clearly in Russian interest or are glorifying a murderous ideology, silencing the fact that Dugin openly called for genocide. Or articles falling for the false cultural narrative of „family values” in Russia – without even checking the statistics (yes, that same narrative that was fabricated in Moscow as a divide-and-conquer strategy). Or even claiming it would be good for a dictatorship to own nuclear weapons.

Agnieszka Płonka, “Four months into the war – personal stories and broken alliances

Kremlintarianism in the UK

🤡life🤡libery🤡property🤡

Kremlintarianism is primarily an anti-American-American phenomenon, but alas the plague has spread even to the UK...

  • The Libertarian Kremlintarian Alliance, who claims that “What we want is a government so small that it doesn’t matter where it is, what it does, who’s in it, or how they got there.”[58], from which “Alan Bickley, who is both Editor of Free Life [sic] and Director of the Libertarian Alliance” concludes: “I hope the Russians will win.”[59]
    • Like their American counterparts, they think fighting Hitler was wrong: “Our unwise entry to the Second World War had brought economic dislocation and a large mass of debt, and it required us to rethink our status as an imperial power.” (the Director Alan Bickley again [60])
    • They themselves describe their views as “Bleak and Cynical Semi-Libertarianism” in yet another awful piece [61], yet frankly, if we add the publication of such titles as Hoppe’s awful speech redefining libertarianism as boot-licking of the alt-right [62] (while calling real libertarian organizations such as Students for Liberty “stupid”), or “Why I Choose to Collaborate with Racialists and Theocrats” by Keith Preston: “It is true that groups like the Ku Klux Klan have a lengthy history of terrorism and violence against minorities. It is also true that skinhead gangs have perpetrated much violent street crime in the name of racism (though still less than black and Latino crime gangs). However, white nationalism has evolved considerably in the past ten or fifteen years ... Even when I read the commentary of ex-Nazis like Don Black or David Duke, I find that I frequently disagree, but I don’t find their views inherently scandalous”, perhaps “idiotic non-libertarianism” or “dangerously misguided anti-libertarianism” would be even more accurate.

Studies on Kremlintarianism

See also