Re: nostalgia for the USSR part ii

2001-03-30 Thread Andrew Hagen

On Mon, 26 Mar 2001 14:56:59 -0600, Ken Hanly wrote:
March 15, 2001
Nearly four fifths of Russians are nostalgic about Soviet Union
 
According to a poll conducted by the Public Opinion Foundation shortly
before the 10th anniversary of a referendum on the preservation of the
Soviet Union, the overwhelming majority of Russians regret its subsequent
collapse. []

The USSR had a unique constitution. Unlike the U.S. Constitution, and more like the 
Articles of Confederation, 
the USSR's constitution allowed the individual "SSR's," like Ukraine, Turkmenistan, 
and the like, to secede from 
the USSR if they wished to. In practice, such secession was simply not allowed until 
the late 1980s. This legal, 
theoretically peaceful process was how the USSR in fact dissolved. The individual 
SSR's (except maybe Russia) 
all announced they were leaving the USSR. It was far from perfect, but at least all of 
the former SSR's have not 
been at constant war with one another. 

Thus, when the survey says that most "Russians" favored the continuation of the USSR, 
the survey is 
apparently talking about the people who live in that former SSR now called the Russian 
Federation, and excludes 
the many expatriate ethnic Russians who are living in the rest of the former Soviet 
Union. We should bear this in 
mind when considering the survey.

Andrew Hagen
[EMAIL PROTECTED]





nostalgia for the USSR part ii

2001-03-26 Thread Ken Hanly

Sorry about the blank message...
   Cheers, Ken Hanly

March 15, 2001
Nearly four fifths of Russians are nostalgic about Soviet Union
 
According to a poll conducted by the Public Opinion Foundation shortly
before the 10th anniversary of a referendum on the preservation of the
Soviet Union, the overwhelming majority of Russians regret its subsequent
collapse.

The number of people nostalgic about the Soviet Union has increased with
the passage of time. In 1992 69% of the Russians confessed they regretted
the break-up of the USSR. Since then the figure has risen by 10%. At the
same time the number of people who do not regret the collapse of the Soviet
Union has dropped from 32 to 15 percent. The study shows that 72% of
respondents would vote for the reunification of former Soviet republics if
a referendum on reunification were held today. 15% would vote against. 

On the other hands, most of the respondents in the latest poll are aware of
the fact that it is impossible to restore the Soviet Union (58%). 30% are
still hopeful that this is possible, with Communist sympathizers accounting
for 49% of this category. 37% of them are people will inadequate schooling
and 36% are people older than 59 years. 

Although 10 years ago most Russians voted for the preservation of the
Soviet Union as a single state, 20% of the respondents today do not
remember how they voted in the referendum. More than that, 40% do not
remember its outcome. 

63% of those polled feel the break-up of the Soviet Union ten years ago
could have been averted. Communist sympathizers (82%) and people older than
50 years hold stronger views on the subject than other people sharing this
view. 

23% of the respondents are positive that the Union's collapse could not
have been averted. Most of them are people with a higher education (34%)
and people under 35 years of age (32%).

The survey also demonstrates that 71% of Russians believe that, basically,
Russia fares worse as the result of the Soviet Union's collapse. 15% do not
share this view. Most of the Russians who regard the break-up of the Soviet
Union as a positive development are young people (23%) and people with a
higher education (24%). The Foundation's sociologists note that 76% of the
respondents were willing to talk about the negative aspects of the break-up
whereas only a total of 18% talked about positive implications. 

*