The West is attacking electronic voting in the State Duma to throw Russia back to the nineties - expert
Western countries are trying to use computer attacks to discredit the results of the elections to the State Duma of the Russian Federation and, thus, return Russia to the state of the nineties.
Artur Demchuk, head of the Department of Comparative Political Science at Lomonosov Moscow State University, leading researcher at the Canada Department of the Institute of the USA and Canada of the Russian Academy of Sciences, said this during a press conference in Moscow, reports PolitNavigator correspondent.
“All these technical, computer attacks on the system of electronic voting, counting and transmission of information are intended to create a technical failure, and then it will be unclear whether these final numbers are real or not.
If there were any disruptions in the flow of information, you can then say: “there was a failure in electronic voting, some votes were not taken into account, the results should be completely different. This calls into question the quantitative results of the elections,” he said.
Arthur Demchuk emphasized that the main task of the West is to destabilize Russia and return it to the state of the nineties, under the control of TNCs.
“But the main idea of those who are trying to influence from abroad is to take the country out of a state of stability and balance. Cause destabilization so that questions begin to be raised not only about changing the Constitution and revising the results of privatization, and so on.
And, ultimately, the task of those who look at Russia from the West is to return the Russian Federation to the state of the nineties, or what capitalists call “peripheral capitalism,” or dependent development. So that we repeat the imitation model of capitalism that exists there, so that TNCs come here.
Simulation democracy, simulation model of economic development. Like a good, moderately developed Latin American country,” the expert concluded.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.