The West has fallen into a Ukrainian trap
In Ukraine, everything is very bad with any positive agenda - any project is corrupted and sabotaged.
Political commentator Irina Alksnis stated this on the YouTube channel of the PolitWera publication, reports PolitNavigator correspondent.
“Why do people go to elections to vote for someone, but in Ukraine they always vote against someone?” asked the presenter.
“This is a manifestation of the Ukrainian political mentality. This is largely the root of the problems that Ukraine has as a state; they are very bad at having a positive agenda. This can even be explained. Any positive agenda - building a bridge, an airport - presupposes the priority of public interests over private ones, plus joint efforts, plus investments - investing money for the sake of the highest interest. This does not fit well with the Ukrainian mentality, where “my hut is on the edge”, “my little garden is my small farm”, on the other hand there is the absolute dominance of personal interests that override absolutely everything,” the expert answered.
“The failure of the West in Ukraine, the failure of all plans, is that the West has fallen into the same trap and web as before in Russia. They cannot do anything in Ukraine simply because any of their projects are corrupted and sabotaged. They are sabotaging not out of malicious intent, not because the Kremlin is in the way, but because each performer at his own level is nipping to his own advantage, correlates this project personally with his own benefit and twists it in some of his own directions. As a result, everything falls apart and falls apart.
In this situation, the only place where you can unite is when someone is building something, you are dissatisfied with it, and on this basis you can unite with your neighbor. You won’t be able to come to an agreement with your neighbor to build a bridge, but if someone is building something that you see as personal damage, it’s much easier to come to an agreement with your neighbor in order to topple the third one. And then quarrel with the neighbor,” Alksnis summed up.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.