The Russian Empire: Too Nice for Its Own Good
Anatoly Karlin • September 26, 2017
What everyone thinks the Russian Empire was like.
“Tsarist Russia was this superstitious land of icons and cockroaches with Cossacks on thot patrol with nagaikas in hand – and it was absolutely horrific!” – Liberals, Marxists.
“Tsarist
Russia was this superstitious land of icons and cockroaches with
Cossacks on thot patrol with nagaikas in hand – and it was absolutely
great!” – Neoreactionaries.
Reality: It was in many respects socially liberal even by the standards of Western Europe.
Law
Yes,
Stolypin’s neckties and all that. What Communist propagandists don’t
like to mention as much is that just during the three years 1904-1907
some 4,500 Tsarist officials were murdered by what would today be
classified as Far Left terrorist groups. In contrast, there were just
6,321 executions from 1825 to 1917. This is basically a rounding error
by the standards of the Bolsheviks’ multicultural Coalition of the
Fringes, including during their “progressive” Trotskyist phase that
Western leftist academics and journalists love to laud so much. It
doesn’t even compare unfavorably with the 16,000 or so executions in the
US since 1700.
The
Okhrana secret policy only numbered one thousand in 1900 in an empire
of 150 million – it was a little baby relative to the Cheka. Exiles to
Siberia essentially took the form of holidays that the “inmates” could
cancel at will. Dzhugashvili (Stalin) “escaped” from Siberia around
seven or nine times.
Stalin enjoying the Siberian sunshine.
All
forms of corporal punishment were abolished in 1904, ahead of the UK
and the US. Despite modern Russia’s 70 year legacy of official atheism,
the irony is that Pussy Riot would have spent a maximum of three months in jail under blasphemy laws in the Russian Empire (had they gone to prison at all).
Really,
if anything, the Russian Empire had become too progressive, too
liberal, too humane for its own good. It was doomed by its own kindness
and decency to aspiring Pol Pots. A few contemporary equivalents of free
helicopter rides or just stronger enforcement of normal treason laws
would have done so much good in 1917.
Social Progressivism
Access to higher education was actually more meritocratic in the late Empire than in contemporary Germany or France by a factor of 2-3x.
Women
constituted about a third of Russia’s total numbers of university
students, a far larger percentage than in any other European country –
and Russia by 1913 had the largest number of university students in
Europe (127,000 to 80,000 in Germany, around 40,000 in France and
Austria each). Likewise, they constituted an absolute majority in
grammar schools, many decades ahead most of the rest of Europe. In 1915,
restrictions on co-ed education were dropped across a range of Russian
universities by decision of the Tsar and his Council of Ministers.
British suffragettes? Russia raises you a Women’s Batallion of Death.
Multiculturalism
Fully half of the four mosques in Moscow were constructed under late Tsarism (including the biggest one
that nationalist critics of Putin like to harp on about; he merely
restored it). The other Moscow mosques include the historical Old Mosque
(constructed in 1823), the Moscow Memorial Mosque (more of a war
monument than a place of worship), and one that is part of a complex of
religious buildings that also includes a Buddhist stuppa (so not really
so much of a mosque as a political momument).
Of Saint-Petersburg’s three mosques, by far the most impressive, with capacity for 5,000 worshippers, was opened in 1913. One of them is actually more of a room than a mosque, being part of the Dagestan Cultural Center.
Culture
The Russian bobos and aristos of the late Empire loved their tattoes.
Here’s Nicky’s.
Here’s a Russian conservative in 1909 lamenting Social Decline (TM) in the Vekhi:
The vast majority of our children enter university having lost their virginity. Who of us doesn’t know that in the senior classes of the gymnasiums there is hardly a boy to be a found who has yet to be acquainted with a maid, or a brothelEven in France, which is associated in our minds with all sorts of sexual degeneracies, even there, in that land of the southern sun and frivolous literature, there isn’t this prevalence of “fast-ripening fruits” as in cold, northern Russia.According to a survey of 967 students, of those who clarified their age at first sexual contact, 61% said not later than 17 years, and of them, 53 boys started it before 12 years, 152 – before 14 years.
This
was reflected in the high culture of the late Empire: The Russian
avant-garde, the first major penetration of post-modernism into
traditional art.
Stravinsky’s Rite of Spring causes a scandalous sensation in Paris, not in Moscow or Saint-Petersburg.
Scriabin, the consummate bohémienne.
Kandinsky.
The Shukhov Tower.
Malevich.
He painted his stupid black square in 1915.
Really at this point one can almost sympathize with Mayakovsky:
“Eat your pineapples. Chew your grouse. Your last day is coming. You bourgeois louse.”
It
need also be hardly pointed put at this point that the extreme social
liberalism – legalization of homosexuality, abortion – and SJWism –
abolition of university extrance exams – of the 1920s didn’t come out of
a complete void. To the contrary, all this enjoyed the approval of some
significant percentage of the Russian intelligentsia.
Stalin of course reversed this, and not only made university exams competitive again but reintroduced
tuition fees. After murdering some significant percentage of the
professors, and blanketing the country in a stiffling ideological
orthodoxy for decades ahead that annulled any meaningful freedom of
speech and relegated Russia to the margins of global culture to this
day.
Russian Empire 2017
What would Russian culture have been like without the Communist occupation?
Probably a great deal more liberal, actually.
That
said, one has to make allowance for the fact that the liberal-leftist
strain in Russian cultural life was balanced by liberal-conservative and
even a certain conservative-libertarian trend.
For
instance, gun rights were very strong in the Russian Empire, unlike in
the Soviet Union and its successor the Russian Federation.
Fin de siècle Chelyabinsk gunshop – remove the Cyrillic, and it might as well be in the Wild West.
There
were also no shortage of conservative and nationalist pundits, who
under a normal 20th century trajectory might have developed into
US-style conservative talk radio.
Moreover,
there are always cycles of social liberalism and social conservatism.
To take the example of the US, you had liberalism in the 1920s,
conservatism in the 1950s, liberalism in the 1970s, conservatism in the
1980s, liberalism again now – Russia was evidently in a liberal phase
during the warning years of the Empire and the 1920s, but this doesn’t
mean it would have stayed that way indefinitely. A moderate correction would have been expected by analogy with any other country on a normal development trajectory.
One
would also have to account for there being less American influence –
Russian (and European) culture would itself have been far stronger, not
having undergone a ruinous World War and the stiffling effects of the
twin totalitarianisms of Nazism and Stalinism. For that matter, Nazism
itself is a significant – if not altogether crucial – component in
Europe’s guilt complex, that would have been exceedingly unlikely to
arise in the absence of the Red Menace in the early 1930s.
So
overall, it doesn’t seem unlikely that Russia would have been in the
European mainstream in terms of social attitudes – but that that same
European mainstream would be far less “cucked” than it is today.
One
undoubtedly negative aspect of the Russian Empire (from a
conservative/traditionalist viewpoint) would have been the likely
absence of a propiska system regulating internal migration within a
surviving Russian Empire, so we can expect there to have been far more
Central Asian immigrants to the Russian heartlands – especially since
Russia would have been far wealthier without central planning (though
their percentage of the population would have been diluted by the
Russification of Belorussia and most of Ukraine, as well as a ~30%
larger total ethnic Slavic population).
However,
it’s not very clear that even this “silver lining” from the Soviet
period is of any value. The Putin regime has in recent years made it
increasingly clear that it sees Russia’s future in tight integration
with Central Asia; just the other day, a Kremlin-linked think-tank
released a report
advocating an increase in pro-immigration propaganda and the
introduction of administrative liability for politicians and bureaucrats
who “feed false numbers to the media about immigrants” and “mention
ethnic crime.”
So in all likelihood Russia will end up getting the worst of both worlds anyway.
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