Title

11 points
*

Neither me nor my friends don’t beleive Russian media.

There is a quite popular russian principle: listen to the government’s plans and prepare to exaclty the opposite.

permalink
report
reply
2 points
*

I see, thanks for your reply. You reminded me of the quote, “The rules are simple: they lie to us, we know they’re lying, they know we know they’re lying, but they keep lying to us, and we keep pretending to believe them.”

permalink
report
parent
reply
8 points

Me and all my friends don’t believe in kremlin’s propaganda. I think younger generation has more awareness. I mean, I spent my whole life living under Putin’s regime, I see how awful it is and I don’t like it.

permalink
report
reply
2 points

I wish you all the best.

permalink
report
parent
reply
6 points
*

I can’t fathom watching Russian media today. It generally helps that i don’t watch TV and don’t read the news. Since like 5 years ago I developed a brain filter against all native media, memes, Habr, groups, education. All this coloring rarely makes sense to me, so I’m really just swimming in English-speaking Internet.

Despite all that, I find good people on Russian Mastodon: no propaganda, no ***-licking, no bullying. Can’t care much for Russian media though, even with Meduza and alike existing behind VPN… I’m trying my best to avoid federal zombification channels and VK. Even though it’s unrelated to media, I’ll just take this opportunity and say that there are a lot of dumb people on VK and a lot of war propaganda. 🆘

permalink
report
reply
5 points

If Russian state media tell the truth, that happens only because a broken clock is right twice a day.

permalink
report
reply
3 points

Indeed! And the problem is that you never know when :)

permalink
report
parent
reply
1 point

Thanks for your reply. Today I learned a new proverb. This proverb is actually quite insightful and clever.

permalink
report
parent
reply
3 points

Moved to the US when I was a kid, but I have clear memories of watching channel 1 every day with grandma. This answer probably will apply to people 40 and over. For the record I’m not that old yet!

Back then the Internet wasn’t really a thing, so TV was really the only source of news. And even through it was understood that most of the things you heard on the news were lies, it was hard to say what exactly was lies and what was news. So, you ended up believing some things, and then you believe more and more… It’s easy to slip into this. And I’m sure things haven’t really changed. At least from what I’ve seen.

permalink
report
reply

Ask A Russian

!askarussian@lemmy.world

Create post

All these questions to russians you wanted to ask!

Community stats

  • 1

    Monthly active users

  • 13

    Posts

  • 40

    Comments