Petrivka
The author ends his disturbing material with an invitation to readers to continue the discussion of why things are this way. I plan to take part, but even now I can give you the gist of what I plan to say. What Western experts have begun calling the virtual economy is propping up an equally virtual state which tries to do more than it can, thus doing virtually nothing effectively except inconveniencing people in its unending attempt to get whatever it can to support itself. This is the root of Ukraine's poverty, its dysfunctionality, and finally of its nonviability as currently structured. Places on the sociological food chain vacated by the state were immediately occupied by its unofficial twin, the racket, which in its own fashion carries out such traditional and indispensable state functions as keeping order and collecting its own taxes.
Recently my wife ran into an old friend, one of the initial organizers
of Rukh, now a People's Deputy and prominent national democratic politician.
"You know," he said, "Jim did so much for Ukraine as a historian, but now
he's become so critical of everything. You can't just criticize everything.
After all, we do have Ukraine." I wish I could change his visage and take
him for a walk through the bazaar to show him what that Ukraine really
is. Things simply cannot go on this way. The denial of pain at the heart
of Christian Scientist doctrine does not work terribly well when one has
appendicitis, and, figuratively speaking, this country does.
Выпуск газеты №:
№4, (1999)Section
Day After Day