Here's a bit from Bayer's piece; once again viewing Russia's past coming back big time:
But rather than harp on the old canards about the exploited and downtrodden U.S. working class and a clique of greedy capitalists who had all the money and power, Zorin talked more about the uncertainty of life in the United States. Time and again he returned to the theme that a U.S. worker could lose his job or home at any moment.
The unspoken contrast with the predictability of Soviet life was obvious. If your cousin sends you a photo of his new car six months after arriving to New York, don't be tempted to follow him. Here, your life is stable and your right to work is guaranteed by the Soviet Constitution.
Curiously, stability has been claimed by the current regime as its main achievement. While Soviet propaganda contrasted communist stability with the unpredictable perils of the United States, now the contrast is drawn with the lawless '90s. Just like Zorin's documentaries, the implicit message from today's Kremlin is: In the 1990s, you may have had freedom, but now you've got law and order.



"Just like Zorin's documentaries, the implicit message from today's Kremlin is: In the 1990s, you may have had freedom, but now you've got law and order."
Actually, in the 1990s, Russians didn't have freedom either. I really don't understand why some people look on the Yeltsin era as a time of freedom.
We're talking about the guy who turned tanks on his legislative branch, and then wrote the present Russian constitution, featuring vast Presidential power with no effective checks or balances, after all
For once, and probably only once, I agree with you on that one rkka.
Scary ... let's not get used to it...