ltlee1, <news:
[email protected]>
"Negative assessments continue to prevail in relation to the USA, the EU, Estonia and Ukraine. The attitude towards Georgia and Turkey is mostly positive (with a noticeable share of negative assessments). Respondents
have a positive attitude towards China and Belarus. The attitude to the citizens of these countries is better than to each country individually.
Respondents were asked to assess their attitude towards countries and associations from the following list: USA, EU, Estonia, Ukraine, Georgia, Belarus, China and Turkey.
The selection is somewhat weird. It's logical to pay attention on the USA,
EU, China as the most important "geopolitical players", Belarus is seen in Russia as "the closest ally", and the Ukraine is in focus given the current conflict. But if they include Georgia, then why not Armenia and Azerbaijan?
And if they include Estonia, then they should also include Latvia and Lithuania, and if they include these Baltic states, then they should also
have included Poland, and so they should also include all the east-European states. Turkey seems extraordinary given its peculiar stance, but then Iran, KSA, and other regional states are there as well.
The respondents relate best to China and Belarus.
Their comment "the attitude to the citizens of these countries is better
than to each country individually" is both incorrect and irrelevant. As one
can see from their own figures, it's true for Belarus and untrue for China.
But it's irrelevant since the discrepancies are so small that it's close to statistical error.
Although a positive attitude prevails towards Turkey and Georgia, a significant number of respondents have a negative attitude.
It would be the same true to say so, for example, about the Chinese popular attitudes towards Russia ("mostly positive, but a significant number still
have a negative attitude").
My own impression (based on reading on intra-Chinese conversations within mainland online communities) is so that about 25-30% of Chinese feel surely friendly towards Russia, about 10-15% feel certainly negative, and the
attitude of the rest would rather depend on what sentiments are prevailing currently in the China's domestic infospace.
A negative attitude prevails towards Western countries and Ukraine, which
is explained by the current conflict."
Link to the article <
https://tinyurl.com/2m9sn7xl>. At the very bottom
there one can notice a warning: "The ANO Levada Center has been included in
the registry of non-commercial organizations acting as foreign agents", ie.
the Russian government considers the Levada Center an organization pursuing interests of foreign powers in Russia. I can say myself that the Levada's figures often seem adequate (and consistent with what other pollsters in
Russia find in their independent researches), but the rationalizations and conclusions the Levada's analysts attach to their figures are often clearly biased and controversial.
Also, what I personally find notable there, is that the negative attitude towards "Ukraine" - i.e. the current regime - stays in contrast to the
positive attitude towards Ukrainians (although the percentage has become
lesser against the pre-SMO period), which contradicts to the Kiev's claims
the Russians seek "to genocide" etc the Ukrainians.
Also notable things there are seen in the distribution of attitudes by age. Younger people are more like "love everyone and everything", they are more apolitical and they are less sensitive about historical background of misc issues, also the youth are more prone to take a nice wrapper against a less nice content. Their very positive attitudes towards Turkey and Georgia, as
it's seen from the Levada's figures, one may likely explain by the fact
that these countries were popular tourist destinations in the recent years.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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