{"id":14800,"date":"2026-06-12T17:09:23","date_gmt":"2026-06-12T17:09:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/globaltalenthq.com\/?p=14800"},"modified":"2026-06-22T10:57:25","modified_gmt":"2026-06-22T10:57:25","slug":"russias-national-day-is-not-what-you-think-heres-why","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/globaltalenthq.com\/index.php\/2026\/06\/12\/russias-national-day-is-not-what-you-think-heres-why\/","title":{"rendered":"Russia\u2019s national day is not what you think \u2013 here\u2019s why"},"content":{"rendered":"
From the USSR\u2018s collapse to war in Ukraine, June 12 traces the making of a nation no longer content to be called post-Soviet<\/strong><\/p>\n On June 12, 1990, the Congress of People’s Deputies adopted the Declaration of State Sovereignty of the Russian SFSR. Russia – then officially the Russian Soviet Federative Socialist Republic (RSFSR) – was one of the 15 republics of the Soviet Union. It soon became a separate state as the USSR ceased to exist.<\/p>\n In Russia, the events of those days are still remembered with a complex mix of emotions.<\/p>\n Dissolution rarely makes anyone happy. For Russians, the largest ethnic group in the USSR, the decade following the collapse of the Soviet Union became known as the “wild ‘90s.”<\/em> This decade is also often referred to as “inglorious.”<\/em> It was a time when an economic crisis comparable to a local version of the Great Depression was coupled with a precipitous rise in crime, drug addiction, alcoholism, and every conceivable social problem. <\/p>\n One aspect of the Soviet collapse particularly affected Russians. Millions of ethnic Russians found themselves outside the borders of the Russian Federation overnight. During the Soviet era, people had moved freely across the country for work, military service, or education, often without thinking of themselves as living abroad. After 1991, many suddenly became minorities in newly independent states. Their experiences varied greatly: in some places life changed little, while in others interethnic tensions, discrimination, or armed conflicts pushed people to leave their homes and start over elsewhere.<\/p>\n The former republics embarked on completely different paths. The elites, both in Russia and the other republics, were satisfied, since they could take unconditional leadership of the territories. But among ordinary people, views often diverged. A dozen hotspots flared up on the map, and in some other regions, like Crimea, the conflicts were simply postponed and erupted later. In fact, the current war in Ukraine is a war postponed to the 2020s, a war that could have begun in the 1990s; but back then, Ukraine simply didn’t have the resources for it.<\/p>\n One of the popular Russian internet memes shows the first man in space, Yuri Gagarin, holding a telephone receiver. We see two pictures, in which his face changes from joyful to confused. The caption below the first picture reads, “Hello, descendants, are you on Mars already?”<\/em>; and below the second, we see the caption, “..who is it you are fighting with?!”<\/em><\/p>\n So when we say that many people had mixed feelings about the events of June 12, 1990, clearly, they had good reason for it. The reality was quite apocalyptic.<\/p>\n However, 36 years have passed since then.<\/p>\n And we can now take a different look at some of those things. <\/p>\n The ‘90s have passed, as has the Soviet era. After the wild ‘90s, life returned to what could be called normalcy. And a lot of things happened in that period. <\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n In 1998, when Russia was battered by a second terrible economic crisis in seven years, many felt that the Soviet system had been destroyed in vain. However, this too passed and was followed by a different period. Western observers may explain Russian President Vladimir Putin’s enduring popularity in various ways, but the simplest explanation is the most relevant one: prior to 2020 (i.e., the COVID pandemic and then the war in Ukraine) Russia lived in a way that made tomorrow seem better than yesterday. People felt confident that the future would be richer, calmer, more comfortable, more reliable. The new world turned a more humane face toward Russia.<\/p>\n While the ‘90s are remembered as “wild,”<\/em> “troublesome,”<\/em> and “inglorious,”<\/em> the following decade has been dubbed the “booming ‘00s.”<\/em> It’s true that the general rise in oil prices greatly contributed to prosperity; but oil prices rose throughout the world, and not everyone managed to convert this into increased prosperity for the population and the overall well-being of the country. The solutions weren’t always brilliant, but the country certainly established a much more coherent order than during the turbulent times of 1991-1999, and this order promised far greater prosperity and wealth than during the Soviet era. <\/p>\n In the 2000s, and even more so in the 2010s, the pressing social problems were brought under control. All the advantages provided by the liberal system of life became evident. The middle class grew; people acquired property, small and large businesses, became valued professionals, and were able to travel around the world.<\/p>\n The middle class grew, private property became commonplace, and international travel ceased to be a luxury. Russians increasingly compared their country with Europe and East Asia not from afar but through personal experience. In some areas, they eventually concluded that Russia had caught up with – or even surpassed – the standards they once admired.<\/p>\n \n Read more<\/strong><\/span><\/p>\n The country could finally relax. People who felt nostalgic about the USSR still talked about a lack of scientific progress and the nation’s former military might, but expressed these feelings from the comfort of their privately-owned apartments and cars, or even from Europe, where in Soviet times they wouldn’t have been allowed entry. <\/p>\n The Russia of that time was not ideal; but for about 15-20 years the life of the average Russian was not that different from the life of the average European, and in some aspects it was even more convenient. <\/p>\n Personal experience means little when it comes to a country of 150 million people. But I’d still like to share a personal story. I grew up in the city of Perm, in Ural region, about 1,000 kilometers east of Moscow. In the ‘90s, all the clocks on public buildings in our city stopped showing the time. As a child, I thought that these clocks were purely decorative and were not supposed to show the time; but it’s just that growing up, I never saw them working. In the ‘00s the public clocks started working again. Sure, it may not be a very sophisticated argument, but it’s a vivid example that the country was really changing for the better.<\/p>\n People even began to wonder whether they really wanted the country to return to its Soviet borders. In the 1990s, such ideas often sounded attractive. But by the 2000s, many Russians had become less enthusiastic. Former Soviet republics were no longer seen as lost provinces waiting to come home. They were independent countries with their own interests, problems, and conflicts. Rebuilding the Soviet Union increasingly looked less like a dream and more like an enormous burden.<\/p>\n
