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IMHO regimes like in Belarus or Turkmenistan is so dysfunctional and live in delusional bubble, they generate quality comedy material for outside world, we don't need sketchy spy or political satire anymore, just read the news.



While I don't disagree with you the key sentence is "outside world".

If you happen to live in the "inside world" of such despicable excuses of human trash then the situation is rather less funny.


Political discussions is walking really thin line :)

I meant to say, world outside of group of people behind the cogs of regime.

> word régime originates as a synonym for any type of government, modern usage has given it a negative connotation, implying an authoritarian government or dictatorship.

'Inside world' would mean inside government. Outside world - civilians, even inside said countries.


I meant the entire country of Belarus with "inside world". And I hope you didn't get the impression that I'm dumping on you.

Seeing Lukashenko in one of his ridiculous uniforms, for example, certainly is pure comedy. But if you're imprisoned by his thugs it's far less funny. That's what I meant to express.


> like in Belarus or Turkmenistan...delusional bubble

Uhh...we don't need to look far geographically and only a few months back in time to see something similar closer to home.


It's not a comedy if you share a border with them, and EU does.


It's tragicomedy. Their justifications are the comedy, while their attacks on people and operating a nuclear power plant so close to the border is the reason for worry.


They aren't dysfunctional in the sense you imagine. Their state is fighting for survival in the face of foreign agents and interference. They are in a weak position to defend themselves so you see them lashing out in less subtle ways. Civilians are unfortunately caught in the crossfire.


Also, er, fighting for survival against its own people.


Correct


> Civilians are unfortunately caught in the crossfire.

Not a crossfire, but a very directed one. It's critical to such regimes to never let anything the West does happen without it hitting their own civilians.

If the population see Western sanctions benefiting them, and visibly harming the regime, people will be ready to take bigger sacrifices, knowing that the regime will loose much more than they do.

It is equally critical for the West to communicate loud, and clear to Belarusian people that they are doing those actions to support their resistance, and not just because they want to hit Lukasenka.




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