So it's hard to say that there are really two sides when one is so heavily armed and the other so vocal. It's hard to say, at least from where I'm standing which opinion is actually in the majority. I'd hazard to say the pro-E.U. side only because, if it had just been some relatively minor band of anarchists, they'd have been gone by now. But it's hard to speculate.
I find much it interesting on a broad scale in that Putin has been slowly gaining more and more international influence, but due to his autocratic tendencies, people tend to write him off. I think that is severely mistaken. I know I mentioned this earlier in the thread, but everyone in my department nodded and said, "It's about time someone admitted it," when Forbes declared Putin the most powerful person in the world.
Edit Essentially, I am saying the reverse of some here. The US is losing power, Russia is gaining it. EU is caught in the middle, especially with Merkel not being as powerful as she once was.
Honestly, I think it's an old metric that doesn't matter much anymore. I think people like to focus on the U.S. since we were sort of "the last superpower" around, but the most powerful people in the world aren't politicians anymore. I think, rather than being post-American, the world is becoming post-nationalist, and it has a lot to do with the way information is spread uncontrollably through the internet.
Autocracies tend to retain their power longer since they had so much state control to begin with, so Putin might be losing power slower than everyone else, but even he came out of his last election looking pretty bruised. If there's desperation, its on politicians that are really fighting to retain their power in the face of global populism. People everywhere are seeing how other people really live, unfiltered, and it kind of shakes the foundation of culture.
I don't want to be too blunt, but this is incorrect regarding nationalism. Nationalism is absolutely on the rise world-wide, in a dramatic fashion. When I have more time, I can send you scholarly articles and book links about it, if you would like.
Yeah, go ahead, I wouldn't mind reading them. I'd read in a few places that it was actually starting to die, just according to surveys. I'll try to find it when I'm not fighting the Revit lighting engine. It essentially said that, while people were still identifying by their nationalities, they were more and more becoming receptive to ideas from other nations and cultures. It used to be that, say, there was an American way of life that we could accept as a standard. That's no longer really the case, especially in the field of design and lifestyle, but also in politics. That's why so many people are no longer accepting this kind of bullshit.
Used to be that if your government sided with someone, you didn't say anything. You supported the government because, you know, in our case, "FUR 'MURCA!" That's not the case so much nowadays because not only do we generally have more resources to know what's going on outside our world, we tend to associate people less with their host governments. Such as, I actually know a few Russians from my days designing Starbucks that I keep in touch with. I don't associate them with Putin's right-wing stunts anymore than they accuse me of hacking their phones.
I know I more and more see this political wrangling as a sort of spectator sport that, unfortunately, tends to run up huge debts and gets people killed. I think I'm mostly over seeing the government as an organization acting in my expressed interests.
So where nationalism used to unite people under a flag against outside influences, now it seems to be that people aren't satisfied with being told what is satisfactory and that they definitely have it better than everyone else. Information just moves too fast nowadays for that farce to really continue.