Not really. There are people who would start a late to exploit this revolutionary legitimacy in order to push forward their very specific programs, which may not really represent the majority of participants. So, vaguely articulated claims vere loosely organized. Many revolutions were diverse, te classical french russian revolution, wer werdible also like cross class coalitions. And we've just seen in casak stan that revolution my escalade into very violent actions very quickly.
An in-depth interview on the historical and political-economic context of the Ukraine crisis with Ukrainian sociologist Volodymyr Ishchenko.
Read Volodymyr's work:
truthout.org/articles/ukrainians-are-far-from-unified-on-nato-let-them-decide-for-themselves/
ponarseurasia.org/how-maidan-revolutions-reproduce-and-intensify-the-post-soviet-crisis-of-political-representation/
lefteast.org/ukraine-in-the-vicious-circle-of-the-post-soviet-crisis-of-hegemony/
lefteast.org/contradictions-post-soviet-ukraine-failure-ukraine-new-left/
Tony Wood on Russia: thedigradio.com/podcast/russia-beyond-putin-with-tony-wood/
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