The Alchemy of the Russian Soul in the Canadian Welfare State
From an international perspective one reads or hears so little of life
in Canada, that most foreigners have only a vague default image of some “Sweden of North
America”, or hybrid welfare state model, that they commonly project their own
expectations into. To be fair there is a powerful seductive allure about Canada when seen
from afar, especially among those who think they can emigrate here, outsmart the system
and plug themselves into its cozy welfare state prerogatives. More often than not these
people end up being boxed in and manipulated to a degree they could hardly have imagined;
they underestimate the pervasive system of entrapment that is intrinsic to a social
welfare state like Canada.
While different ethnic-cultural groups fare differently with their own
stories, I would like to focus on the fate of recent Russians and Eastern Slavs coming to
Canada: a tragic-comic tale of brave souls with unreal, cocksure expectations who get
swallowed up by a process they barely understand. Even though Russians are a physically
hardy and tough-minded people, they seem to have little native resistance to this matrix
of psychological forces – it is like a psychic acid bath that dissolves their best
qualities. Typically while they are involved in the survival/money making game, the other
side of their nature is being unconsciously worked on and molded. This is not a pretty
picture; I do not like seeing my own kinsmen turned into zombie-cattle. Does anyone warn
or prepare Russians for life in Canada?
First some background: Canada is arguably the New World’s exemplar
social welfare state; it is, if you will, a large scale materialization of those of the
18th century European philosophers’ revolutionary ideas – Universalism, Rationalism,
liberal social engineering writ large, and expressing itself for us to see now. The end
game of Liberalism!
At first it is somewhat disarming to arrive in a typical, large
Canadian city. On the surface everything appears as it should be: the built environment is
clean, with all the modern amenities; there are well-maintained cafes, restaurants, malls,
theatres, parks, office buildings, high rises, athletic facilities and so on. The people
are usually beguilingly polite, and compared with the USA, with its menacing and ever
present law enforcement apparatus, one sees here a notable absence of police. Ghettos and
slums don’t exist. Everything seems to run with the healthy hustle and bustle of urban
life.
Now at this point it is best to pause. This is the layer of images that
fills the consciousness of most visitors, and indeed the Canadian government, corporate
media and travel industry try diligently to maintain that image. That is what you will see
in the glossy brochures, travel books, official and unofficial websites – the
perfunctory smiling skiers on snowy mountain tops, those vistas of sparkling commercial
high rises and well dressed urbanites at some outdoor cafй. And this is not a bad
picture! Was not this the goal of so many past reformers? Perhaps I could even stop here,
and write for some budget travel guide about the most affordable hotels in some remote
part of the country, or how to squeeze the most out of your dollar while busing from one
end of the country to another. But all this would only be elaborating on a boring mirage.
A much more interesting and sinister drama can be found in the day-to-day culture
patterns.
For example, language and etiquette. As I alluded to above, Canadians
do have a reputation for excessive politeness. At first this can have an enjoyable,
narcotic effect; but soon this becomes tiring and one wants to dig for more complex and
real emotions. This is a major impasse for Russians conditioned to believe that civility
is merely a veneer or social lubricant whereas in Canada it is extended far beyond what
most other cultures would consider appropriate. Unlike western continental Europe or
Russia, one rarely sees those overt displays of “negative” emotions, like expressive
anger, mockery or most any grand gesture; it is as if a placid psychologically machined
grid has been overlaid on the human drama. One wonders where the line is between robotic
communication and the deeply authentic? Or is it even a relevant issue here? Quite
incredibly, no! At least not for English Canadians. This is such a non-issue that you will
rarely if ever hear it brought up in the popular media or cultural forums. This blind spot
is all the more incredible, as the overarching principle complaint I have heard from
Russians is the incongruity between the spoken word and feelings/actions – a kind of
linguistic schizophrenia. It is as if Canadian English has become a kind of bureaucratese.
Perhaps the closest analogy would be Japan or Finland (without the drunkenness).
If all this hyper-politeness is not enough, we have a layer of
“political correctness” which has become so internalized that overt censorship is
hardly necessary; talk, enlightened or otherwise, on race, ethnic issues, deep power
structures, banking, most historical or political reasoning, that may veer off into the
deeper or darker depths is generally proscribed. One can try to “push the envelope”
and get “personal”, but more often than not this will only threaten Canadians and they
will recoil. Oftentimes you may not even realize that you committed some faux-pas
save for some subtle increase in politeness. And then you wonder if it is only a question
of time before you understand the social signals and can thereafter plumb the cultural and
emotional depths. So you wait and indulge people with the social niceties, but soon this
becomes debilitating: who wants to live with that constrained look, shallow breathing and
tightness in the chest? And this is where so many Russians half-consciously reach a
tipping point, take stock of themselves and ask: what is there of intrinsic cultural value
that would make social engagement worthwhile?
One group will see sport spectacles (hockey), phony politeness, manic
consumption, idiosyncratic talk of work or government entitlements, and not much else, and
they form their own little bubble communities of other Russian йmigrйs that they never
really break out of. This of course is not integration, and as the reader will have
guessed, these are mostly middle-aged and older Russians, and not worth writing about as
they have self-insulated themselves from the society at large (except for government
benefits!).
More relevant are those reasonably intelligent, proactive and ambitious
йmigrйs who try to productively integrate into the society. What is their fate? Consider
first of all if you are a Russian with the above qualities then you may be especially
vulnerable to the hypnotic power of western industrial consumerism. Here in Canada the
corporate capitalist matrix is especially potent, as it has been fine-tuned to be softer,
more pervasive and seductive than the US with its extremes, violence and economic
hollowing out of industry. And unlike Europe there are no historical or cultural
countervailing forces – Canada started its history as a mercantile colonial outpost and
easily transitioned into modern consumerism. It is not too much of an exaggeration to say
that corporate consumerism is the historical foundation of Canada, and that it has not
known much else.
So as far as psychological resistance to this, a native Russian can
expect no support from the surrounding culture, and must rely on his own psychic-spiritual
resources. Then there are societal expectations: possibly a car, an over-priced apartment,
electronic gadgets, high taxes (50% or more). It is not easy to opt out of the above
“necessities” as they are also social signifiers, especiallty for professionals.
Moreover, wages, taxes and expectations are so calibrated as to keep you busy, robotically
busy, to succeed. You would think some grand demonic social engineer thought up this
system! After a few years of long work days and busy-ness, that special animating quality
in the eyes and facial expression becomes absent. This is a spooky sight for me, as I have
lived in Russia and experienced the “Russian Soul”.
As an aside, any Russian professional deliberating about emigrating to
Canada will almost certainly be at a disadvantage compared with native-born Canadians,
despite the hype from Canadian Immigration. Even if your English is impeccable and you are
in the top of your field, you will have to go back to school and get re-credentialized
(which usually means going into debt!) and then jump through more hoops that no one
bothered to warn you about. It is a cruel racket and I have spoken with many professionals
who would not have left Russia had they known the bigger picture.
Another dynamic that Russians have to deal with in Canada is what I
call “creaturalness”, i.e. the tendency to see yourself as an organic object or
creature. This is much more than just health crazes, rather it is a process whereby your
visceral processes become progressively more and more important. The process is insidious
in that it comes in under the conscious radar screen. This is ultimately a feature of
Canada as a secular humanistic state. There is no transcendent reference, so we are,
implicitly, ephemeral carbon-based units and this generates a tremendous amount of fear.
Canada is a fear-based nation. Consider: Canadians own more various insurance policies
than any other people on earth, and there is an existential attachment to government
entitlement systems – pensions, welfare, unemployment insurance, etc. The Patronage
State as the guarantor of (visceral) security.
This idea of “creaturalness” protected by a secularized state with
the entitlement machinery is so powerful that you cannot understand the Canadian mentality
without it; political platforms and most all bureaucracies are predicated on it. Read a
Canadian newspaper or magazine and you will see its popular expression. But an advanced
Social Welfare State is very unnatural, especially for Eastern Slavs who evolved under
very severe environmental and social pressures. It is as if the pressure on a tightly
wound spring was slowly released, so in the end, the “energetic” quality of the person
would be very different. I believe this partly explains the difference in demeanor of many
new world Russians, in so far as there is a loss of the life force or vitality. The very
logic of the Liberal Humanistic State undermines its own foundation in the end. It is
dysgenic.
Here I would like to mention – briefly – a dimension of Canadian
life that is difficult to see when you are immersed in it, and yet glaringly obvious-or
hidden in plain sight: Canadian cultural life is primarily a simulacra culture with nested
levels of simulation. The popular mass culture is almost entirely imported from the USA,
what little grows in Canada is a simulation of the giant American media hologram – or
really a simulation of a simulation! The governmental structure is a simulation of both a
constitutional monarchy and a parliamentary democracy, and yet is really a cryptocracy run
by a handful of families. The economy is a simulation of a protectionist left-centrist
social welfare state, yet is almost entirely foreign owned and controlled. Language and
mannerisms are progressively emptied of substance, simulating emotions that hardly exist
anymore. There are many major newspapers that seem to compete for public attention, and
yet are almost entirely owned by one family – a simulation of the market place of ideas.
A notoriously provocative Premier in Canada struck a resonant chord when he said “Canada
is not a real country”. And today we have the moniker of “Absurdistan”. That is why
one hears so little substantive information about this country – in the background is
the Nihil!
And lastly, perhaps some Russian reading this may only want to come
here, plug himself into this system with its entitlements, live an insular life, and not
worry about philosophical issues. Well, that too may be a delusion. I was in St.
Petersburg about a year before the collapse of the Soviet Union, and can see many
parallels with Canada today: there is a pervasive sense that things will carry on the same
into the indefinite future, and yet Canada is mortally dependant on the US economy and
military; there is a higher per capita energy consumption than the US; the
artificiality and internal contradictions are too great too sustain; it is too
geographically large to keep together, especially if the western half is contested by
China. I could go on, but only want to convey a caveat: any Russian wanting bourgeois
security may be in for a surprise in Canada.
I think Russians coming to Canada can give us some of their best
qualities, like strength of character and tough-minded groundedness. This land is going to
need these qualities when we get to the other side of the watershed, and this has a
greater future than being cattle in some huge Potemkin village.
By M. Kunashko,
Vancouver, Canada
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