Post-Russia: Difference between revisions
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==== '''Ideological Significance''' ==== | ==== '''Ideological Significance''' ==== | ||
Post-Russia's post-leftism can be traced back to old schools of anarcho-nihilism that arose from Russia's Nihilist movement in the 1860s. Scholars often label its ideological and phillosophical reasoning as "proto-annihilism" due to its similarities to other similar movements in Spain and Finland and due to the role it played of developing [[annihilism]] as an ideology. | Post-Russia's post-leftism can be traced back to old schools of anarcho-nihilism that arose from Russia's Nihilist movement in the 1860s. Scholars often label its ideological and phillosophical reasoning as "proto-annihilism" due to its similarities to other similar movements in Spain and Finland and due to the role it played of developing [[annihilism]] as an ideology. | ||
== '''History''' == | |||
==== '''Background''' ==== | |||
''See more: [[3rd Russian Revolution]]'' | |||
Yevlogiy Pyotr, who was the current leader of the [[Union of Russia]], was shot in a riot by a starving peasant in February 2085. With his only successour Ignat Pyotr deemed too young to rule, the rationalists and the conservative socialists declared a coaltion government which had already fallen apart by March. Following this, the [[Russian Army]] mutinied and many break-away nations started arising and admidst this chaos so did Post-Russia. |