
Silicon Curtain 916. Long Soviet Hangover - Why have the USSR's Evils Proved so Persistent?
Jan 2, 2026
Alya Shandra, Editor-in-chief at EuroMaidan Press, passionately discusses Ukraine's ongoing fight against corruption amidst wartime pressures. She explains the 'unspoken pact' Ukrainians made to prioritize unity early in the conflict. Alya critiques President Zelensky's anti-corruption rhetoric versus his actions, highlighting the impact of Soviet-era patronage on modern governance. The conversation touches on the resilience of civil society, the cultural heritage at risk, and Ukraine's role as a symbol of democratic ideals in a challenging global landscape.
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Anti‑Corruption Agencies Were A Post‑Maidan Pillar
- Ukraine created independent anti-corruption agencies after 2014 to enforce rule of law and break oligarchic impunity.
- Zelensky's moves to subordinate them signaled a major breach of the wartime social pact between citizens and leaders.
Failed Fabrications Revealed Systemic Abuse
- Attempts to fabricate pro‑Russian cases against anti‑corruption investigators collapsed in court and exposed political abuse.
- That failure highlighted Ukraine's stronger civil society and judicial pushback compared with Russia's routine fabrications.
Micromanagement Created An Inefficient Inner Circle
- Zelensky surrounded himself with loyalists lacking qualifications, producing inefficiency and informal power networks.
- Replacing Andriy Yermak exposes a deeper problem: whether Zelensky will accept qualified dissenting voices.
