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Time Person of the Year, Vladimir Putin?

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout: Debate & Discussion' started by deepblue, Dec 19, 2007.

  1. deepblue

    deepblue Member

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    link
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    Choosing Order Before Freedom
    By RICHARD STENGEL

    In a year when Al Gore won the Nobel Peace Prize and green became the new red, white and blue; when the combat in Iraq showed signs of cooling but Baghdad's politicians showed no signs of statesmanship; when China, the rising superpower, juggled its pride in hosting next summer's Olympic Games with its embarrassment at shipping toxic toys around the world; and when J.K. Rowling set millions of minds and hearts on fire with the final volume of her 17-year saga—one nation that had fallen off our mental map, led by one steely and determined man, emerged as a critical linchpin of the 21st century.

    Russia lives in history—and history lives in Russia. Throughout much of the 20th century, the Soviet Union cast an ominous shadow over the world. It was the U.S.'s dark twin. But after the fall of the Berlin Wall, Russia receded from the American consciousness as we became mired in our own polarized politics. And it lost its place in the great game of geopolitics, its significance dwarfed not just by the U.S. but also by the rising giants of China and India. That view was always naive. Russia is central to our world—and the new world that is being born. It is the largest country on earth; it shares a 2,600-mile (4,200 km) border with China; it has a significant and restive Islamic population; it has the world's largest stockpile of weapons of mass destruction and a lethal nuclear arsenal; it is the world's second largest oil producer after Saudi Arabia; and it is an indispensable player in whatever happens in the Middle East. For all these reasons, if Russia fails, all bets are off for the 21st century. And if Russia succeeds as a nation-state in the family of nations, it will owe much of that success to one man, Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin.

    No one would label Putin a child of destiny. The only surviving son of a Leningrad factory worker, he was born after what the Russians call the Great Patriotic War, in which they lost more than 26 million people. The only evidence that fate played a part in Putin's story comes from his grandfather's job: he cooked for Joseph Stalin, the dictator who inflicted ungodly terrors on his nation.

    When this intense and brooding KGB agent took over as President of Russia in 2000, he found a country on the verge of becoming a failed state. With dauntless persistence, a sharp vision of what Russia should become and a sense that he embodied the spirit of Mother Russia, Putin has put his country back on the map. And he intends to redraw it himself. Though he will step down as Russia's President in March, he will continue to lead his country as its Prime Minister and attempt to transform it into a new kind of nation, beholden to neither East nor West.

    TIME's Person of the Year is not and never has been an honor. It is not an endorsement. It is not a popularity contest. At its best, it is a clear-eyed recognition of the world as it is and of the most powerful individuals and forces shaping that world—for better or for worse. It is ultimately about leadership—bold, earth-changing leadership. Putin is not a boy scout. He is not a democrat in any way that the West would define it. He is not a paragon of free speech. He stands, above all, for stability—stability before freedom, stability before choice, stability in a country that has hardly seen it for a hundred years. Whether he becomes more like the man for whom his grandfather prepared blinis—who himself was twice TIME's Person of the Year—or like Peter the Great, the historical figure he most admires; whether he proves to be a reformer or an autocrat who takes Russia back to an era of repression—this we will know only over the next decade. At significant cost to the principles and ideas that free nations prize, he has performed an extraordinary feat of leadership in imposing stability on a nation that has rarely known it and brought Russia back to the table of world power. For that reason, Vladimir Putin is TIME's 2007 Person of the Year.
     
  2. ymc

    ymc Member

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    Not a bad choice. If Gore chose to run for presidency, then they should give it to Gore.
     
  3. rodrick_98

    rodrick_98 Contributing Member

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    #3 rodrick_98, Dec 20, 2007
    Last edited: Dec 20, 2007
  4. Saint Louis

    Saint Louis Member

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    Bush just placed Time Magazine in the Axis of Evil category.
     
  5. glynch

    glynch Contributing Member

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    As Time says it goes to the most newsworthy person of the year, not the best person.

    I really don't know much about Putin and was intrigued that Gorbachev, who I have somewhat admired for his role in ending the Cold War, though critical at times of Putin is still somewhat supportive.

    The link is an interesting article about Putin, and recent Russian history, the extent to which Russia under Putin is becoming more authoritarian, the role of the West in perhaps not taking policies that could have helped Russia in its first 10 years after Perestroika when it had a 50% decrease in GDP, the unilateral invasion of Iraq as the last straw which led the Russian elite to abandon support of US policy wrt to democracy, recent economic success and with it increasing international political power etc.

    http://harvardmagazine.com/2007/05/p3-the-enigmatic-mr-putin.html
     
  6. vlaurelio

    vlaurelio Contributing Member

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    yeah award should go to Bush







    just sayin
     
  7. Rocket River

    Rocket River Member

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    I thought Bush look in his eye and saw his soul

    Rocket River
     
  8. ymc

    ymc Member

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    Well, our Prez is a simple man, so he can be easily duped by a KGB spy. :cool:
     
  9. Saint Louis

    Saint Louis Member

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    Bush was envious, because when he looked Putin in the eye he saw the cult of personality.
     
  10. J DIDDY

    J DIDDY Member

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    it goes to the guy with the most impact on the world during the year.

    bin laden should have gotten it back in 2001, but fear of backlash kept time from putting him on the cover.
     
  11. J DIDDY

    J DIDDY Member

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    Putin is the scariest looking head of state. the guy has the look of a cold blooded hitman who will snap your neck if u look at him wrong.
     

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