When I say russians are degenerates, I do not hurl a baseless insult. I really mean it. I’m not a history expert, but you don’t need to be one in order to see it. I verified my understanding through ChatGPT, Claude, and DeepSeek, just in case. And none of them, not even the crappy whataboutist dodge-questions-at-all-costs DeepSeek, were able to find fallacies in the notion I am about to present.

Back in the day, before the onset of the Industrial Revolution, Moscow’s empire was roughly equivalent to any other empire of the time, not a lot better, not a lot worse. Around its onset, however, Moscow started to fall behind rapidly. The Muscovites started to make wrong decisions time and again. The Soviet Union seemed to have narrowed the gap, with its widespread education and vast military industry, but the general trend persisted, and now Moscow’s far behind any other empire of the time (UK, Spain, France, China, Portugal, Turkey, etc.), especially when it comes to things that directly affect population, such as the quality of life.

It is, I believe, the universally accepted chronicle, the safe waters which cannot be mudded. And it’s already enough for my point, so it was what I inquired. But I must mention quickly: I don’t see the Soviet Union as some sort of leap or remedy. Oh no, far from it. It was the worst period in centuries for all Moscow-subjugated territories. The immense suffering and reckless loss of life were covered by a flimsy facade. The skin was stretched so thin it was translucent, revealing unhealthy gory offal to anyone with the eyes to see. Anything good the SU achieved would have been achieved much more efficiently without it. When I was a barely conscious wee lad (6 or 7 maybe), like any kid, I used to perform a lot of little field experiments. Once I decided to put a dead grasshopper on fire. Whether it was truly dead I cannot tell. But as the jet from the lighter impaled its body, it started to jerk frantically. My surprise made me memorize that scene. That miserable, convulsing body — that was the Soviet Union. A lot of movement that imperceptive observers can mistake for vigor.

I didn’t include this vivid imagery to my AI queries though, as it wasn’t relevant to my point. And the point is that russians are degenerates by the very definition of the word, consistently declining further and further, acting more and more irrationally.

Of course it is a generalization, and the figuratively closer to Moscow someone is, the more the term “degenerate” is applicable. For example, I wouldn’t dare call Chechens degenerates. They were not part of the management. They did not align with it. They openly opposed it. They sacrificed a lot in their opposition.