Russian are stakeholders of their own country. This analysis explores the collective responsibility of the Russian people—not just their leadership. If leaders change based on history Russia's core geopolitical and economics ideas do not change radically for the better. Russians need to own their own country connected to the economic poverty and geopolitical turmoil that defines the nation's current state. It challenges the notion that accountability rests solely with elites, emphasizing the complicity of ordinary citizens in supporting or tolerating policies and actions that have led to widespread instability and global distrust. By examining historical patterns, societal behaviors, and cultural dynamics, this argument calls for a reevaluation of national accountability and the moral obligations of Russian society as a whole to enact meaningful change. We want to make the world a better place. It has nothing to do with the biology, but rather the current collective unconsciousness and history of Russia. We want all people equal and free and do do this, we need to be realistic about who is responsible. By doing this, by taking authentic ownership of a countries actions, then real positive change for the greater good of humanity is possible, a global ethic of moral responsibility.
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