Remember that elderly women that offered seeds to russian soldiers "so that at least some sunflowers will grow where they are going to die". I think that kind of counts as greeting with flowers?
Genocidal/Politicidal history doesn't predict political opposition though (e.g. Kazakhstan being struck by starvation campaigns as well, but juggling neutrality now)
Things will get more expensive to ship to Russia. which will hit the average consumer's bottom line.
Which will add more pressure to stop this war.
That being said, I am more concerned I don't hear anything about it on the Russian side. Is the government quietly eating the extra costs to ship things? Or is consumer goods not shipped by rail?
I think it was primarily used to move military items.
Governments like that don't usually admit failures on their part. They'll mention it if they can use it to justify some greater level of atrocity vs. ukraine, I suppose.
@HuddaBudda You won't hear any time soon. Authoritarian states not only prevent news like these from surfacing, but also repress any little form of opposition. Look at how many rather influential people got shot, stabbed, poisoned, defenestrated etc.
Normal pepple do not have a fraction of their power.
i can't imagine any nation isn't significantly consumerist at this point, even people in bumfuck nowhere live pretty modern lives even if they don't have electricity.