"Russian-Americans" such as myself do NOT agree with the MP takeover. Met. Laurus said it himself in a speech in Russia recently - that his "psychological plan" was not effective on the old-timers, from whom I am descended and by whom I was educated. The Russian press recently reported that the "defection" rate (I love the irony (truth?) in that term) is about 30%, whereas the Russian propaganda people reported just before the merger that 85 - 90% of the members of ROCOR were recent emigres.
My personal theory is that many Russian-Americans who went along, and I hesitate to name names as I know some of them and they are easily identified, and some are clergy and some have spent all their lives in the service of the Church, or what WAS the church, is that their Russianness was more important to them than their Americanness.
A lot of these people really had no life outside the Russian community. That made them quite vulnerable. Although they might speak fluent English, their social circles are stunted and their understanding of Western life dwarfed by trying to apply pre-Revolutionary Russian values and world-views to modern American life and expecting that they would get the same results as if America were pre-revolutionary Russia.
I don't dispute your contentions about Russian nationalism within ROCOR. My family was accused at times of not being "Russian enough," and this was years before any of this began happening with the MP.
And I am well aware of Soviet infiltration (or what was apparently so) into ROCOR. I saw Soviets who had escaped by saying they were Jews trying to videotape Easter services at a small ROCOR church on the west coast one year. This would have been in the early 80's - which also might help to answer Jean-Serge's bewilderment at the suspiciousness of Russians of recent emigres. Who knows who they were or why they came to videotape and not to worship?
It is also curious to note how many "Russians" remained within the MP - including Abp. Kyrill's (San Francisco) family and many of the nobility who also reportedly kept communion with them, also long before the MP issue was even considered something to discuss.
I can't speak for the Soviet emigres, because I have tried to limit my dealings with them. Of those I have run across, some have been kind and some have seemed vulgar. I don't find I share much of a culture with them from either side. Even our versions of the Russian language are very different.
I can say, because my family did compel the release of documents concerning my mother under the Freedom of Information Act, that some of what we had considered "paranoia" on her part was actually true.
She had insisted all her life that the FBI had cut a hole in her floor, that she was under surveillance, and that it had begun when she purchased a receive-only shortwave radio from a local store in the early 1950's. (She had worked as a radio operator after fleeing the communists.)
Honestly, we, her American children, considered her to be paranoid. The documents indicated she was being truthful. Furthermore, the FBI indicated that they had used a family of Greeks who lived in the same apartment building as informants, and they actually stated in their report that Greek was close enough to Russian that the Greeks could be expected to understand what they were saying.
It was a crazy time in America, and it wasn't that long ago. And this was the FBI investigating someone who had worked for the U.S. government abroad when she was a refugee before arriving here.
The Nashi article was published in the UK's Daily Mail. There was no "sex camp." People were legally married while there. That does not constitute a "sex camp."
Putin has a long-standing policy of rewarding those who will have children, or more children. There is nothing wrong or illicit about procreating within the confines of marriage, as was described in the Daily Mail article. Russia, despite spanning about 11 time zones, has only about 140 million citizens. (Hence the synergy in a Sino-Russian alliance.) Lifespan for a male Russian is estimated at 56 years. It is a sensible policy, unless Russia wishes to be overrun like its European neighbours by immigrants with higher birthrates.
The article was written purely to create scandal where there is none.
The Daily Mail is a right-wing tabloid whose founders supported fascists like Oswald Mosley and supported the British policy of appeasement.
They only began to support the British entry into WWII after the British government threatened to shut them down, as their founder was friendly with both Hitler and Mussolini.
This is widely known to anyone who cares to look.
I just don't smell a scandal in the fact that there is a summer camp for young adults who get legally married and are offered honeymoon quarters.
Should we close down Las Vegas because Britney got married there and stayed married for all of 56 hours? Where does Hitler enter into it?
There is no scandal, except perhaps in the fact that they were not married in an Orthodox Church.
If we want to talk about Hitler, let's talk about Prescott Bush, who was convicted in an American court for "trading with the enemy" - or perhaps IBM, whose fledgeling computers helped the death camps operate.
That is a scandal - not young Russians getting married and consummating their marriages.
So the group offers a "leg up" in business? I can show you thousands of groups here that offer a similar leg up and connections which result in jobs in the government and industry, which here is also fast becoming one and the same. Did the "Federalist Society" - a group of young right-wing lawyers in which membership is a prerequisite to join the Justice Department or the bench hold a picnic this year? Maybe I can tip off Pravda to their scandalous BBQ and we can have cold-war tit-for-tat scandals.
I just don't see it.
Your original post asked if the "Russian people" and "particularly Putin" were paranoid.
I still don't believe so, and I still question whether it is appropriate to brand a race/ethnicity/national origin of people with a psychiatric label for acting the way they do.
I commend you for the fact that we have been able to keep this discussion civil and not resort to ad hominem attacks.
I think maybe at the end of it, we will have to agree to disagree. My eyes show me a world that is different from yours, and your eyes show you a world different from mine.
I am glad we had this opportunity to trade views, or at least try to.
Thank you, Pravoslavnik.