Comment: 'Russia's war of aggression' is a propaganda narrative pushed solely by the rapidly shrinking 'international community' of the West and its vassals.
However, individual personality traits play a decisive role as regards the issue of recovering from the shock.
These are the results of a study carried out by an international team of researchers headed by psychologists Julian Scharbert and Prof. Mitja Back from the University of Münster. The study was based on around 45,000 individual surveys taking in 1,300 people from 17 European countries, with over 50 researchers involved. The results of the study have been published in Nature Communications.
Comment: People in Russia and Ukraine likely have been subjected to more stressors, but one wonders whether there's a greater resilience due to having suffered significant societal unrest in their recent histories.
Furthermore, by comparison, Russian society hasn't been subjected to other fracturing issues, such as weaponised mass migration; the enforcement of ideologies like the Green Agenda, LGBTQ+; to name but a few of the differences: Over 80% of Russians are 'happy' - poll
Either way, the report doesn't bode well considering the establishment appears determined to directly involve Europe in a war of some kind with Russia: Korybko: Russia's Avdeevka win will reverberate across Europe and accelerate geostrategic shifts