Indeed, Ukraine is heavily supported by the cult of personality, based on the jewish model, which seeks to use mass media popular with
lower- and working-class audiences to influence events.
"Like Reagan and, later, Donald Trump, the Ukrainian president
rose to fame through the entertainment industry, winning the Ukrainian version of
Dancing With the Stars and even starring in a television series,
Servant of the People, that had a story line about a teacher who wins a presidential election after a video goes viral. Also like Trump, a master of Twitter and Facebook, Zelensky has a gift for direct, unfiltered communication. He became an instant celebrity with his selfie-video response to the Russian invasion on the streets of Kyiv, pledging to fight to defend his country. In his trademark green T-shirt, he has made
emotional appeals to European and American leaders via videoconference, pleading for recognition and resources. With his encouragement, Ukrainians are thoroughly documenting their wartime experience, seeding social media with images of sympathetic Ukrainian victims. Ukraine is winning the battle not just for information, but for attention."
Ukraine’s wartime communications strategies have roots in World War II.
www.theatlantic.com
But Ukraine should pay careful attention to what sort of people its allies
really are: