Talk:Liberal revolutionary movements in post-communist Eastern Europe
This page could use a lot of expansion. I invite collaboration on it.--Pharos 21:13, 15 Feb 2005 (UTC)
- Why only in Eastern Europe and not include all post-Soviet territory? There may be some 'revolutions' in the offing in places like kyrgyzstan or kazakhstan. Also, "revolution" may be a strong word to use in these cases. they weren't revolutions insofar as they didn't destroy or remove the constitutions extralegally. Although I guess the most common reference for these movements is revolution, perhaps an explanatory note is due. —thames 21:21, 15 Feb 2005 (UTC)
To tell the truth, I had a lot of trouble coming up with a halfway decent title for this page in the first place. But you are right that this phenomenon may well spread to Central Asia, though it hasn't really as of yet. Of course Serbia was never part of the Soviet Union, nor Albania, where MJAFT! is active. One can also consider plain "movements in post-communist countries", but this is probably too vague. A better geographic solution, if inelegant, would be to add "and Central Asia" or maybe "and the CIS" to the title. What do you think of these different ideas? Anyway, I do think that the "liberal revolutionary movements" part is right, because of usage and the real revolutionary changes of government, but you are certainly right that the constitutions weren't changed extralegally.--Pharos 22:10, 15 Feb 2005 (UTC)
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