Russia fired back on Wednesday, saying, “Old Freud during his lifetime would have dreamed of such an object for research,” Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov advised Russian state-owned information company RIA Novosti. He referred to Austrian neurologist Sigmund Freud, who based psychoanalysis and had a number of controversial theories about masculinity.
Johnson made the feedback in a German tv interview days after the war entered its fifth month, a devastating battle that has destroyed cities, displaced tens of millions and killed hundreds of civilians.
Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon, when asked about Johnson’s feedback on the British tv present “Good Morning Britain,” stated she did “unusually perhaps, agree” along with his feedback relating to ladies in politics.
Sturgeon, who leads the pro-independence Scottish National Party and has usually clashed with Johnson’s authorities in London, referred to as Putin a “war criminal” and went on to say that “the world would be a better place if there were more women in positions of leadership.”
“I think it is important we don’t generalize,” she said. Women make mistakes as well as men make mistakes. But I do think women tend to bring more common sense and emotional intelligence and reasoned approach.”
On social media, others argued that “toxic masculinity” was not Putin’s worst quality.
“Ruthless, psychopathic, murderous and despotic — toxic masculinity is the least of Putin’s disturbing character traits,” tweeted behavioral psychologist Jo Hemmings.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Tuesday demanded that world leaders at the United Nations take further steps to punish Russia, following an escalation of missile attacks and airstrikes on civilian targets — including a shopping mall in the city of Kremenchuk earlier this week that killed at least 18 people and injured dozens more.
Despite his critique of Putin, Johnson previously has been accused of sexism, sparking controversy with his comments about ladies.
“Voting Tory will cause your wife to have bigger breasts and increase your chances of owning a BMW M3,” the Conservative leader said in 2005, according to British media.
Johnson’s feedback got here just days after he and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau joked about going shirtless to threaten Putin with “our pecs” during the opening of the Group of Seven summit in Germany on Sunday.
“Jackets on? Jackets off? Shall we take our clothes off?” Johnson pondered as the G-7 leaders, who had just announced a ban on new imports of Russian gold, prepared to pose for a photo. “We all have to show that we’re tougher than Putin,” he quipped.
Putin’s tough-guy image, experts say, has been a central part of building Russia’s reputation on the world stage as influential and authoritarian.
“You need to create an image of power,” political strategist Gleb Pavlovsky, who once played a key role in shaping Putin’s public persona, told The Washington Post in 2018. Since the earliest days of Putin’s presidency, Russia’s leader has often been photographed in an array of commanding poses.
Shirtless Putin on horseback, shirtless Putin catching fish and Putin swimming on vacation are just some of the images released by the Kremlin in recent years, along with others that show him taking part in martial arts training and arm-wrestling.