The problem also is that a lot of the good Russians have left Russia, if nothing else then once Putin started imposing his increasingly draconic laws on his population. That means those who remained behind are becoming increasingly terrible.
Also: This is increasingly becoming the adopted flag of the anti-war movement, mostly among Russian dissidents.
The idea is that this flag is completely devoid of the color red, which is associated with war and blodshed, instead replacing it with the more peaceful color white (which is also meant to symbolize remorse), while the shade of blue is lighter than that used in the current official Russian flag, which is meant to symbolize truth and justice.
Also also: One of the many reasons why Russia's invasion of Ukraine is affecting so many people on a personal level is because the modern internet age also means that many of us are familiar with individuals from Ukraine, whether we previously were aware of the fact or not.
Take, for example, Ukrainian band
Sershen & Zarítskaya, whose regular performances and music videos featured on Youtube were interrupted by their home country being invaded. Singer Dariaa Zaritskaya has
posted about her having to flee her country on International Women's Day.
I've seen stories about Ukrainian influencers abruptly shifting their schedule from beauty and shopping to having their established audiences witness a real war affecting people they know. This is what makes this war so different. This one affects people whom many people in other countries were familiar with. It's essentially like the characters on all your favorite TV shows suddenly being snapped out of existence by Thanos.
You might call this hypocrisy, you might criticize that this war is getting coverage which other wars prevously didn't get because they didn't affect people any of us cared about, but that's not a reason not be cynical about it and insist that we shouldn't care about this war either since we didn't care about any of the others, which is bullshit. If anything, this war is interrupting enough of a lot of people's daily routines so they simply
cannot go on with their lives as of nothing had happened. And that's one of the things that are definitely helping Ukraine. The world is watching. A lot of people are paying attention. And a lot of people are pissed off enough at Putin that he can't simply shrug it off eventually and go back to business as usual once he has
obliterated "liberated" Ukraine.