Cluster A — Cultural & Linguistic Frustration (Everyday Concerns)
Profile:
Older demographic (35–50+), focused on daily-life issues, culturally anxious, politically cautious, rarely interacting with Cluster B.
Narratives: language pressure, cultural erosion, rising costs.
Themes (~60% of RU-language activity):
1) Language Mandates & Integration Rules
Complaints about mandatory courses, exams, and Latvian-language requirements in retail and services.
Tone: negative
Engagement: ~180 likes
2) Economic Pressure & Cost of Living
Medicine prices, excises, basic goods; nostalgia for “cheaper years.”
Tone: mixed
Engagement: ~140 likes
3) VAT on Russian Books & Media Restrictions
Pushback against 21% VAT on RU books and film dubbing restrictions.
Tone: negative–anxious
Engagement: ~120 likes
4) Holiday Nostalgia
Non-political festive posts, photos, recipes.
Tone: positive
Engagement: ~90 likes
Cluster B — Pro-Ukraine, Security-Focused & Civically Active
Profile:
Younger users (20–40), urban/IT/creative/volunteer circles, openly pro-Ukraine, critical of Kremlin narratives, supportive of Baltic security policies.
Very limited overlap with Cluster A.
Themes (~40% of RU-language activity):
1) Ukraine Solidarity
Fundraisers, community support, volunteer updates.
Tone: strongly positive–empathetic
Engagement: 200+ likes
2) Border Security & Belarus Balloon Incidents
Support for rail dismantling toward Russia; calls for coordinated Baltic airspace response.
Tone: positive on defense, negative on threats
Engagement: 150–250 likes
3) Integration as Civic Duty
“Live here — learn the language” messaging; strict support for enforcement.
Tone: positive–strict
Engagement: 80–120 likes
4) Anti-Kremlin Commentary
Mocking propagandists, highlighting democratic movements.
Tone: sharply negative toward Kremlin; supportive of EU/NATO
Engagement: 150+ likes
Structural Observation: Two Segments, Not One
Russian-language conversations in the Baltics form two separate ecosystems, not a unified bloc:
Cluster A focuses on cultural/language frustration and avoids geopolitics.
Cluster B focuses on Ukraine, security, and civic norms.
Cross-cluster interaction is minimal, meaning aggregated sentiment would be misleading.
The two audiences must be analyzed independently.
Summary Signal
Balts navigate December with holiday optimism, economic irritation, and persistent security awareness.
Latvia’s integration debate becomes the week’s biggest social flashpoint.
Russian-language discussions bifurcate sharply, revealing two different communities rather than a single “minority opinion.”