It is literally just a totally normal synecdoche, it's just metonomy that everyone fucking does. "Beijing" for the Chinese government, "Washington" for the American government, "London" for the British government, "Paris" for the French government. It's totally normal.
The fun comes from them immediately going "Moscow is a friendly country". Which even if it is totally normal to use it as synecdoche, means you're still directly referring to Moscow as a country.
Moscow also isn't a country
Moscow is a common synecdoche for the Russian federal government, the same way "Washington" is for the US federal government.
Good point, but how they phrased it above would be: "Make washington / make london a friendly country."
https://hexbear.net/comment/4873721
Dessalines posting on Hexbear pog
Neither Washington nor Moscow!
Instead, The United States of America and The Russian Federation!
it is when you do the thing that i can't remember the word for where you refer to the government by its capital.
I mean, I get it when you refer to country by naming it's capital but you can't say "Moscow is a country" like this sentence did
might be a form of synecdoche
It is literally just a totally normal synecdoche, it's just metonomy that everyone fucking does. "Beijing" for the Chinese government, "Washington" for the American government, "London" for the British government, "Paris" for the French government. It's totally normal. The fun comes from them immediately going "Moscow is a friendly country". Which even if it is totally normal to use it as synecdoche, means you're still directly referring to Moscow as a country.