Monday, August 1, 2011

On gay parades in Moscow and elsewhere

On and off the buzz hangs in the air of either impending pride parade or its  prohibition.

Will they allow a gay parade to go on or ban the visual feast of homosexuality in the Soviet capital ? Russia's capital is located 600 km north.  Who knows. Who cares.

The Bolshevist church is supposedly against the gay parade though she seems to be far greater pervert while the public - well, no one asks the public.

Putin is against  gay parades - if we to spell his name phonetically he should be Pootin like Poo Tin (tinned poo? a tinpot dictator called Poo),  not Putin but again who cares? Putin and the patriarch would look really good at the head of a major gay procession - that's why probably it is not taking place - not because Pootin and the patriarch won't beautify any gay parade with their lusty presence but because Putin is against any gaiety.

That's what matters most in Russia.

I haven't yet seen a guy parade live or on TV and don't understand why they would want to organize one either. I know there is a gay parade in Taiwan but  not in Sodom in Gomorrah that is called Moscow.

While Moscow had a particularly avaricious cleptomaniac vizier presiding over it, Iuriï Lužkov (Yuri Luzhkov in Americanish-phonetish), under whom the city became number one European (or honorary European, it is Asiatic really ) capital (the place where they steal capital) by the number of Muslims outside of Tirana and the number of mosques constructed while becoming a personal milking cow for  Lužkov (hence my idea of changing the spelling of the city, at least in English, to Mosque Cow. If the State department changed Kiev to Kiyiv or whatever then why can't it change Moscow to Mosque Cow )  was notorious for fighting the threat of gay parades but not organized crime and corruption. Iuriï Lužkov battled the mysterious parade that never took place while looting billions.

Iuriï Lužkov was also a valiant defender of Russian speakers' rights in the Baltics, particularly in Latvia. 

After Great Khan dismissed him because he was probably outstealing even the Thief in Chief himself, Iuriï Lužkov forgot about his patriotism and ran to kiss and polish with his tongue the gate of the great concentration camp called Latvia. He wanted in. He knocked. He whined. He groaned.  Apparently he bought some property on other side of the fence (in addition to Tyrol, London and other places) and life in the concentration camp called Latvia looked more attractive to the mayor of Moscow and Soviet apparatchik with his countless stolen billions than life in Moscow.   Where he fought hard against gay parades but lost all interests to them after losing his post and at the end fled to London. Probably because London is gay-friendly unlike Lužkov's Moscow. It is likely one of the reasons why it is the city that is preferred by Soviet nomenkalatura and Muscovite Thieving Class.

I was listening to the radio today - I rarely do that - there are no good national classical music stations in Russia, in fact there are no bad ones either.  Russia is losing its culture, its language and its musical tradition . There are national syndicated stations with round the clock broadcasting of ...  criminal songs, the music of the underworld and of the folklore of thieves that is misnamed shanson, the aural garbage that has nothing in common with the chanson française though, and then some idiot was again on the air talking about gay parade - which is something that is not on most Russians or non-Russians agenda anyway. This  is grotesque non-issue issue that is being pulled out by the junta and the Bolshevist church to stimulate the organs of their moronic electorate. 

Now the schizophrenia of all this is remarkable as neither one of many Lužkovs nor Putin can forbid a parade of homosexuals from taking place, even those of Polynesian descent can congregate  as long as they are Russian Federation citizens, and no sight can be more repulsive than gathering of United Russia members - I mean in the sense of offending public morals on the subject of which the constitution is silent. And now I got it as I remembered that Russian Federation has a constitution or  the constitution,  a stupid  copycat sort of document, but which is still amazingly valid, on the "books", and is supposedly the supreme law of the land.

It says right there.

Article 31

Citizens of the Russian Federation have the right to gather peacefully, without arms, and  assemble, conduct public meetings and demonstrations, processions and organize picketing activities.




Статья 31

Граждане Российской Федерации имеют право собираться мирно без оружия, проводить собрания, митинги и демонстрации, шествия и пикетирование.

No comments:

Post a Comment