Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
April 29, 2017
Putin has an approval rating in the high 80s.
Soros and his organizations are kicked out of the country for their “color/spring” type revolutionary planning and social engineering.
But the Jews keep on pushing.
Today, Jew Khodorkovsky’s “Open Russia” staged protests across the country.
Every Jew does this gesture. No one but Jews. It is usually followed by “oy vey goyim, my grandfather was gassed 7 – no 12 times – by evil Nazis!”
No one really showed up, because no one except those who speak fluent English and are watching TYT on YouTube every day are interested in this sort of Pepsi nonsense.
But that hasn’t stopped the Western media from acting like it’s the Bolshevik Revolution Pepsi Redux.
The Jew York Times in particular is like “wow just wow the Russian people want Jewish rule” by splashing it across their front page.
Note that mostly women are visible in this photograph. No mention of the gender demographics in the article, however.
At least they start out by saying the Jew billionaire terrorist is behind it all – a lot of outlets are skipping this particular element and acting like it’s some grassroots revolt.
Thousands of Russians lined up in cities across their country on Saturday to present letters of protest at government offices, the second widespread show of public discontent in two months.
The protests, initiated by the Open Russia organization founded by Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky, an exiled former oil tycoon, centered on the right of all Russians to present letters listing grievances to the government.
Some of the protests turned violent. Nearly 120 people were arrested in St. Petersburg, according to O.V.D. Info, an independent organization that tracks protest arrests, and there were scattered detentions in at least a half-dozen other cities. A heavy police presence in Samara thwarted any protest there, organizers said.
Pictures of the protest in St. Petersburg, which organizers said had attracted about 300 people, showed riot police officers hustling protesters onto buses, including one older woman holding a sign critical of President Vladimir V. Putin, which said, “V. V. Putin — there is a way out — take a pension.”
If there’s an older woman it’s a Jew or some other ethnic minority woman.
All babushkas in Russia are either extreme Stalinists or hardcore Orthodox Christians (or both – yes, that is a thing), and both groups support Putin 100%.
Overall, the NYT isn’t telling us if these signs are in English or Russian.
But they are telling us one word…
The overarching theme for the day was “Nodoel!” or “Enough!” as in enough of Mr. Putin and his government. Signs and many petitions called on him not to seek a fourth term in next year’s presidential election. He is expected to run, although he has yet to officially declare his plans.
Yes, yes.
The protesters in the recent Jew-organized protests in Belarus were using the word “Basta!” which also means “enough” (it’s a Spanish/Italian word that is sometimes used in Russian).
Seriously, they might as well be handing out Pepsis, so manufactured is this “dissent.”
“We have Putin, we don’t need food,” read one sarcastic protest sign in the Siberian city of Tomsk, where some press reports said 500 people had taken part in the event.
Before Saturday, Open Russia announced that it had organized protests in about 30 cities. Over all, the number of participants was smaller than the tens of thousands who turned out in about 80 cities for protests called by the main opposition leader, Aleksei A. Navalny, on March 26. Mr. Navalny has called for more demonstrations on June 12.
Well, at least they admit that.
And it’s a whole lot warmer now than it was in March.
In Moscow, the capital, hundreds of people holding petitions lined the sidewalk near the Kremlin administration building between Red Square and Staraya Ploshad, or Old Square. For a little more than two hours starting around 2 p.m., petitioners filed into a government office to present their letters, many of them written on the spot.
In the days before the protest, the government had deployed construction equipment and barriers near the office that handles such letters, leaving organizers to believe the entrance would be blocked.
After word went out that the letters were indeed being accepted, many more people arrived to stand in line. Organizers said that an early count found that at least 1,500 people had presented petitions in Moscow.
There are 15 million people in Moscow. This is not a big protest. At all. It is not front page news for the NYT, in any normal universe.
I want to know how many of these protesters were:
- English-speaking females
- Jews
- Homosexuals
- Ethnic minorities (particularly Islamic ones)
I can pretty much guarantee if there were any heterosexual white males there, they were under 35, highly-educated English-speakers from a wealthy background.
The video definitely indicates that I am 100% correct in that.
But we never get any demographic data on these protests, do we?
“We must participate in such events to show the authority that more and more people whose rights are being violated are against this,” a 30-year-old marketing specialist who identified herself only as Veronika said as she wrote her letter. Many participants were reluctant to give their names because of the legal problems faced by numerous people who took part in previous protests. “I want to live in a country where laws are observed,” she said.
Another protester who declined to give his full name, Aleksandr, 26, said he had tried to start an emergency services company to work in gas fields and had been blocked at every turn. “They keep telling me that they don’t have the budget, maybe because the prime minister stole $70 billion dollars,” he said, referring to recent accusations against Prime Minister Dmitri A. Medvedev in a YouTube video produced by Mr. Navalny.
Navalny is the opposition candidate who is funded by and personal friends with Khodorkovsky, also given money by Soros. He is apparently not Jewish, but is most likely a homosexual.
He is the sole source of this “$70 billion” atrocity lie.
He might as well have said Medvedev hosed down people with a water hose in Syria.
“The government does not care about ordinary people — about our salaries, medication, our rights, nothing,” Aleksandr said.
Many of those presenting petitions acknowledged that the relatively low turnout and the government’s general indifference meant the protests would probably not have much of an effect. But they said it was time to start pushing back against an erosion of civil liberties and the country’s poor economic performance.
One of those things is actually real, but it’s due to Western sanctions and the fact that Russia was a third world country like 20 years ago.
The other is an atrocity lie.
Open Russia’s Facebook page had a few suggestions about subjects to be addressed in the petitions, including “We are tired of living on poverty-level salaries and pensions”; “We are tired of listening to lies on television”; and “We are tired of driving on bad roads.”
Two of those claims are economic, one of them is frivolous.
The economic issues are not going to be fixed by a Jewish IMF revolution.
Ask the Ukraine about that.
Or any Islamic country that participated in the “Arab Spring.”
The group’s founder, Mr. Khodorkovsky, a former chairman of the oil giant Yukos, spent several years in prison before being pardoned by Mr. Putin in 2013. Since then, he has lived abroad, becoming one of the Kremlin’s most outspoken critics.
The anticorruption theme burst into new prominence on March 26, with marches that included many young people in about 80 Russian cities. The protests were called by Mr. Navalny, who was subsequently jailed for 15 days for organizing them. More than 1,000 people were arrested in Moscow alone and have steadily been brought to court.
Yeah.
Khodorskovsky organizing a protest against corruption is like Jeffrey Dahmer organizing a protest against homosexuality.
This whole thing is a joke and it is not really even meant by the Jews funding it to go anywhere.
It is just testing the waters, and a threat to Putin.
But given the poor turnout – especially following the arrest of Navalny in March – we can call this a complete failure for the Jews.
When Russians see Jews trying to organize a revolution, they say “this is like deja vu all over again.”