This is not the first sign of Putin's unpopularity, and it certainly won't be the last. I only hope the brave leaders of Moscow do not pay too high a price for having done their duty, and that Putin's ouster is both speedy and peaceful. Hoping for the best, preparing for the worst.
A good sign. Putin's day is past and he needs to be rolled with the process starting. Just want the Russians to do it after all, don't we all agree foreign interference in domestic political affairs is a bad thing?
The Russian Federation is not the USSR. The days of Gulags are gone. Russian democracy at work, not perfect but it's happening. No crowds on the street yet.
How do our countries handle political dissent? Canada, asking you. Victoria Australia.
Political prisoners get sent to correctional facilities, I'm sure they are the worst of the worst. I think the actual Siberian work camps and gulags we're shut down by Nikita Krushchev so that would be a long time ago.
Wouldn't it be suitable for one of them to bring a concealed weapon to a meeting and execute the dictator who is dragging their country into the mud?
Or maybe a dot of nerve toxin on the handle of his teacup. The same poison they used on their escaped agent and wife in England a few years ago.
Probably easier said than done.
Oh, those ARE lovely ideas!
I heard of this earlier today. The average Russian believes the lies about "Nazis and an exercise in the Ukraine." Most do not give it a second thought. Now it will be different because more people than these original 18 are speaking out and letting Putin's failures be known. The move to oust Putin has begun.
Gutsy move for sure in a country where dissent is generally really bad for your health and future.