Carpet-bombed by song
The Russian city of Samara recently hosted a six-day-long ‘anti-fascist song festival’ — with Steven Seagal and round table discussions about ‘falsifying history’. Novaya-Europe reports

An “anti-fascist song festival” took place in Samara last week. Six days from morning till evening were filled with a fierce struggle for peace and a rapturous extolment of the allure of the trenches. If you thought that the regime wants the Russian people to see the war as something routine, you were wrong: war is all about old war songs and the pinings of a distant sweetheart. If you thought that the current war would destroy Russia’s memory of the past war, you were wrong again: the two wars must now merge in the mind of the Russian citizen into a single battle against the collective West.
They eagerly posed for photos with their mess tins and helmets, but for some reason stayed away from the minibus.
The festival was advertised as being international — there is no point in fighting for peace on one’s own, right? And several guest stars from abroad were indeed brought to Samara.
The slideshow in the background showed brave Russian soldiers marching, planes zipping across the sky, people in camouflage uniforms with the word “FSB” on them successfully storming something — one victorious image after the other.
A videotape of Maria Zakharova, spokeswoman for the Russian Foreign Ministry, acted as an intermission between the musical performances.
“There is no doubt that there’s a clear message in the West now: Zelensky is good, Putin is bad,” Church said. “Zelensky is good, Putin…” the interpreter faltered at the word “bad” and, after a pause, concluded with “...is not.”
“Or take, for example, the case of Stalin’s ‘personality cult’”, he chimed in. “There’s been so much dirt dumped on him!”

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