Remember the lady who resolutely waved the "No to war!" poster allegedly on live air of a Russian propaganda TV outlet?
While many admired the stunt, praising a "brave" and defiant woman, the only thing I thought about is another game being played by the Kremlin.
And I turned out to be right. After all, now the lady is circulating across the EU the thesis that "ordinary Russians should not suffer," launched by Russian propaganda nearly two weeks ago.
Now a number of Russian journalists, intelligentsia, and other "activists" in emigration have started the talk about the West needing to ease sanctions on ordinary Russians. Everyone who promotes this idea is in fact a latent agent of the Kremlin"s influence. Since Soviet times, quite a few research works have been done, by myself included, about the ways such figures integrate into Western society.
These doves of peace, freedom, and democracy are called upon to spread pro-government narratives – in an extremely liberal and democratic wrapper – within the Western community.
This once again proves that none of those liberal amoebae and peace activists, who had been fed throughout all these eight years by propaganda outlets or served the authorities in any other way before suddenly "opening their eyes" are not worth people"s trust.
What"s most interesting, after publishing her post on Instagram saying Russians should not suffer because of Putin and regain access to hygiene products, Ovsyannikova edited the text an hour later and deleted all this.
That is, having told on foreign TV that there is no need to impose sanctions affecting ordinary Russians, she said nothing about it in her message. That"s some kind of clandestine work targeting Western audiences.
And now the main part.
Every Russian is accountable for what"s happening in Ukraine. This is called collective responsibility. If Ovsyannikova"s mother dies without her medication or someone gets a leaf stuck in their ass or sepsis develops, it"s only their personal fault.
You reap what you sow.
Well, for all gullible and naive, I suggest they not fall for this kind of cheap shows anymore. It"s not a good time to allow such destructive trust.