Paul
Goble
Staunton, April 15 – One can only
imagine the international outrage if any German came up with the idea of using Hitler’s
death camps as the basis for a computer game for children, but so far there haven’t
been many complaints about a Russian firm coming up with a computer game based
on Stalin’s GULAG (regnum.ru/news/2610894.html).
That is just one of the “only in
Russia” stories the Russian media covered more or less fully this week. Here
are 13 others:
1. More than 20,000 Evacuated in Yekaterinburg by Bomb
Threats. More than 20,000 Russians were evacuated from
malls in Yekaterinburg after an anonymous caller said bombs had been planted in
them, but this story, which would have led the news in most countries, was
largely ignored by the Moscow media lest people question the Putin narrative
about everything being fine (versia.ru/bolee-20-tysyach-chelovek-yevakuirovali-iz-torgovyx-centrov-ekaterinburga).
2. Even Nomadic
Reindeer Herders Can Face Charges of Illegal Meetings If They Get Together. Activists
from various political parties are demanding that officials bring charges
against a reindeer herder who assembled those doing the same thing because he
didn’t get permission for the meeting (nazaccent.ru/content/29659-na-yamalskogo-olenevoda-pozhalovalis-posle-nesankcionirovannogo.html).
3. Riders Destroy
Bus Stop Built to Protect Them from the Weather. Officials in Noyabrsk built a wonderful
enclosed bus stop so that those waiting for a ride would not suffer from the
cold, but those for whom it was intended stole the doors, vandalized the building
and used it as a public toilet, making it unusable (facebook.com/groups/vostroge/permalink/524167798113590/).
4.
Children
of the Rich Get Better School Lunches than Children of the Poor.
Some parents are upset that a school in Khabarovsk Kray provides better lunches
for children of the rich than it does for children of the poor and even puts them
at separate tables in an example of “apartheid.” They have complained to the
governor who promises to end the practice (puls-planeta.ru/blog/43720881331/Aparteid-SHkolnikov-iz-bednyih-semey-sazhayut-za-otdelnyiy-stol).
5.
In One Siberian
Town, All the Streets are Named for Stalin. Giving directions in the Siberian
town of Slavyanka is tough: all the main streets there are named for Stalin (sibreal.org/a/29856135.html).
But geography presents a problem for some Russians in more prominent places:
officials in St. Petersburg put up a map of Prague instead of one of their own
city (echo.msk.ru/blog/day_photo/2406535-echo/).
6.
Zorkin Again
Celebrates the Virtues of Serfdom. Valery Zorkin, the head of the Russian
Constitutional Court, apparently doesn’t think going back to Soviet times is
enough. He says the best system Russia ever had was serfdom, apparently hoping
that others will join him in bringing it back (zen.yandex.ru/media/id/5bd35da5064ed400ad696af4/zorkin-zaiavil-chto-rf-doljna-vernutsia-v-epohu-rabovladelcheskogo-krepostnogo-prava-5ca7161d1c0c7c00b208040b).
7.
Russian
Periodicals in a Death Spiral. Rising costs and falling subscriptions
and purchases are forcing publishers to raise prices further, driving down the
size of the print runs still further and putting ever more of them at risk of
closure (forum-msk.org/material/news/15566150.html).
8.
Comrade Stalin had
a Great Sense of Humor, New Collection of His Remarks Says. Stalin is known for many things few of them
good, but now a Russian portal has suggested that he deserves credit as a great
humorist and presents a selection of his funniest lines. Presumably under his
rule, you could die laughing (fishki.net/1285559-jumor-tovariwa-stalina.html).
9.
Import Substitution? Just Repackage Goods Made Abroad and
Say They’re Russian-Made. A Penza medical
equipment firm has come up with an unusual way to meet Vladimir Putin’s demands
for import substitution. It has repackaged prosthetic devices made in China and
sold them as if they had been produced in Russia (sobkorr.org/news/5CADC159ACD6F.html).
10.
How Bad are Things
in Russia? Even FSB Officers are Complaining. Some FSB officers are complaining
about their work, still anonymously, but complaining nonetheless, an indication
that not everyone in Putin’s power vertical is thrilled with the way things
are, even if they are still frightened of being open about that (zen.yandex.ru/media/esquire.ru/sotrudniki-fsb-anonimno-rasskazali-pochemu-oni-nenavidiat-svoiu-rabotu-5c6439c184e0ea00aebfae2d).
11.
Claims Yoga Makes
People Gay Leads Moscow to Ban It in Russian Prisons. Claims by some that practicing yoga can make
people gay led Russian officials to temporarily ban the practice in jails until
they realized just how absurd this idea was (rferl.org/a/russian-prisons-temporarily-ban-yoga-after-claims-it-makes-inmates-gay/29868803.html).
12. Moscow Subbotnik Washes Down Busts of Marx and Lenin. Three Soviet practices came together with one
post-Soviet reality in Moscow last week: Some Muscovites organized a subbotnik
to wash down the remaining busts of two Soviet heroes – and they got official
permission to do so as Russian officials now require (moslenta.ru/news/moskvicham-razreshili-pomyt-byusty-marksa-i-lenina-07-04-2019.htm).
13.
Russians Now Trapped by New Laws. An anecdote is
circulating in Moscow that recalls some of the best Soviet ones and says a lot
about how Russians really feel about their rulers. The story has it that “now
those who say that the authorities work badly can be charged with not
respecting the powers that be, while those who say that the authorities are
doing a good job risk being accused of disseminating fake news” (maximonline.ru/humor/made-in-web/_article/13-luchshih-anekdotov-maya/).
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