Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 16 – Many are
focusing on the odious features of the Yarovaya “package” that Vladimir Putin
has signed into law, but they have missed its “most offensive” and dangerous
aspect for the regime, Mikhail Klimaryov says. The package is so poorly
written that Russians will be able to sabotage its provisions and even take steps to organize themselves more generally.
And having sabotaged that law, the
Russian blogger says, they will not only consider how they can sabotage other
Russian laws but lose whatever little respect they have for laws as such, a
development that will make it even more difficult for the powers that be to
control the situation (nag.ru/articles/article/29639/pervaya-yarovaya.html).
“For the Kremlin and the FSB,” he
argues, the law will result in “humiliation and ridicule” because it is so
poorly drafted, is so far out of line with reality, and is, whatever many fear,
“unbelievably easy to sabotage” both in advance and whenever the authorities
may try to enforce it.
On June 24, Klimaryov writes, “without
a declaration of war,” the Russian legislature “attacked” Russia’s Internet
business by attacking our constitutional right to secure communications” and
what may matter even more, threatening to “empty the wallets” of Russian
companies in that sector.
“All responsibility for this attack
on Good Sense entirely and completely falls on the Duma … the Federation
Council … and [Vladimir] Putin who signed it into law.” That means that the old
adage about a good tsar with bad boyars doesn’t apply in this case, although
some have suggested that the new law isn’t that bad and that they can live with
it.
The blogger says that he is “consciously
putting the accent on the economic component of ‘the Yarovaya package’” because
“for commercial organizations, which internet providers are in 100 percent of
the cases, economics is more important than anything else.” And given that the
old question of “who is guilty?” has been answered, the one before them is “what
is to be done?”
The facts of the case are that this
new law is going to cost these companies money, and to defend against that, they
“must organize will all people interested in the cancellation of the law,
including associations and NGOs, colleagues, partners and competitors. And
political parties.” In short, “with all whose interests coincide and are
categorically against this law.”
Given that elections are
approaching, it is important to make the distinction between United Russia and
Just Russia whose deputies supported the law, on the one hand, and the LDPR and
KPRF whose deputies voted against it, on the other. Those who want the law abolished should vote
their convictions.
Some activists have proposed organizing
an association under the “code” title, “We are Against the Package,” Klimaryov
says; but that is too narrow and over the long term, it will not be “very
effective.” Instead, those opposed need to consider the broader issues of how they
can evade the law until it is repeald.
And they need to recognize its opponents are all “in one boat.
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