LGBT Propaganda has been officially outlawed in Russia

Rawhide "Doug" Kobayashi

Сила бога-нам подмога

Seems like this will be a major blow for Globohomo, as the first bold move towards drawing a line in the sand has now been drawn:

Russian ‘LGBTQ propaganda’ law signed by Putin explained

Published: 5 Dec 2022 | 20:50 GMT
The new legislation mandates fines for anyone promoting non-traditional relations, pedophilia, and gender reassignment

Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed into law a complete ban on ‘LGBTQ propaganda’, which criminalizes the distribution of material promoting non-traditional sexual relations, pedophilia, and transgenderism. The law also allows foreign offenders to be expelled from Russia.

Putin signed the bill on Monday, after it was approved by the upper and lower chambers of the Russian parliament late last month.

What does the law forbid?

The law bans the dissemination of LGBTQ materials to both “minors and adults,” and applies to “the media, the internet, literature and cinema,” according to a statement issued by the Duma last month.


The materials banned include content promoting non-traditional sexual relations or preferences, pedophilia, and transgenderism.


Advertisers are also forbidden from depicting non-traditional sexual relations or preferences under the law.

How will offenders be punished?

Breaching the new regulations will result in a fine of up to 400,000 rubles ($6,600) for individuals and up to four million rubles ($66,000) for corporate entities. Foreign offenders will also be expelled from Russia.


As the bill made its way through several readings in the Duma, lawmakers rejected amendments that would introduce stiffer penalties for repeat offenders.

How does this differ from previous laws?

While a 2013 law banned the distribution of LGBTQ material to minors, the new law expands this ban to all ages, and covers content on pedophilia and gender transition, which were not explicitly regulated by the original act

How has Russia responded to Western criticism?

A group of 33 mostly Western states calling themselves the ‘Equal Rights Coalition’ accused Moscow of creating “a climate of fear and intimidation” among LGBTQ people and “impacting the human rights of all in Russia.”

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken called the legislation “another serious blow to freedom of expression and the human rights of LGBTQI+ persons in Russia.”


Russia’s embassy in Washington condemned Blinken’s statement as “gross interference in our internal affairs,” adding that “Russia consistently stands for the protection of traditional family values” and rejects “attempts by Western states, led by the United States, to impose pseudo-liberal and perverted ideas about human rights on other countries.”
 

Petr

Administrator

Russian court bans 'LGBT movement'

Published​
13 hours ago​
By Steve Rosenberg​
Russia editor, Moscow​
Russia's Supreme Court has declared what it calls "the international LGBT public movement" an extremist organisation and banned its activities across the country.
The ruling was prompted by a motion from the justice ministry, even though no such organisation exists as a legal entity.​
The hearing was held behind closed doors, but reporters were allowed in to hear the court's decision. Nobody from "the defendant's side" had been present, the court said.​
Russia's constitution was changed three years ago to make it clear that marriage means a union between a man and a woman. Same-sex unions are not recognised here.​
Ahead of the ruling, I asked Sergei Troshin, a municipal deputy in St Petersburg who came out as gay last year, what effect it would have.​
"I think this will mean that anyone whom the state considers an LGBT activist could receive a long prison sentence for 'participating in an extremist organisation'," he said.​
"For the organiser of such a group, the prison term will be even longer.​
"This is real repression. There is panic in Russia's LGBT community. People are emigrating urgently. The actual word we're using is evacuation. We're having to evacuate from our own country. It's terrible."
In recent years Russia's LGBT community has come under increasing pressure from the authorities. In 2013, a law was adopted prohibiting "the propaganda [amongst minors] of non-traditional sexual relations".​
Last year, those restrictions were extended to all age groups in Russia. References to LGBT people have been deleted from books, films, adverts and TV shows. Earlier this month, one Russian TV channel discoloured a rainbow in a South Korean pop video, to avoid being accused of violating the "gay propaganda" law.​
At the Duma, the lower house of the Russian parliament, Vitaly Milonov, a famously homophobic MP from the ruling party, United Russia, said the ban on LGBT groups was "not about sexual minorities or the private life of individuals".
"It's more about the political agenda proclaimed by this LGBT international movement," he told me.
"They have their own tasks, their own goals. They act as a political force, a political structure and the goals of this structure contravene the Russian Constitution."​
Vitaly Milonov
We can ban any activities from LGBT international organisations here in Russia. That's nice. We don't need them​
Vitaly Milonov
United Russia MP​
"You talk about a political structure," I responded. "But there isn't a movement called the 'International LGBT public movement.' How can you ban something that doesn't exist?"​
"Oh, it's easy," Mr Milonov replied. "We can ban any activities from LGBT international organisations here in Russia. That's nice. We don't need them.
"And I'm looking forward to the next step: banning the six-colour rainbow flag. We don't need this flag. It's a symbol of the fight with the traditional family. I hope that no-one can show this flag in Russia."
Under Vladimir Putin, the Kremlin has embraced an ideology centred around conservative thinking and "traditional family values". The authorities portray LGBT activism as something inherently Western and hostile to Russia. Pressure on the LGBT community is presented as a means of defending the moral fabric of Russia.​
And is it also a potential vote winner?​
"I think [the court hearing] is linked to the presidential election next March," believes Sergei Troshin. "[The authorities] are creating an artificial enemy."​
"They say 'We are battling the West'. The battle with LGBT people fits in with this anti-Western rhetoric. Fighting both the West and the LGBT community is popular amongst the conservative, anti-Western part of society. So this topic will be pushed in the run-up to the election."
"They're trying to distract attention from more important problems, which the Russian authorities don't want people to think about," says Maxim Goldman. :6: He works for a Russian organisation that has been offering support to transgender and non-binary people.​
"As soon as we heard about the Supreme Court hearing, the people who run our organisation realised we would have to leave the country urgently. It became an emergency."​
I spoke to Maxim, who identifies himself as non-binary, on his final day in Russia. He had packed a small suitcase and was about to head to the airport.
"I feel totally rejected by my own country," he said. "We're supposed to have a democracy here. The people we put in power are supposed to take care of us.​
"But the opposite is happening. They're punishing us. They're wiping their feet on us. I'm being forced out."​
For now, municipal deputy Sergei Troshin is staying. But he has no illusions.​
"I have spoken a lot in the past about LGBT rights," Sergei tells me. "It's possible this will be enough to launch a criminal case against me. I hope not, but maybe. And this is terrifying.​
"Russian society is soaked in fear. With every word you're crossing a mine field. Say one thing and it might land you in prison for five years; say something else, and you'll get 10 or 15 years behind bars."​
 

Petr

Administrator

A Tale Of Two Supreme Courts

Posted by Mundabor
gaystapo.jpg
In the United States, you have a Supreme Court Justice who does not know who is a woman. She roams freely in the street. No straitjacket, or medical care of any sort. She just goes on with her work, and everyone pretends everything is fine.​
In Russia, you have this.
The decision is very apposite. By its very nature, every propaganda of homosexual acts or tendencies is subversive of the natural order, besides running contrary to common sense and basic decency. This, even not considering something that even my canary bird has long understood: there is no more aggressive threat to all your freedom than this bunch of degenerate bigots.
I will remind you here that, until around the Sixties, most European States criminalised homosexual scandal, sodomy, or both. The rationale is evident: having inherited a blessedly Christian societal structure from their forefathers, they understood that a Christian society must be defended from perversion.​
Fairies of all colours of the rainbow will now say that they are criminalised for being homosexual. But this is not the case. The Russian Supreme Court decision allows for ample closets where these people can close themselves in, and shut up already. They can bring in their bras and make up if they so wish. But they need to stay in.
It’s just fair, really.​
Look at the Papal States. They criminalised homosexual scandal. One could have been homosexual even in the middle of the Eternal City, and live jail-free. What would get one in trouble is the propaganda for sexual deviancy.​
What the Russian Supreme Court has done is to simply reinstate the common sense thinking that was prevalent in the Christian societies of the last Century. This, they do because – surprise, surprise – they want to reinstate Christian thinking, common sense, and basic decency.​
The fun part of this is that, whilst every African Country that would take such measures would immediately be hit by sanctions by the United States, that beacon of free-determination of the Peoples, there is absolutely nothing anybody can do against Russia.​
So we have a tale of two Supreme Courts that is also a tale of two Countries. One now in the hands of the forces of evil, the other emerging from evil and slowly marching towards Christian restoration. There is a lot to do, of course, and I will notice here that Russia has abortion still. But Putin is very prudent, and he advances in incremental steps. When the Country has been seriously re-Christianised, the end of abortion will come naturally and without risking the end of all that has been achieved until now.​
Yes, I wish Putin felt safe enough to ban abortion now. Realistically, it’s not happening.​
Re-Christianisation, as well as de-Christianisation, don’t happen overnight. Both need several decades, and will develop in a gradual process.​
This tale of two Supreme Courts tells us in which direction each of these countries is going.​
 
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clefty

Phoron
Well there ya go…

Putin ain’t Christian after all...

Nor is Holy Rus.

Certainly not OT enough as the demand and desire is around here..."to kill the faggots!"..."hoes be mad!...ragin' roasties!"...ironic as traditionally what was given at Sinai is rejected as "just to da joos".

Putin should (as all good Christians should) be stoning gays or those involved in extra marital sex outright...and both MALE and female...

and outlawing ALL abortion and making it "eye for an eye life for life" for any man whore who rejects his planted seed...

Oh and stoning drunkard and gluttonous sons...criminalizing contraception use...hang on did they have contraception in the OT?



Right! so commence stoning for coitus interruptus...and certainly place it on the ballot initiatives and other legislative bills...to be written in stone.



It’s just fair, really.​
right...but not enough...Putin must (as all Christians should) campaign for immediate application to what the OT expects...

Look at the Papal States. They criminalised homosexual scandal. One could have been homosexual even in the middle of the Eternal City, and live jail-free. What would get one in trouble is the propaganda for sexual deviancy.​
One could have been homosexual? One IS homosexual more like...the pope even complains about "the gay cabal" running things.

...and not just in the Eternal City but throughout its global corporation...concealed and protected...condoning it even on its campuses...

And sadly homosexuality or abortions or other perversions are not limited to this V2 era...

What the Russian Supreme Court has done is to simply reinstate the common sense thinking that was prevalent in the Christian societies of the last Century. This, they do because – surprise, surprise – they want to reinstate Christian thinking, common sense, and basic decency.​
Alas in Christian history there has always been "sin"...perhaps we are not trying hard enough to legislate and enforce its removal?

I mean the threat and use of stoning in the OT was successful after all yes? God Himself cleansed with fire and brimstone...

The fun part of this is that, whilst every African Country that would take such measures would immediately be hit by sanctions by the United States
Interesting that in the original "Catholic without compromise" blog article he writes "the fan part"...

So we have a tale of two Supreme Courts that is also a tale of two Countries. One now in the hands of the forces of evil, the other emerging from evil and slowly marching towards Christian restoration.​
Chin up! Mundabor! we overturned Roe vs Wade!...

We also have powerful forces here in the "Fuq da Qua" already in play marching us towards a more complete Christian/OT restoration...His Kingdom on earth...by the sword if need be...

To comfort him someone please apprise Mundabor of Heritage Foundation... project 2025... and other such Moral Majority common good initiatives...

There is a lot to do, of course, and I will notice here that Russia has abortion still. But Putin is very prudent, and he advances in incremental steps. When the Country has been seriously re-Christianised, the end of abortion will come naturally and without risking the end of all that has been achieved until now.​
No no...these things must be immediate...

Pro Life is to be front and center on every conservative ballot...the hill to die on...is what my conservative AM talk radio programming insists DAILY...proud Catholics like Christ Plante...Dan Bongino...Matt Walsh...Michael Knowles...and 2 joos...

Yes, I wish Putin felt safe enough to ban abortion now. Realistically, it’s not happening.
Don't be so defeatist...GOP is trying its best here...maybe include on Red State initiatives the stoning for extra marital sex...or marital sex not for babies...and gluttonous and drunkard sons?

Re-Christianisation, as well as de-Christianisation, don’t happen overnight. Both need several decades, and will develop in a gradual process.​
This tale of two Supreme Courts tells us in which direction each of these countries is going.​
And once Christian Catholic WITHOUT COMPROMISE here...we can continue resolving better and more traditional Christian issues like "leavened or unleavened bread use in our assistance of the mass" with our hero Putin and his Third Rome.
 
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Petr

Administrator
Waiting for the other shoe to drop:




Bill banning private clinics from performing abortions to be submitted to Russia’s State Duma in spring session

5:08 pm, December 6, 2023​
Source: RIA Novosti
Private clinics in Russia may soon be banned from performing abortions, reports Russian state news RIA Novosti.​
“A bill to remove abortions from private clinics’ services is being developed. There are also plans to reduce the period of time that termination of pregnancy would be possible. The document itself is not yet available,” one source told RIA Novosti.
The source said the bill is planned to be submitted to the State Duma in the spring session.​
Several Russian regions have recently advocated for the introduction of fines for “coercing” women into having abortions. Other regions have started to prohibit it in private clinics.​
 
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