“Kremlin Dawns? Oh, Das ist fantastisch!!”

Both my grandfathers fought the fascists. One was killed on the Karelia front in the fall of 1941, the second one fought from Stalingrad to Berlin. Many millions of our grandfathers split their blood and lost their lives to stop the fascists from reaching Moscow, reaching Kremlin and stamp their boots on the neck of our motherland. 25 millions of our grandfathers were killed by fascists to stop the brown plague. Dozens of millions of our ancestors over hundreds of years stopped countless hordes of enemies.

Our motherland has never been in peace: nomads, Tatars, polish invaders, Germans, Danes, French… endless waves of them rolled over Russia. All of them were defeated by the firmness and courage of the Russian people.

However, now all those who died for Russia would curse us: foreign soldiers have marched across the Red Square. No we have not lost a war after fierce battles where all of our brave soldiers perished. It has happened in a time of peace when the ruling clique allowed foreign soldiers to march across the Red Square with dull idiots applauding with moronic smiles from the stands.

“Kremlin Dawns” ruling clique has sold as a ‘holiday’. Select German, English, French, Danish soldiers showed off their marching skills, while TV presenters were breathless with delight over the mastership of foreign soldiers.

Zombies on the stands care only about beer, grub and sights, they applauded to landsknechts in the Russian holy place. These zombies would applaud to NATO tanks if they roll through Moscow streets. Leaking with servility one TV presenter let us know that the stands applauded Dane guardsmen louder than the Russian soldiers – there were rumors that there was a Dutch prince on the stands. Well, it is ‘Kremlin patriotism’. I myself would not applaud to our ‘performers’. They showed a ‘Nutcracker-style’ operetta that caused even not laughter but burning shame. It looked as if a battalion of guards of a ‘banana republic’ entertained their transoceanic masters.

It looked like a parade of occupants. Russia is trampled by liberal-fascist ‘reforms’, the Russian population dies out by million every year. Economy, industry, culture, army and social infrastructure are all destroyed. As well, we have unemployment, alcoholism, youth degradation and geopolitical positions surrender. The country has received an almost fatal blow. We pray for patriots to come and save the country. However, for now soldiers of NATO are marching in front of the Kremlin even though no official occupation has happen yet. But it is all just a matter of time. I do not think that an army where the officers beat soldiers to death and ‘hussars’ mince before a drunken crowd can repel the invasion. USSR could do it before, but not now.

The apotheosis of cynicism was German Coat of Arms on the Kremlin wall! Can you imagine the Russian Flag on the walls of Tower, Reichstag or the White House? No, it is not possible, and for a good reason – no foreign symbol can be placed in sacred national places. Why was the German Coat of Arms placed on the Kremlin? We had many wars with Germany and always the Germans have attacked Russia first. Several times they tried to annihilate Russian people. Not all the Russian soldiers from the last war are dead and buried, not all the German bombs are extracted from our fields and cities. Why? Is it a jeer at us or a gentle hint on something? Maybe Putin is a big friend of Germans? But this personal problem of his does not give him the right to defile our national sacred place.

Some of ‘tolerasts’ can say that ‘Russia does not have enemies’ and that it ‘helps understanding and friendship’… Well, then suggest to the English the idea of placing the Russian Flag on Tower and to have Russian soldiers march across Trafalgar Square.

I am not a cant and if this fancy dress-up party had happened somewhere in Rostov or Saratov – no problem. But to do it on the Red Square where no parade of foreign soldiers has ever happened it is a highest blasphemy and disgrace to all Russian people and our history.

Georgij Znamenskij

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