• Random_Character_A
      link
      352 months ago

      In a good old fashioned Russian meatwave attack, you can skip the first two.

      • @ladicius
        link
        16
        edit-2
        2 months ago

        Ask those Indian citizens about that.

      • Diplomjodler
        link
        5
        edit-2
        2 months ago

        At least the US gravy seals bring a lot of meat to the wave.

  • @PugJesus
    link
    English
    582 months ago

    I, for one, entirely support this move by Putin. In fact, I think our tax dollars should pay for a one-way trip and renunciation of citizenship for any American who wants to go!

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      292 months ago

      Tankies should be pushing and shoving to actually fight “US and NATO imperialism” instead of drive-by shitposting

      • AmidFuror
        link
        fedilink
        142 months ago

        Pretty sure they only post that to keep their jobs in St. Petersburg and stay away from the front.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    252 months ago

    Mmm. So, how far back are we talking when we’re saying “traditional” here?

    https://www.new-east-archive.org/features/show/9567/being-lgbtq-secret-histories-lgbtq-life-in-pre-revolutionary-russia

    Historian Dan Healey, whose 2001 book Homosexual Desire in Revolutionary Russia was translated into Russian in 2008, argues that despite several prohibitive laws sexuality was considerably less regulated in pre-revolutionary Russia than elsewhere in Europe at that time. Several researchers claim that historical accounts show that before the 18th century, Russian society held rather lenient views toward homosexuality, and that homophobia was at least in part “imported” from Europe by Peter the Great — along with European traditions in food, architecture and fashion. Some argue that it was Peter’s father, Tsar Alexis, who first started persecuting gay people, but the first law that made homosexuality illegal (initially only for men in the army and navy) was signed by Peter in 1716. For civilians homosexuality was made illegal in 1835 — again for men only. However, not only there few recorded cases of these laws were actually applied, but the rapid urbanisation that followed the abolition of serfdom in 1861 allowed for LGBTQ communities to form in the capital, St Petersburg, as well as Moscow and other large cities.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGBT_history_in_Russia

    In the wake of the October Revolution, the Bolshevik government decriminalized homosexuality. The Bolsheviks rewrote the constitution and “produced two Criminal Codes – in 1922 and 1926 – and an article prohibiting homosexual sex was left off both.”[1] The new Communist Party government removed the old laws regarding sexual relations, effectively legalising homosexual activity within Russia, although it remained illegal in other territories of the Soviet Union, and the homosexuals in Russia were still persecuted [ru] and sacked from their jobs.[1] Under Joseph Stalin, the Soviet Union recriminalized homosexuality in a decree signed in 1933.[2] The new Article 121, which punished “muzhelozhstvo” with imprisonment for up to five years, saw raids and arrests. Female homosexuals were sent to mental institutions. The decree was part of a broader campaign against “deviant” behavior and “Western degeneracy”.[1] Following Stalin’s death, there was a liberalisation of attitudes toward sexual issues in the Soviet Union, but homosexual acts remained illegal. Discrimination against LGBT individuals persisted in the Soviet era, and homosexuality was not officially declassified as a mental illness until 1999.[3]

  • @ladicius
    link
    15
    edit-2
    2 months ago

    They probably need foreign citizens to teach their spies to better infiltrate in those countries.

    I totally see Germany right wing lunatics and Hungarian dicktator suckers enjoy such insurrection.

  • RubberDuck
    link
    32 months ago

    Dual citizenship with the Russian one should be evaluated by all countries then.