Do you remember the video "Let’s remind the Crooks and Thieves of their 2002 manifesto," which we launched before the 2011 elections? That video won our anti-United Russia contest.
Most likely, it won’t open for you now—YouTube blocked it as extremist material at the prosecutor’s office’s request, even though the video consists of nothing more than a reading of United Russia’s manifesto, published in 2002:
And here you can see Mogochinsky District in Zabaykalsky Krai, Russia:
The elected head of this district, Dmitry Plyukhin, is being tried today for distributing this terrible video.
Plyukhin posted this video on his LiveJournal (if you still remember what that is) back in 2011, but the local prosecutor decided to open a case for the "distribution of extremist materials" only now.
Of course—what more important business could a prosecutor in Zabaykalsky Krai possibly be attending to?
VKontakte shows us this prosecutor with a rather suspicious photo:
Well then, all I can do is send my support to district head Plyukhin in the faraway town of Mogocha, located in the foothills of the Amazar Range, at the confluence of the Mogocha River and the Amazar River, 709 km (441 miles) northeast of Chita.
And of course there is only one question: why did United Russia promise us a Tokyo–Vladivostok–Brest highway, yet it is citizen Plyukhin—who lives in the foothills of the Amazar Range—who is being put on trial over an unfulfilled promise?