Read it once—I didn’t understand. Read it twice—and understood that I am now “a number of individuals.”
An additional label to go with “a well-known criminal” and “this gentleman.”
We note the "advance work done on advance notification."
And where is anything about Medvedev? About the investigation? About Usmanov’s bribes, the palaces, and the vineyards?
If the mighty Kremlin, with an 84% approval rating, is keeping tabs on a protest by a bunch of pitiful marginals with no support, then maybe they should ask themselves: why do they even need to monitor this protest in the first place?
And the answer will become obvious to them right away — how to make sure that when I show up on Tverskaya Street at 2 p.m. on Sunday, I look like John Travolta in that famous GIF:
Issue a statement with the following points:
The Kremlin expresses concern over the public reaction caused by the investigation “He Is Not Dimon to You”;
- The investigation clearly contains facts that require verification in accordance with the procedure established by the Criminal Procedure Code;
- A criminal case is being opened;
The Kremlin supports the parliamentary inquiry proposed by deputies; it will be as public as possible.
And that’s it. At that moment, the ground falls out from under my feet. I can no longer continue my “provocation” and stop rocking the yacht *Fotiniya*.
And if that doesn’t happen, I’ll be waiting for anyone who isn’t satisfied with the complete absence of answers or comments anywhere on Tverskaya Street (just like Schrödinger’s cat) on the 26th at 2 p.m. Or in your own hometown, at one of the one hundred announced rallies.