Yesterday I was walking down the hallway to the studio when I saw a strange guy in a mask coming toward me. Then another one. Then about 20 more like him.

So, it’s all clear: fear of Smart Voting has sent these guys into a mild panic.

Think I’m exaggerating? Take a look at this:

These are hanging on every pole in Metrogorodok, Northern Izmailovo, and Golyanovo in Moscow. And there’s one in every mailbox too.

This is a fake Smart Voting leaflet put out by Metelsky, the leader of United Russia in Moscow. He won the last election by a huge margin, but now he’s on the verge of collapse (as shown by the mayor’s office polling) and is trying to siphon off some of Smart Voting’s support from the real candidate, Sergei Savostyanov, to a spoiler candidate from Communists of Russia.

That’s exactly why it’s so important to sign up for Smart Voting. Not only will you be guaranteed to get the right name, you’ll also receive a leaflet you can put up in your apartment building entrance.

Not convinced? Look at this:

These are United Russia people in St. Petersburg (Yekateringofsky municipal district) making fake Smart Voting boards with their own names on them so they can beat our team.

That’s exactly why yesterday little men in balaclavas disrupted my broadcast (it gets a lot of views; it’s an important tool). They stole ABSOLUTELY EVERYTHING connected to video production and streaming.

Cameras, lighting, sound. Broadcast backdrops and graphics.

They even seized the teleprompters, for God’s sake, as part of the “mass riots” case. Cables too. They just smashed the uninterruptible power supply.

At the observer training center, they seized 2,000 observer assignment forms. It’s obvious why: if they start losing on Sunday, they’ll rig the vote. Observers would get in the way.

They seized a newly delivered clothing collection made for the ACF (Anti-Corruption Foundation) by my brother Oleg.

More than anything, they were looking for servers and anything like that. It’s critically important for them to shut down Smart Voting. It’s critically important for them to stop us from doing our information work. Just look at yesterday’s Biryukov video: 1.5 million views in less than a day.

You can help us by going here, but that’s not what I want to talk about right now.

I want to talk about a little revenge. I wanted to launch this on the show yesterday, but it didn’t work out, so I’m asking all of you to help. Let’s use the power of the internet.

Someone has to pay for yesterday’s searches and thefts, right? We’ll make every one of them pay if we bring more people to Smart Voting. Make one final push.

But of course, you want someone specific to be punished. Let it be Beglov.

He’s disgusting. He has a terrible approval rating. They are openly preparing to rig the vote for him. He’s a thief and a bribe-taker. We’ve established this reliably, and here I explain how in one minute.

And Beglov isn’t the only thief — his deputy, Sovershayeva, is the same kind of thief. Sobol talks about that here.

Let’s just make sure all of St. Petersburg sees this before voting day. It’s simple and clear. No official extracts or paperwork needed. Any pensioner will understand it.

Here is the video on Facebook. (And here is Lyubov Sobol’s video about Sovershayeva).

Here is the video on VK. (And here is Lyubov Sobol’s video about Sovershayeva).

Here it is on Odnoklassniki.

Here it is on Twitter. (And here is Lyubov Sobol’s video about Sovershayeva)

Here it is on the Telegram channel.

Here you can simply download the file itself, and that may be the most important thing of all. I really want this 58-second clip to be shared from person to person on WhatsApp. Please download it and send it to a few people you know. Write exactly this: we’re testing the power of the internet, and we want the whole city to find out about Beglov’s 10 million ruble watch (about US$100,000). Watch it and pass it on. Vote for anyone but Beglov. Smart Voting.

That’s it — let’s give it a try.

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