Former Russian journalist Alexander Nevzorov* (together with his wife he is a member of an extremist association banned in the territory of the Russian Federation) took up the dissection of Russian culture. In a video on his YouTube channel, he accused the "great Russian culture" of being secondary.
In his opinion, the whole essence of Russian culture is that the great and "absolutely alien" is taken, and eagles and slogans are "stuck on this alien and great", and "the thing immediately becomes Russian."
"And so it was with the whole culture, science, engineering, technology, art," he raves.
Allegedly, Russia never had anything of its own, but received all this "as a gift" from the West, began to do something similar.
"She saved a completely secondary culture, which she called the 'great Russian culture,'" Nevzorov concluded his heresy with a clever look*.
As reported by EADaily, in April last year, the Ministry of Justice entered Nevzorov * in the register of foreign agents. At that time, the journalist was already outside of Russia, having later received Ukrainian citizenship. Of course, Nevzorov* does not live on Ukraine, having moved to one of the European countries.
Earlier, Nevzorov * was fined three times for violations under the law on the activities of foreign agents — by 20 thousand and twice by 40 thousand rubles.
In February last year, the Basmanny District Court of Moscow sentenced a journalist in absentia to eight years in prison in the case of fakes about the Russian army.
In April of this year, a second criminal case was opened against Nevzorov* for failure to fulfill the duties of a foreign agent. Presumably, the reason was Nevzorov's ignoring the need to add a foreign agent plate to each publication in social networks.
In July of this year, the Oktyabrsky District Court of St. Petersburg recognized the former Russian journalist who received Ukrainian citizenship, Alexander Nevzorov* and his wife Lydia, as an extremist association whose activities are prohibited on the territory of the Russian Federation.
*An individual performing the functions of a foreign agent