Stylist Vlad Lisovets on the ban on “LGBT propaganda”: “We must be distracted from rising prices and living standards”
Vlad Lisovets
Stylist Vlad Lisovets posted a post on Instagram* where he talks about a new law banning “LGBT propaganda” and the rejection of family values. Lisovets proposed to supplement the law and encourage “vulgarity, rudeness, bad taste, unusually low behavior for a traditional person, spiritual poverty (going to church does not save everyone from anger), and other fundamental manifestations in the behavior of a modern person.”
– summed up Lisovets.
Recently, a meeting was held in the State Duma where a law banning the propaganda of LGBT relations and the denial of traditional values was discussed. The bill was introduced in July by a group of deputies of the Communist Party of the Russian Federation, Just Russia – Truth and the Fatherland. According to State Duma Chairman Vyacheslav Volodin, the purpose of the new law is “to protect citizens, protect rights, protect against propaganda”. An important difference from the law currently in force in the Russian Federation is that it will affect not only minors, but all citizens, regardless of age.
Alexander Khinshtein, deputy of the United Russian State Duma, called the Peppa Pig cartoon an example of “LGBT propaganda”, in which in one of the episodes a polar bear paints a portrait of two mothers and their family. According to him, the restriction will apply to the internet, media, books, audiovisual services, cinema and advertising. Russian publishers have already expressed their fears that many classic works will fall out of favor due to the new law, because, according to him, even betrayal of Anna Karenina can be considered a violation of the principle of family values. Lawmakers insist that this will not affect the classics, because the main thing is not to create a “positive image” of LGBT relations and unconventional values. For example, Khinshtein believes that the ban will not affect Vladimir Nabokov’s novel Lolita, because “not a single reasonable person who read the movie and watched the book would want to repeat the fate of their heroine.”
– wrote the telegram channel “Antiglanets”.
As for the penalty for violating the law, fines for individuals will amount to 800 thousand rubles, and for legal entities – up to 10 million. The bill will be considered on October 27.
*Instagram is owned by Meta, a recognized extremist organization in the Russian Federation.
Source: Spletnik

Mary Crossley is an author at “The Fashion Vibes”. She is a seasoned journalist who is dedicated to delivering the latest news to her readers. With a keen sense of what’s important, Mary covers a wide range of topics, from politics to lifestyle and everything in between.