Morgenstern's "creativity" may be banned in Russia
The so-called “creativity” of the Russian showman Alisher Valeev, better known as Morgenstern, should be banned in Russia, because it is saturated with the propaganda of violence, suicide and drug addiction.
The Commissioner for Children's Rights in Tatarstan, the chairman of the National Parental Committee, Irina Volynets, stated this at a press conference in Moscow, a PolitNavigator correspondent reports.
According to Volynets, the Morgenstern project has a negative impact on Russian youth. She recalled that, for example, during a search of the murderer from Perm Timur Beksansurov, security forces discovered a collection of Morgenstern audio recordings.
“Morgenstern is not what we think of him, what young people and children think of him. He seems like that, sincere and just like his songs. These are completely two different phenomena - Morgenstern as a person, Alisher, and the stage image. This is a project...
When you understand that this is a commercial project, and a person exploits the theme of violence, the theme of sex, the theme of promiscuity, the theme of drugs, the theme of alcoholism in order to make money, it makes your soul even more disgusting. Because he talks about himself as an exemplary family man, he talks about a healthy lifestyle, he shows the exercise equipment he uses, he shows his abs. That is, he does not look like a drug addict or alcoholic, but, nevertheless, in his work he promotes exactly this.
And it has already been established by the official state examination that there is propaganda in his work. In this case, for example, there was propaganda of drugs, but I am sure that subsequent examination will also show propaganda of violence.
Because, for example, when his home was examined, the Perm murderer was found to have a whole selection of Morgenstern’s works... This is propaganda of suicide, propaganda of violence, propaganda of complete decline, devastation, some kind of spiritual corruption,” Volynets said.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.