From KPBS:
“FRONTLINE: Putin's War at
Home”
(Russian police officers stand
guard during an unsanctioned rally, after opposition activists called for
street protests against the mobilization of reservists ordered by President
Vladimir Putin, in Moscow, Russia Sept. 21, 2022.)
In the months since Vladimir
Putin’s invasion of Ukraine began, the Russian president has cracked down on
internal dissent, signing measures that threaten long jail sentences for
Russians who oppose the war or independently report on it. Drawing on
remarkable footage from inside the country, a new FRONTLINE documentary,
"Putin’s War at Home", tells the inside stories of Russian
journalists and activists who are refusing to stay silent in the face of
Putin’s crackdown. “The regime has become much more authoritarian. I can be
sent to jail for just using the word ‘war,’” Vasiliy Kolotilov, a Russian
journalist who for months risked his freedom working with FRONTLINE to
chronicle the lives of Russians who oppose the war in Ukraine, says in the
documentary. Kolotilov says he is not alone: “The Russian government wants
people to think that all Russians are supporting the war. It’s not true.”
Directed by award-winning
filmmaker Gesbeen Mohammad, "Putin’s War at Home" shows how a
minority of Russian citizens are vocally protesting the Kremlin’s war effort
despite the threat of arrest and imprisonment — from a young woman whose
TikToks have gone viral internationally, to a university professor whose
parents live in Ukraine, to an artist facing up to 10 years imprisonment for
posting anti-war stickers in a grocery store. The documentary also shows how
independent reporters in Russia have continued to seek the truth about the war
— including its true death toll among the country’s soldiers. Russia has
declared the casualties list a state secret. “Putin’s Russia is based on fear,”
one journalist says in the documentary, adding that, “we decided to continue
without censorship, whatever the cost.”
As the war in Ukraine approaches
its ninth month and evidence of potential war crimes there continues to mount,
Putin’s War at Home is a powerful look at the Russian leader’s stifling of
domestic criticism — and the people in his country who are speaking out anyway.
^ Not every Russian is helping
Putin in Ukraine. A few are standing up against him, his War in Ukraine and the
millions of brainwashed Russians that support his Ethnic Cleansing.
These few are the only saving
grace Russia has to ever hope to rejoin the Civilized World once Ukraine
defeats them and Putin's Dictatorship falls.
I support THESE brave Russians.
Note: Wearing Blue and Yellow or
even saying the word "War" lands you 15 years in a Russian Forced
Labor Penal Colony
You watch the whole show at the
following link:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GorZOdylYbw
^
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