Sunday, December 22, 2013

One steaming cold siberian agreement



"And this is regarding Amnesty?," thought Jane drinking the hot black morning coffee..."I feel cold right now." Pussy Riot members Nadya, 24, and Maria, 25, will be freed from prison three months before their scheduled release? wow. This coffee creamer must be bad because I feel sick too. Why not just let this ridiculous sentence run its course based on punk PRINCIPLE alone. Principle being: Screw em. The two women and fellow band member Yekaterina were arrested for performing Mother of God Drive Putin Away from Moscow's Christ the Saviour Cathedral on Feb. 21, 2012. 

Their crime?: "hooliganism motivated by religious (i.e. government oppression) hatred or hostility." Hip, Hop, Hurray.
While Samutsevich successfully appealed her sentence, the other two artists remained, despite global cries for their release. "burp." Earlier this week, a new Russian amnesty law was passed (hmmmm, and Putin signs this weeks before his Winter Games at Sochi. lol. No, Jane does not see any coincidence there you dummy). According to The Associated Press, prisoners "who haven't committed violent crimes, first-time offenders, minors and women with small children" are granted amnesty from their imprisonment. 

During their time, Alekhina went on a hunger strike and Tolokonnikova wrote an open letter, protesting the treatment of prisoners. Just days after that letter was posted, she disappeared for 21 days during a prison transfer, showing up in a Siberian prison hospital. 

Again, let the sentence run its course, and then start saving Russian rubles for the next pack of colored stink bombs. Timing is everything. And that's one thing Putin does and knows well. And so does Jane. bye.