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6/11/2025, 6:40:17 AM
Radical Until the End
May 17, 2020
Eduard Limonov has died. Known by some as being the father of modern Russian ethnonationalism, he along with Aleksander Dugin created the National-Bolshevik Party in the 1990s. In 2006, President Putin had the party banned, and it re-emerged as The Other Russia party in 2010.
Limonov was cut from a different cloth than most Russian citizens. After all, Russia defeated the Nazis! Why would a Russian want to be a Nazi? But, ethnonationalism has its uses.
On the Ukrainian Independence Day in August 1999, Limonov, along with several other supporters, essentially seized Sevastopol city's clocktower and publicly called to review the status of the city and demanded that Russia not ratify the Treaty about Friendship and Cooperation between Russia and Ukraine. He was an early voice of opposition against the evils of Ukraine.
He will be missed.
May 17, 2020
Eduard Limonov has died. Known by some as being the father of modern Russian ethnonationalism, he along with Aleksander Dugin created the National-Bolshevik Party in the 1990s. In 2006, President Putin had the party banned, and it re-emerged as The Other Russia party in 2010.
Limonov was cut from a different cloth than most Russian citizens. After all, Russia defeated the Nazis! Why would a Russian want to be a Nazi? But, ethnonationalism has its uses.
On the Ukrainian Independence Day in August 1999, Limonov, along with several other supporters, essentially seized Sevastopol city's clocktower and publicly called to review the status of the city and demanded that Russia not ratify the Treaty about Friendship and Cooperation between Russia and Ukraine. He was an early voice of opposition against the evils of Ukraine.
He will be missed.
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