February is for the 2005-07 Sabres

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February is for the 2005-07 Sabres
“Who else?! Who else?!”
May 4, 2007 - Game 4 of the ECSF v. The NY Rangers
Chris Drury ties it with 7.7 seconds left in the 3rd.
Max Afinogenov wins it in OT.
In closing a vital safety valve for Russia’s young reformists, the regime is endangering its own future, says historian Greg Afinogenov
On Wednesday 9 June, the Moscow city court issued a decision designating a range of organisations associated with Alexei Navalny – including the most important, the Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK) – as extremist. By Russian law, this equates them with Isis, making it illegal to collect money, recruit members, disseminate information, or participate in elections on Russian soil. The court endorsed the state prosecutor’s argument that Navalny’s supporters were planning to destabilise Russia in a “colour revolution scenario,” using “liberal slogans” as cover for their nefarious plans. In terms of its effects, it may be the most serious – and shortsighted – attack on the Russian opposition so far. While foreign commentators tend to focus on Navalny himself, the ramifications of the decision extend much further. The popular movement Navalny has come to represent is the most ideologically committed to peaceful, nonviolent political change that Russia has ever seen. It has made millions of people, many of them young, into civic activists working to repair – rather than overthrow – the post-Soviet state. And, most importantly from the regime’s perspective, it has effectively no chance of ever taking power using its chosen means. Putin is far more entrenched and possesses a greater degree of legitimacy than other post-Soviet rulers. In closing a vital safety valve for what is otherwise a closed system, it is endangering its own future. To understand why, it is important to keep in mind that the Russian regime extends far beyond Putin, just as the opposition is more than just Navalny. FBK activists have often focused their fire on the local and regional representatives of the ruling United Russia party (which is technically separate from Putin’s presidency), in part because this is the arena in which the system is most vulnerable. But by outlawing its challengers, Putin has identified himself even further with United Russia – a party that is significantly more unpopular than the president himself. Its corruption, deployment of “administrative resources” to manipulate elections, and inability to address the country’s underlying social and economic problems are well known even to people who oppose Navalny. According to a February poll, only 27% of Russians are ready to vote for United Russia in the forthcoming parliamentary elections; other polls suggest that this number has since dropped even further.
[…] The liberal opposition was, paradoxically, the regime’s best shot at gradual renewal. Its use of tactical voting and other attempts to game the system to advance reformist candidates was sometimes effective, but in the long run, without changes at the top, such improvements would be unlikely to yield comprehensive transformation. Instead, their piecemeal successes could be co-opted by the regime. The point is that liberal activists take the Russian constitutional order far more seriously than United Russia itself takes it. Though they know better than anyone that its promises are usually honoured in the breach, they are committed to making it work, unlike United Russia’s corrupt and self-dealing functionaries.
It is hard to say whether the decision to brand Russian liberals as extremists will lead them to go underground or embrace more radical forms of extra-parliamentary politics. But it will probably make future regime opponents more sceptical of both gradual change and the constitutional norms that make it possible. By breaking the promises it once made to civil society, the regime has ensured that future dissent will be more implacable and less controllable than it is now. That may mean an opening for the radical left, but it is more likely that hardline nationalism – catalysed by issues such as migration – will be a more appealing alternative. Navalny himself once flirted with these ideas, but gradually evolved into a liberal social democrat; his successors may make the opposite journey.
History suggests that moments of generational change in the political class – as when the Brezhnev generation gave way to a wave of younger leaders in the mid-1980s – pose particular challenges for dysfunctional systems. That moment in Russia is a few decades away, since Putin is not yet 70 and other leaders are in their 50s. But it will come eventually, and when it does the accumulated weight of the choices the regime has made will count for much.
Ice hockey game KHL teams Vityaz vs Torpedo
I FOUND ALL OF THESE PICTURES OF SABRES PLAYERS AT RYAN MILLER'S CHARITY THING AND I JUST CAN'T STOP LAUGHING