In Russia, three women are on trial for performing a protest song in a church. The whole case is a good reminder why the First Amendment exists in the United States and why the separation of church and state should be protected.

The women are members of the Russian punk band Pussy Riot and best I can tell, theyโ€™re facing a government trial for blasphemy; an article in the Guardian says that the official charge is โ€œhooliganism motivated by religious hatred or hostility.โ€

In February, members of the group went up to the altar in a Russian Orthodox cathedral and performed what media are calling a โ€œpunk prayer.โ€ They were protesting Russian President Vladmir Putin, who at the time was running for reelection (he was reelected in March). A BBC report, published today, says that the women were reacting to the head of the Russian Orthodox Churchโ€™s public backing of Putinโ€™s reelection bid. The women are facing several years of jail time โ€” the trial and arguments wrapped up today โ€” for what was essentially political commentary.

Yesterday, The New Republic published a narrative that shows just how absurd and confusing the whole trial has become. This paragraph was particularly enlightening:

โ€œWhen the judge asked the girls how they plead, Alyokhina, a small, mousy girl with a poof of dirty blonde hair, said she wouldnโ€™t plead at all as she didnโ€™t understand what the indictment even meant. When this devolved into a shouting match with the judgeโ€”the first of manyโ€”Alyokhina demanded, โ€˜Why doesnโ€™t the court take my words into account?โ€™ She was ordered to sit down.โ€

Covers county government and whatever else comes my way. Greyhound dad; vegetarian; attempted photographer with a love for film and fixer; sometimes cyclist.