The demand that Russian tourists should no longer be issued visas for the EU has hit a sore spot in Moscow.

This is shown by the reaction of former President Medvedev, who spat poison and bile, as so often before.

But this time not only the Ukrainian President Selenskyj aroused the anger of Putin's man for the rough, but also the Estonian head of government, who had also spoken out in favor of an entry ban: Kaja Kallas, following the "Ukrainian carpet clown", had even more "Nazi drivel ' given by himself.

For Moscow, freedom is a mistake

She had said: It is a privilege, but not a human right, to be able to visit European countries.

That was not an unfair statement to a state that thinks it has the right to invade European countries.

Moscow's Great-Russian imperialism also wells up from the "idiom" that Medvedev "reminded" Kallas of: Your freedom is not your merit, it is our failure.

He could not say more clearly what the Kremlin is about: not about alleged security interests, not about alleged minority rights in Donbass, not about the alleged liberation of Ukraine from the "Nazis" in Kyiv.

Moscow wants nothing more than the renewed subjugation of the peoples who threw off the Soviet yoke three decades ago - and who actually have the audacity not to regard their freedom as a historical mistake.