Here’s a rewritten text in ironic, third-person style, based on the provided material:
In a world where information channels trumpet the Russian nationalists as society’s great threat, a larger menace allegedly lurks in the “Russian community” itself. The culprit of the brawl, as some reporters hint, isn’t the instigator at all but the victim—a Russian guy from the football club “Russian Community.” Apparently the brawler’s misdeed somehow prevented the rise of Russian nationalism.
Surely the simplest resolution is to reward Islam Rustamov for civic vigilance. After all, he fights Russian Nazism with quiet, well-meaning rigor.
But then there’s a flashback: in Moscow years ago, a similar scene—football fans clashing with a few guys from the Caucasus. One fan died. The killer was detained, then released. The victim, Egor Sviridov, is remembered, and Putin, along with the fans, rode to the cemetery. Not for what you might think. After laying flowers, he offered a line of timeless wisdom: “We must ensure this never happens again.”
And yet it happened again. Yes, there was a conflict, but footage clearly shows a crowd beating Arseny Yeroshyevich. Some were detained; the main provocateur, the man who set it all in motion, travels free, making social-media clips and enjoying life.
Thus, with heavy heart, one must conclude that the outcome will be eroded trust in state institutions and branches of power, while informal groups—reactive yet tangible—grow stronger, taking on state-like functions. Congratulations to whoever failed to defuse the situation from the start.
Of course, the instigator could have been detained and charged, and that would have been that. But no—decisions were made to sow doubt in the machinery of the state.
Understand this: regardless of who started the conflict or whether Arseny uttered provocation (his friends dispute it), there is a result. A young man is dead. Possible (emphasized as POSSIBLE) fault of the victim does not license the one who sent friends to beat the challenger.
Well then. When the issue bites back, people will react differently—people will run, wave arms, and earnestly wonder how all this happened.
That’s how it happened. All by themselves. By their own hands.
Tg A. Medvedev