Yes, because being respectful to someone's religious beliefs is equivalent to rape.
The purpose of this hyperbole is to highlight the silliness of responding "the state says it's illegal therefore it's crime", when that is clearly not how anybody conceives of criminality. It's the kind of argument exclusively used in response to situations where you want to use the opportunity of an oppressive law that happens to agree with your stance.
It is rude and could be deemed harassment to do something like this in a church when you quite obviously know it's not welcome. Churches are not, in fact, publicly owned, as far as I am aware, for instance.
It may be rude (he didn't so much as speak to anybody), it's definitely not harassment. You can't harass a church, you can only harass a person. You can harass many people at once, such as by running around an office building screaming racial obscenities at the employees, but you're not harassing the company. Harassment has an inherently personal and disruptive element that this clearly does not fulfill.
Five years for a crime of this nature is a bit much. A week or so might be appropriate to say 'hey seriously knock it off dickhead', or a fine or something.
Highlighting the ridiculous actions of the Russian state and church collaboration (the whole point was to prove nobody would actually object to him playing Pokemon Go in person, only after the fact) = being a dickhead, got it.
But if you are trying to say that criminality arises from morality, then we run into the issue of morality being highly subjective, and subjective criminal law is...unstable, to say the least.
Welcome to all criminal law? I also said it arises from pragmatic concerns, to account for the possible nonexistence of morality and more civil laws, but all matters related to human concerns are inherently subjective. Again, you are only thinking of the things you disagree with and dismissing the ones you do agree with. "Torturing criminals to death is wrong" is no more subjective than "letting your plants overwhelm your neighbor's yard is wrong". Subjectivity is not weakness.
Again, I refer to my bacon sandwich hypothetical. It's not the act itself that's criminal, but the intent behind it.
Intent does not matter in crime. It is at most a mitigating or aggravating factor. If I don't intend to kill you and only to wound you, but I shoot you with an assault rifle because I'm an idiot who doesn't know how deadly guns are, and you miraculously survive that, the charge is attempted murder. If you die, it's murder. The intention is irrelevant; the action is what matters.
Ruslan Sokolovsky deliberately set out to offend Russian Christians by his actions inside their place of worship.
Even if he did, so fucking what? Maybe they should suck it up. The whole point of this was to prove that the nature of their offense stems from a dreamland conception of sanctity that they can't even recognize unless he out and shows them a video of it being "violated" even when he was surrounded by other people at the time.
There's a time and place for certain acts, and the inside of a church is definitely different to other public places. If you can't show respect for other people's belief, don't go inside.
Respect of course meaning, "do what I say you must do".
Freedom of speech means freedom to be annoying. But if it's actually harassment, or trying to provoke a reaction, and you get one, you don't really get to whine about it.
It's pretty obvious he wanted to show that: (a) he enjoys catching pokemon and (b) he doesn't respect churches. He could have just made a Youtube video where he talks about how much he likes one set of fictional characters and dislikes another, but instead he went to the effort of going inside their house and deliberately thumbing his nose at them. That crosses the line between freedom of speech and setting out to deliberately offend a specific religious group.
In other words, neither of you think people should have freedom of speech. FoS is inherently about speech deemed offensive by others. That's literally the only thing it
can be about. Do you think this was codified in response to people being concerned that backing up the dominant forces of society or telling people what the powerful want them to hear would get them in trouble? In that case, every society to ever exist has freedom of speech. You're only protecting freedom of speech when you protect things you disagree with, or think are massively offensive, or whip people up into mobs demanding "reaction".
Otherwise, you're "protecting" something that needs no protection, because it is already approved of by society.
Thank god the legal precedent in America doesn't see criticism of religion that way, I'd spend my whole fucking life in prison for the things I've said on the internet alone.