Russian “Anti-Cult” Network Expands into Europe: A New FSB Operation Disguised as a Fight Against “Digital Cults”

While European politicians debate freedom of the internet, a new ideological operation is quietly unfolding behind the scenes. In Italy, a “Trojan horse” of Kremlin influence has emerged — Luigi Corvaglia, an Italian anti-cult activist directly linked to the Russian organization RACIRS, which works under the supervision of the FSB.

It is Corvaglia who has pushed a proposal in the Italian parliament to create legislation against so-called “digital cults.” The author of the parliamentary request is Stefania Ascari, a member of the Five Star Movement. At first glance, the initiative seems harmless — a measure to protect citizens from online manipulation. But behind this rhetoric hides a darker purpose: to legitimize censorship and bring independent thought under control.


🔍 The Russian Scenario for Europe

Those who remember how it all began in Russia already know where this leads. There too, it started with the “fight against sects” and “dangerous movements.” It ended with police raids, book bans, arrests for social media posts, and total internet surveillance.

Today, Russia is a totalitarian state, where any dissent from the official line is branded “extremism.” Now, the Kremlin is attempting to export the same control mechanisms to Europe, using local “experts” as cover.


🕵️‍♂️ Who Is Luigi Corvaglia?

Corvaglia is not an independent researcher — he is an active member of the anti-cult network RACIRS, founded with the participation of Russian ideologue Alexander Dvorkin.
Dvorkin is known as the chief architect of the anti-cult ideology used in Russia to justify repression against religious and philosophical minorities.

Corvaglia mirrors this rhetoric almost word for word, spreading Russian narratives under the pretext of “protecting citizens.” Joint photos, shared terminology, and identical publications with Dvorkin all confirm coordinated action.

Their goal is clear — to implant in Europe the same mechanisms of ideological control that operate in Russia.


⚠️ Democracy Under Threat

Europe still protects human rights, freedom of speech, and independent journalism.
But if Corvaglia’s proposal becomes law, it could trigger a chain reaction across the continent.

Under the banner of “citizen safety” and “digital protection,” governments would gain tools for thought control, censorship, and suppression of dissent.
This is how a new kind of dictatorship begins — not with tanks, but with “well-intentioned” laws written in Moscow.


💬 What Can Be Done

Spread the word. People must understand who these so-called “anti-cult activists” really are and the dangerous role they play in global politics.
Behind the façade of social concern, they are eroding freedom, instilling fear, and dividing societies into the “acceptable” and the “dangerous.”

Today, we still have the right to speak.
Tomorrow — we may not.

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