Boris Malagurski

Boris Malagurski (Serbian Cyrillic: Борис Малагурски; born 1988) is a Serbian ethnic ultranationalist, right-wing extremist and conspiracy theorist.

Some dare call it
Conspiracy
What THEY don't want
you to know!
Sheeple wakers
v - t - e
The colorful pseudoscience
Racialism
Hating thy neighbour
Divide and conquer
Dog-whistlers
v - t - e

He is firmly in the pro-Milosevic camp, and is somewhat notable for making nationalist homemade videos in which he portrays the Serbs as the victims of the wars they started, claims there was a "globalist" conspiracy against Serbia, denies Serbian war crimes, and praises Milosevic as well as various far-right Serbian nationalist figures.

He spent some time in Canada and likes to describe himself as "Serbian-Canadian," although he is now back in Serbia. He has been described as "the Serbian-Canadian Tom Metzger." He also frequently writes conspiracy theorist pieces for the well-known crank website Globalresearch.

Wikipuffery

Malagurski was once an active Wikipedia editor, until he was more or less permanently banned in 2007,[1] and has written autobiographies of himself in several languages.[2] An ardent self-promoter, he is notable for claiming he was the "Winner, Silver Palm Award, 2009," when in reality, he was one of 14 silver winners in the category "student films", and one of 76 winners overall of said award (after 13 other students had been awarded their Golden Palms) at an obscure film festival in Mexico.

Criticism of his film travesty

In an interview with the magazine Ny Tid, Serbian film critic Vladan Petković describes Malagurski’s film "The Weight of Chains" as "pro-Serbian conspiracy theorist propaganda." According to the interview, "the film is promoted as having been made in Michael Moore’s style, but it totally lacks Moore’s characteristic qualities. Instead Malagurski interviews journalists, politicians, ex-ambassadors and historians, who all promote the same one-sided story of Serbia as a victim of western capitalist imperialism." Petković describes Malagurski’s earlier film "Kosovo can you imagine?" as "even more extreme, horribly made and with absurd explanations of the Kosovo conflict." According to Petković, Malagurski "belongs to the nationalist oriented part of the Serbian diaspora in Toronto, who tend to have very one-sided views on the conflict."[3]

gollark: v4, generally.
gollark: Your requirements.
gollark: Depends.
gollark: Oh. Do you want v4 websocket protocol specs, the HTTP interface, or the legacy one?
gollark: It... is obviously websocket-based? And I added a HTTP fallback.

References

  1. Block log of Bormalagurski
  2. Boris Malagurski
  3. Nils Gjerstad. "Med skulderen til veggen." Ny Tid, 20 May 2011, pp. 48–49.
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