Trubnikov, Dmitry

96
Trubnikov, Dmitry
Year of birth: 2004 Postal code: 00200

Mikään ei muutu, jos kukaan ei suutu

Introduction

I’m 17-year-old Dmitry Trubnikov. Young people know me from TikTok.

I’m a nationalist patriot. A liberal and democrat in favour of the right to vote.

Author | Political social media influencer | Expert in political confrontation | Expert in table tennis equipment | Cryptocurrency investor

Hobbies:Table tennis, politics and social media

Answers to the election machine

Schools should have more days during which they only serve vegetarian food.

Humans are omnivores who need both meat and vegetables. The food offered at schools often does not taste good because of an effort to make the food ‘varied’. For example, the food may be seasoned with unusual spices, or the school may serve special food ‘to broaden the pupils’ eating habits’. This equation does not work, as the budget for school food is very limited. It should be spent on ensuring the provision of tasty and edible food.

 

Schools should focus on grouping more extensively than now.

The grouping of pupils is a very good thing. It should be focused on. It is important for the development of pupils’ social skills, a positive class community and non-discrimination. A good class community prevents and deters malicious bullying.

 

Distance learning needs to be established as a permanent learning method in addition to contact teaching.

Distance learning is not needed now, and it never was. Those in power should apologise to every young person whose study rhythm was undermined by distance learning and all other craziness carried out in the name of coronavirus hysteria, such as hybrid teaching, mask mandates, hand sanitisers, safe distances and half-mandatory COVID-19 vaccinations.

 

The competitiveness of young people’s sports activities should be reduced.

Competition creates a juxtaposition between players and forces them to compete with each other. We are promised that everyone will feel good once the competition is eliminated, but no one wins. Why are matters like this even addressed? This feels like an attempt to get closer to communist values.

 

The City of Helsinki should primarily offer summer jobs to those young people who do not yet have work experience.

It is not possible to guarantee something that does not exist (jobs). The City should build, fix or produce something. The aim is to turn young people into assistants in this type of work that has a low attraction rate. Positions would remain vacant in this type of work, but they would be guaranteed for young people who are fine with any type of work, as the aim is for such positions to be left over.

 

The public spaces in Helsinki should maintain the division between women’s and men’s toilets.

No. We should fight against red-green identity politics.
Many girls avoid drinking anything during the school day, so that they can wait until they get home to use the toilet. This has happened in the United Kingdom. There, parents have begun to demand that separate toilets be provided for both genders. This demand is justified.

 

Helsinki should start offering free public transport to those under 18.

Public transport should absolutely be free for all Helsinki residents when it comes to trams, buses, trains and underground trains, as last year Helsinki had a budget surplus of more than EUR 0.5 billion. Helsinki Region Transport should adopt e-scooters that are subject to a fee and travel at a speed of 30 km/h.

 

It would be better if there were no e-scooters in Helsinki.

E-scooters are one of the most important technological innovations and changes of the decade. E-scooters that are subject to a fee should be adopted in public transport, and their speed should be twice as high as the e-scooters currently in use.

 

For a member of the Youth Council, pushing their own goals through is a more important quality than agreeing on compromises.

The Youth Council should seek to push through as many reforms beneficial to young people as possible in order to strengthen local democracy, because power belongs to the people.

 

On which topics would you like the Youth Council to focus, in particular? Select the three that are the most important to you.

Young people’s influencing opportunities; Summer jobs; Safety

Maintaining safety, lawfulness and order in Helsinki.

The benefit of young Finns.

Impartial and life-long learning at schools.