Pravada

     Two Cosmonauts were sent into deep space at an undisclosed date for a confidential mission during the time of the United States of Soviet Russia. For years the Cosmonauts were in the vacuum of space in deep hibernation, the sounds and various lights slowly creeping into their subconscious. As the days turned to weeks, then months, and then years, the lonely duo drifted in and out of the various galaxies of space. During a clear morning in Europe back on Earth, the vessel in which they had been drifting in was called back home. The ship was returned to it's home base and with that, the waking of the Cosmonauts.


     Adjusting to the modern age was difficult for the two men. Hibernation had created a shield for them against the fall of the Soviet Empire and the acceleration of modern technology. Their first brave move was to go out into the public and try to integrate with the modern world, a world that had changed rapidly since their departure. The two men have been wandering the various continents of Earth, searching for all of the information that they had missed during their absence. Information was found t from various sources, catching them up on movements, political actions, music, and science. They had begun to slowly learn of the new world and begin to assess the damage.


     Realization had taken hold of them as they stared back at what used to the the various soviet states of Eastern Europe. The conclusion was that they had fallen in love with the new technologies, but had grown a disdain for the prevalent Capitalism and the non-Soviet system as a whole. Working with a small amount of equipment, the Cosmonauts had decided that they would indoctrinate the new citizens of the world stage with the sounds that they had heard during their hibernation in space. They began to use the imagery of the Soviets that they had loved and known since birth. The duo decided that their representative name would be "Kosmodrome" and it would represent their Vanguard Party. A young comrade had asked the question of "what is to be done"? With wires and circuitry, Kosmodrome is formulating the futuristic manifesto in which the questions are answered.




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