Is there a news story we are actually allowed to believe? If we saw footage or genocides in Rwanda, Darfur, or Syria, would we believe them or should we think the footage is doctored with CGI? At what point would we accept a news story as valid or do you think it's a 100% conspiracy to lie to all of us? There are obviously bad newsreporters, lousy and biased stories we hear, and agendas to be had, but are we to be so paranoid that we can't trust anything the news has to say ever?
 
Rus, what does your not having any American friends and being so deeply isolated from all things American have to do with the rest of the post? That part eluded me...
I was reading about it online and according to the Kiev Post:
Moscow - Most Russians (79%) are more or less aware of the punk prayer performed by the [bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse] Riot band at Christ the Savior Cathedral in February 2012, and more than a third of them believe that the band members broke the moral rules, sociologists from the Levada Center told Interfax.
Almost half of respondents (53%) believe that citizens have the right to public protest against the Russian Orthodox Church's position on major social issues and criticize it but not in churches, according to the findings of a poll conducted among 1,600 people on July 20-23.
More than a third of respondents (38%) said that by staging the anti-Putin performance at Christ the Savior Cathedral, the [bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse] Riot members rather violated the public moral rules than insulted the president (9%).
	
		
	
	
		
		
			Dear Mr Schmidt, (in itself an assumption)
How on earth do you think you know what the Russian people are divided over? Is it because the media told you? The same media that constantly slants reporting against faith in general?
		
		
	 
The Moscow Times:
According to the results of a poll released Friday by the independent Levada Center, 50 percent of Muscovites oppose criminal prosecution of the members of [bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse][bless and do not curse] Riot.
In a reminder of how the case has polarized society, a sanctioned rally Sunday that was billed as a defense of the chuch attracted hundreds of people, many holding icons and waving the nationalist tricolor. Two young women held a sign that said "Blasphemers should go to jail!" 
Friday's decision was met with denouncements and lamentations from the opposition, which has made vehement calls for the women to be released, calling them political prisoners.
"This goes beyond blatant lawlessness. It's sadism. They're behaving like cannibals
The same poll (the 50% Levada Center poll) was cited in the London Times, etc. 
Polls are subject to error and aren't flawless, but why should we not believe all polls and why isn't this at least a fairly reasonable position to say that, based on this particular poll, the country is divided in half more or less on this issue? 
I don't think it's wise to believe everything one hears, but at the same time I also don't think it's reasonable to discount or sluff off any and every report the media makes either. 
 
VTSIOM/Levada is widely-respected in polling and methodologies they employ in tapping into how the public feels, reacts, and thinks on different topics. Basically, they are accepted and liked by not only most news agencies across the world, but they also are used and watched with respect by the Russian government itself.  And this poll they conducted backs up with the poster said about divisions.  
 
I guess in the end my point is that, if one employs the paranoid "I don't trust anyone" approach, then no discussion, no debate, no conversation can really ever take place. Because in science discussions "Scientists are all liars and bums with agendas!" will inevitably kick in. With news, "all newsmen are atheists and liars and can't be trusted!" will be the argument.  "I don't trust education!" and "I don't trust generals" and "I don't trust museum curators" will always be the argument. It's impossible to have a discussion with that approach. 
 
My best friend never trusts any news unless it's filtered by Rush Limbaugh. My other buddy at work doesn't trust news unless it's on liberal MSNBC.  I try to listen to both and others, look at the full context without soundbytes, take all polls into consideration and take a general average of all, trying to be holistic.