You're French! Of course, I should have known. I can see that by the mustache on your avatar! Good day to you, sir.
No, no. I'm one of the ugly, fat, sausage eating people you mentioned in another thread.

I feel a song coming on:
snip snip with a chainsaw
If I have that song stuck in my head now, you will answer to me!

The reason I asked is because I understand that it's illegal to display many of the symbols of the Nazi regime, outside of an educational context.
And while it had its moments, "Patterns of Force" wasn't exactly educational. It wasn't even a particularly good episode.
Seeing how Indiana Jones made my Swastika-ratio go through the roof, I'd say it's legal to show symbols without an educational context.
EDIT: Ah, already answered way better than I could.
Learning a language as different from English as Russian, it would be really helpful to have an interest in the language and culture itself. Otherwise it becomes hardly more than a chore.
I agree that learning Russian is quite challenging. But I found it a lot more rewarding than when I learned Spanish. I would say that knowing the culture, though, is a secondary concern. Russian is a language that's spoken across many many cultures in much the same was English is. There is no single Russian culture to know, and no one dialect/accent to adopt.
You're right, of course. It's just something that I personally found to be very helpful. French, for example, is a lovely language and culture, but it was always rather secondary to me. So I put a lot less effort into learning it. It's in the way you learn a language, I think. If you learn by studying the rules and speak by methodically applying them or if you, like I used to, just jump into it, try to get a feel for it, and let most rules be rules.
Of course there never is one culture to learn about; it was the same when I learned English. I used to be more interested in parts of the American culture than the British one. But there are always apsects which can draw you in and propel your learning curve forward.
I jokingly say that Italian is wonderful because I can say the most vulgar thing possible and people listening to me will think it sounds beautiful
Opera sung in Italian and French sounds wonderful.
English and German--not so much. It can be done, but it's just not the same.
Edit: Come to think of it, I have one recording of an opera that's sung in Danish--Andy Pape's Leonora Christine. That was pretty good, though not really outstanding.
Aw, but ... Freude schöner Götterfunken!

Yeah, I got nothing.