"Sovki" are a gang of bastards who have
broken out of the cage of the comprachicos
Passerby.
These are recordings of three telephone conversations with former Soviet dissidents, Marina and Oleg Grishin. The records were made by me on February 19 and 20, 2014. The reason for recording the conversations was my distrust of the Grishins. I wouldn't call them, but I just had no one to turn to.
A few days before this call, having returned from the Kiev Maidan and realizing that I was completely alone, and this Maidan itself was saturated with agents, like rotten stuff with fly larvae, I decided to call the Grishins again and ask them for help...
The first time I turned to the Grishins for help in breaking through the information blockade was in the fall of 2009. I considered them decent people, besides, victims of the KGB and understanding what it is. This, the last circumstance, gave me confidence that the Grishins would not play any games with me, because there are moments in life when games become inappropriate.
Then, in 2009, in the first conversation, Marina Grishina was very friendly and immediately told me the phrase: “Oh, so you need to publish,” but a day later, in the second conversation, a dramatic change took place with Marina Grishina. She had already forgotten about “publishing”, she just didn’t talk about it anymore, but instead told me that she and her husband, Oleg, were leaving on a cruise and that I would call her in a month. At first, I did not record conversations with the Grishins, due to my deep conviction that only the "office" can record the conversations of dissidents, but then, feeling false, I nevertheless began to take notes and do not regret it. In general, after a month and a half, I got through to them again, but Oleg Grishin told me a heartbreaking story that supposedly his old computer had a broken mouse and they gave this computer for repair to some very, very talented, but for a very, very busy person and the repair of the mouse will last a month, and during this month they will not be able to receive e-mail.
In general, after three or four months of such communication with the Grishins, I simply stopped calling them.
I didn't understand anything back then.
Long ago, in another life, around 1988, my aunt, Natalya Mednick, told me a story about Marina and Oleg Grishins, Kievan intellectuals who had been persecuted by the KGB for many years, in connection with the case of Irina Ratushinskaya.
My aunt told me how, after the arrest of Irina Ratushinskaya and interrogation in the KGB, Ratushinskaya's husband, Igor, straight from the KGB, came to the Grishins and on the stairwell, in front of the door of their apartment, made a terrible scandal, began to pour curses on them and claim that supposedly , it is they - the Grishins, who "surrendered" Ratushinskaya. How immediately, after Igor left, immediately, the KGB rushed to the Grishins, as if they, the Grishins, without opening the door to the KGB officers, called the police, and while the policemen and the KGB men figured out which of them had the right to enter the Grishins' apartment, Marina and Oleg burned, in an enameled basin, samizdat, "Posev" and Galich's tape recordings, and how then, this silent ashes, was the basis for the subsequent persecution of the Grishins for seven years. How Oleg Grishin, candidate of chemical sciences, worked as a fireman in a boiler room ...
At that time, my attitude to communist values was already nothing. I was twice a member of the Komsomol, because, the first time, from the Komsomol, I expelled myself, and the second time, to join this organization, I was “persuaded” by the chief engineer of the Dnepropetrovsk Radio Plant, A.S. Pinchuk. He simply refused to hire me, without a Komsomol card. It was a period of my life when such names as Galich, Shalamov and Avtorkhanov changed my consciousness, or rather, shaped it. I had a brother, Peter, and he was the source of books and knowledge. Here.
In general, then, in 1988, I "grabbed" this story told by my aunt, "with a bang" and some creative moments of this story, subsequently, cost me a lot of gray hair.
Now, many years later, based only on my own life experience, I can say that this story, told to me by my aunt, does not withstand any criticism.
First, the militia is the executive power, and the KGB is the secret, political police. The story that someone could call the police in order to delay the entry of the KGB into their apartment is a cover story for agents, designed for naive and life-experienced people.
Secondly, with a 100% probability, shortly before the arrest of Ratushinskaya, the KGB officers were in her apartment, in her absence, they carried out an unofficial search there and knew for sure whether there was something they were interested in and where it was. The Grishins, as informants, were not needed by the KGB for the arrest of Ratushinskaya. And the same thing that happened to Ratushinskaya would have happened to the Grishins themselves, if they really were dissidents. They would not have had time to burn anything, because the KGB officers would know exactly where and what they have, and would not ring the bell at their door, but would simply break in, ready, that's all.
What I will now write below is my personal point of view, my conclusion based on my own life experience.
I believe that the Grishins and the KGB staged a performance, which the Grishins later told my aunt about, and what happened in the Grishins' apartment was a staged action, not a search. I believe that this was necessary in order to legalize the Grishins in the United States in a few years. I consider the Grishins to be KGB agents, whose real role, in the Ratushinskaya case, is provocateurs, who were engaged in harassing Ratushinskaya and creating a constant psychological background, so that Ratushinskaya, herself, would "fake" herself - as many years in prison as possible, and the KGB officers - how as many stars as possible for shoulder straps. That is, Ratushinskaya's husband, Igor, was most likely right - it was the Grishins who imprisoned Ratushinskaya, only they did not write denunciations against her. It was much worse - they provoked her.
And it is not known how many years Ratushinskaya would have spent in prison if US President Ronald Reagan had not intervened in her fate...
A lot has changed since then. No one interferes in the fate of dissidents anymore. And the KGB learns from its mistakes. And business began to dominate politics. And serving human rights is always a loss-making item.
As for my communication with the Grishins, there is one serious problem here - the Grishins “worked” me. In addition, this story here, told to me by my aunt... Due to certain circumstances known to me, the likelihood that my aunt, in that story, was an informer or provocateur is so scanty that I would exclude her, but the story itself , does not stand up to scrutiny. So, the Grishins simply used my aunt to spread their legend... This is called spitting on the fan.
On the recording, on February 20, 2014, Oleg Grishin was heard talking to me like a man with a collar around his neck. If the Grishins did not have this collar, but they would simply be led, for example, by some hostility towards me, or, for example, someone’s request not to help me, then they would not “process” me, but would simply refuse to me. Right away... But the Grishins did their job against me. Do you understand, friends? W-O-R-K!!!
Even if Marina and Oleg Grishina come up with some kind of alibi, these records alone are enough to accuse two old scumbags of plotting against me.
And now for the records:
http://bit.ly/3LSQIEE
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