2020 11 07. Funeral of a cat.
I came into this world not to make people better,
but to take advantage of their vulnerability.
Adolf Hitler.
Every pig must float in its own coffin.
Passerby.
Let me tell you an old Soviet joke:
There once lived a man… and he ended up in prison. He served many years, and then he was released. He returned to his hometown—and was shocked: when he went to prison, only half the cops were pigs, but when he got out—all of them were. So he decided to go back to the taiga.
He found a nice spot by the river, built himself a log cabin, lived off the land—fishing, hunting, picking berries and mushrooms. He had everything he needed…
One day, he was sitting by the river fishing, and he caught a Golden Fish. He looked at her, and she looked back and spoke in a human voice:
“Don’t just stare at me, man—make three wishes and let me go.”
He thought for a moment and said:
“You know, Fish, I don’t need anything. I have everything I want.”
He was about to release her… but then he said:
“Actually, there is one thing I wish for: Make it so that on this river—day and night, summer and winter, all year round — pigs float by… in coffins.”
The Fish looked at him with her golden eyes and said:
“That’s a dark wish, man… There are good cops among them, you know.”
He thought for a bit again and said:
“Well then, make it so that the good pigs float by… in good coffins!”
A few years ago, I read a story by Viktor Suvorov. It happened back in the Soviet Union, somewhere in the Urals. A policeman was hanged. He was strung up at night, in a courtyard that people passed through. It was late autumn — by that time, the Urals are already freezing cold. The body didn’t decompose and ended up hanging there for about a week, until one of his fellow officers happened to pass through the courtyard and saw it. People had walked through that courtyard every day. On their way to work, on their way home. Children walked past on their way to school and back. At least once a day — maybe even twice — the mailman passed by. They all saw him. Saw the hanged policeman, in full uniform. And not a single person… not one… called the police.
This incident became the subject of a special KGB report — a report on the mood of the people and their attitude toward the Soviet regime.
There were anti-pig uprisings in the USSR as well. One such example was the uprising in Krivoi Rog, in the Socialist City district — a revolt that was brutally crushed by Soviet authorities.
The reason for such public hatred toward law enforcement lay in the so-called “reform” of the USSR Ministry of Internal Affairs, carried out by Interior Minister Nikolai Shchelokov. Under the pretext of creating a mythical “clean image” of the Soviet militia, this reform led to the massive cover-up of crimes committed by the pigs themselves. A serious blow to this system of impunity came from the KGB, after a major scandal erupted in Moscow on the night of December 26, 1980. That evening, at Zhdanovskaya metro station, a group of drunken police officers beat, robbed, and then murdered KGB major Vyacheslav Afanasyev. As the investigation revealed, the decision to kill Afanasyev was made in order to cover up the beating and robbery. And that decision came not from some out-of-control junior officer — but from the head himself: the commander of the 5th precinct, police chief Baryshev. He personally led the murder — no longer as a police official, but as the leader of an internal gang of uniformed pigs. This case became known as “The Zhdanovskaya Killing.” During the investigation, numerous other crimes were uncovered — robberies, assaults, rapes, even other murders — committed not only by metro police, but also by officers in territorial precincts. By the end of the investigation, the lead investigator, Kalinichenko, had opened separate criminal cases against 80 police officers, all suspected of serious and violent crimes. As a result of subsequent internal reviews, around 500 pigs were fired from the Ministry of Internal Affairs. And this was just in Moscow — where everything was under some degree of public scrutiny. In the provinces, out of sight... It was nothing short of a total pig-system catastrophe.
I remember some of this myself… I had just graduated from school, and I began to notice something: guys my age, coming to study or work in Dnepropetrovsk from Krivoi Rog, Zholtye Vody, and other towns and villages across the Dnepropetrovsk region — they would plan their future lives factoring in two years in the army and two years in prison. It had simply become “normal.” Everyone knew: sooner or later, the pigs would arrest you for something. A whole generation passed through the prison system almost casually. The standard pattern? A domestic quarrel — and the standard sentence? Two years.
In his memoirs, investigator Kalinichenko wrote that not only during the investigation of Major Afanasyev’s murder, but throughout his entire career, every time he tried to press charges against someone from the Ministry of Internal Affairs, he was pressured. He was threatened — his career, his family, even his safety — and not just by police, but by senior prosecutors and party officials. Everything that has happened in Ukraine’s law enforcement system since the country's independence — including all the pseudo-reforms, especially those since 2014 under the supposed supervision of the U.S. embassy — mirrors exactly what was happening in the USSR under the leadership of Brezhnev’s friends and relatives — figures like Shchelokov, Tsinev, and Churbanov.
[https://youtu.be/Dld2v5hcbYE]
After I contacted the Embassy of the Italian Republic in September 2019, the psychological torture and harassment I experienced at the hands of the Ukrainian National Police — particularly during the burial of my cats — became systematic. I have no intention of commenting on the videos — everything is clear enough as it is. You can hear the pigs themselves admitting on tape that they had no legal claims against me whatsoever, and that they showed up simply “to poke around” — like looters — hoping to find something. Having stolen information from my apartment about the death of my cat and my plans to bury him, they ambushed me — and through mockery, manipulative questions, and emotional pressure, they tried to extract any detail they could use as leverage: my plans, my state of mind, anything they could exploit to blackmail me, humiliate me, force me to beg for “permission” to bury my cat, and, of course — to extort money. You can hear how they try to lure me into a “heart-to-heart,” how one of them pretends to be mentally slow — as if he doesn’t understand what to do with the information on my website. He asks me to explain what’s going on in my life, or to talk about the posters on my car — so that later, they could psychologically anchor the death of my cat to those posters. They also tried… And one of them openly said he wanted to “find weapons and drugs” in my car’s trunk. This was not just unlawful behavior — it was psychological torture, an interrogation under duress, unlawful investigative activity, corporate pig antisemitism, and an entrenched institutional sadism.
I didn’t edit these recordings — not a single second. I’m just an ordinary person. And anyone in my place would’ve said the same things about those pigs.
What you don’t see on the recordings is that on the way to me, both police vehicles blatantly violated traffic laws multiple times.
As for the incident as a whole, at best, it was corporate antisemitism, corporate sadism, and institutionalized looting. But that’s the best-case scenario. I am absolutely certain that the real goal was psychological terror, humiliation, the deliberate destruction of my nervous system — and that these pigs were sent with that purpose by their superiors. And that — falls under an entirely different article of the Criminal Code.
In Note 2 to Article 149 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine, which clarifies the meaning of the term “human trafficking”, the legislator states the following:
“For the purposes of Articles 149 and 303 of this Code, a person is considered to be in a vulnerable state if, due to physical or mental characteristics or external circumstances, they are deprived of or limited in their ability to understand their actions (or inaction) or to control them, to make independent decisions of their own free will, or to resist violent or other unlawful actions, including in situations involving personal, family, or other serious hardships.”
In this particular case, I believe that these pigs acted in a coordinated manner, following direct orders from their superiors, and that the purpose of the attack was to break my will through humiliation and psychological abuse, exploiting a vulnerable moment. Criminal liability for such actions is provided under Part 2 of Article 365 and Part 3 of Article 149 of the Criminal Code of Ukraine. A formal statement to that effect will be submitted to the Prosecutor General of Ukraine.
To further demonstrate the systematic, years-long pattern of bias and targeted abuse by the police against me, I will follow these recordings with numerous documented examples showing that the same patrol officers consistently ignore unlawful actions committed against me or my property — even in situations where death threats are made in their immediate presence. In such cases, they feign ignorance, pretend not to understand what is happening, or — even worse — start applying pressure not to the aggressors, but to me.
https://bit.ly/43TNb02