Bug in the Program ©️

The killing of Charlie Kirk carries the strange rhythm of an old story. A young man fires in cold blood, then returns home—not hardened, not gloating, but crumbling in his father’s arms. That swing from violence to sorrow feels less like conviction and more like programming.

MK Ultra lingers behind it like a watermark. The program was never just acid and electrodes—it was about breaking down the mind until suggestion replaced will. You drug a subject, trigger him, then send him into the world carrying orders he doesn’t even understand. When the haze lifts, he collapses, because the act was never his to own.

This script is not new. The very word assassin traces back to the Crusades, to the sect of the Hashashin. They would drug a boy with hashish, usher him into a garden of women and wine, a vision of paradise. By morning he woke in the dust. The elders told him: what you saw was heaven, and the only way back is to kill the target. Death was his door. Paradise was a leash.

Look again at the boy who killed Kirk. His tears are not the tears of an ideologue—they are the tears of someone who has been bent, primed, and released. He is less executioner than instrument. The pattern is too clean: intoxication, illusion, violence, collapse. The garden has changed, but the trick is the same. Where once it was hashish and courtesans, now it may be designer drugs and digital haze.

What is haunting is not that the ritual exists—it is that it persists. Centuries apart, the same levers are pulled: ecstasy, obedience, death. The assassin is never the assassin. He is the envelope, not the letter. The message belongs to someone else.

The Quiet Between Heartbeats ©️

They say if you sit still long enough in Moscow, the cold starts talking to you. Not in whispers—just the slow, cracking language of old bones breaking under history. I’d been there five days. Window facing east. Four floors up. Crosswind out of Saint Petersburg. The rifle case slept under the sink like a dog that knew its purpose. All I had to do was wait for the old tyrant to walk into the light.

I watched him every morning—same routine, same pair of gloves, same smirk like he knew the world was too spineless to stop him. I didn’t hate him. That’s what makes this kind of work possible. Hate makes your hands shake. I respected the efficiency, even admired the conviction. But a blade’s a blade, and this one had cut too deep, for too long.

I sipped stale coffee, black as the thoughts in my head. The file said 9:43 a.m. He’d step out for air like clockwork, believing in his own myth. Thinking the devil doesn’t get shot in daylight.

He wore the coat. The one the dissidents talked about in whispers. I could see the fur collar through the scope. Two guards. Useless. Just shapes in suits. I exhaled slow. The city was a whisper behind glass. I wasn’t there for revenge or revolution. I was there because some men don’t get to die of old age.

The crosshairs found his temple like it was always meant to be there. I’d rehearsed this moment ten thousand times. Breath in. Silence. Breath out. Stillness.

The trigger didn’t click. It sighed.

And just like that, the world had a new scar.

I zipped the case. Washed the cup. Stepped out into the crowd like I’d never existed. That’s the part no one understands—the kill is the quietest moment in your life. What comes after is noise.

And in that noise, somewhere deep in the pit of power, a ghost started walking.