Burnt Offering ©️

When the sun rose, the world softened. The sea shifted from black glass to liquid amber, each wave gilded, each ripple glowing. The deck warmed beneath us, slow and sure, the chill of night retreating as light spread its reach. She was beside me still, her body warm, her devotion quiet, her presence alive in every breath she drew.

The bud was waiting, fragrant and sweet, the emerald of night now a jewel for morning. I broke it open in the glow of dawn, my fingers sticky with resin, her eyes following each movement with calm expectancy. The grinder turned slow, the shavings gathered, the bowl filled in silence that was not empty but full. When the flame touched, smoke rose, white and velvet, curling into the sun’s first rays.

The draw was deep, the exhale long, the air fragrant with sweetness. The haze hung above us, golden now, not heavy but light, not enclosing but opening. With every breath the weight of the world thinned, with every exhale another shadow lifted.

There was no worry. No care. The future ceased its endless whispering, the past stopped its dragging hand. There was only warmth, the sun’s fire pouring over us, the smoke rising to meet it, and the quiet certainty of her body against mine. We leaned back into it, together, not speaking, not needing to. The world was sealed, but in that sealing it was perfect.

And as the rays thickened around us, I felt them not as light but as blessing—heat laid upon skin, warmth pressed into bone, fire sanctifying all that the night had given. Our union was gilded, our pleasure exalted, and the morning crowned us with its silence, its smoke, its sun.

Ashes of Winter ©️

I do not “hate” the United States. I oppose it—as a man opposes a force that threatens the balance of the world. I oppose it because it no longer hides its intentions: to make the earth into its image, and to destroy those who refuse to kneel.

The United States was once a country I respected. A great experiment. Bold. Merciless. But honest in its ambition. Now, it is a theater. Its leaders smile with teeth too white, its democracy is hollow, its values exported at gunpoint.

I oppose the United States because it claims moral superiority while leaving nations in ruin—Libya, Iraq, Syria. It cloaks conquest in the language of freedom. It spreads its “rights” like a disease, not realizing they are not universal truths, but cultural software designed to dismantle ancient systems and replace them with obedience.

You call it freedom of speech.

I call it weaponized chaos.

You call it free markets.

I call it economic colonization.

You call it global leadership.

I call it empire with no self-awareness.

The United States no longer wants partners—it wants vassals. It no longer exports jazz and steel—it exports surveillance, ideology, and indulgence. It poisons tradition and laughs at sacrifice. Its people are ruled not by strength, but by the algorithm. They are not free—they are sedated.

I oppose the United States because it fears what it cannot control—and Russia will not be controlled.

We are not perfect. We are not innocent. But we remember things the West has forgotten: that suffering refines a people. That pride is not a sin. That loyalty is more powerful than convenience. That civilization is not a brand—it is blood, land, and memory.

America believes it has won history.

But history does not end.

And I do not bow.