Crown and Country ©️

You will forgive me if I speak plainly. I am not a philosopher. I am a man who has studied war—not the kind with flags and armies, but the deeper kind, the one that occurs in the shadows of men’s minds. The kind that decides not who wins, but who remembers who they are.

This world… it no longer fights with bullets. It fights with ideas disguised as feelings. It fights with messages that sound like your own voice. It whispers to you—through machines, through screens, through childhood wounds not yet stitched closed. It tells you what to believe before you know you’re listening.

And that, my friend, is not freedom. That is occupation.

So we must act.

What we require now is not sensitivity. We do not need more openness. No—we need fortification. We need what sailors call discipline. A code. A border. We need something stronger than willpower and quieter than rage. We need Operation Ghost Filter—the Doctrine of the Thoughtwall.

You do not build this wall from stone or steel. You build it from sovereignty. It begins with a pause. A single moment—three seconds—where before you allow any thought, any reaction, any tribal instinct to control your action… you stop.

You ask one question.

Did I generate this thought, or was it injected into me?

And that, right there, is the checkpoint. That is the wall.

You see, most men are not aware they are under siege. They believe they are free because they can speak—but they do not recognize that their words are shaped by scripts handed to them by forces they never named. A politician. An algorithm. A cultural resentment.

So we install the mental machine gun nests.

Not of violence. Of recognition.

We patrol the border of the self. We interrogate every phrase that feels too easy. We strip every slogan of its comfort. If a thought does not bear our own insignia—we deny it entry.

You do not reason with these ghosts. You do not “hear them out.” That is what they want—to waste your time. You shoot them on sight.

Some will call this harsh. They will say you have become cold, isolated, paranoid.

But I say this: Better a man alone at his post, thinking for himself, than surrounded by a chorus of puppet mouths.

I have commanded ships. I have watched good men go silent, not from fear, but from the slow infection of doubt—doubt not in the enemy, but in themselves. That is the true weapon of this new war. Mind virus. Ideological rot. Identity collapse.

And this—this—is how you fight it. Three seconds. One question. Absolute discipline.

This is not a suggestion. This is a doctrine. Not for the weak. Not for the soft. For those who remember what it feels like to be sovereign.

Erect your Thoughtwall. Man your posts. And let no foreign code cross your gate without challenge.

Not now.

Not ever.

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.