For the past 1-2 years, someone actively discussed various ways of overthrowing the Russian government, or at least destabilizing it, on various Internet forums, but mainly 4chan (mostly it's /k/ board), as well as some Russian political forums. He discussed guerrilla warfare tactics, rapid coup d'etat tactics, central road blocking tactics, and much more, and asked for various military documents on the said topics, which the 4chan community readily gave him. The said person made many upon many threads about it every day, and didn't use a proxy, VPN, or any other cyber-security method. The 4chan community (especially the /k/ board) always helped him, and readily gave him any guides he needed, after discussing the possibilities of coup d'etat and guerrilla warfare against the Putin regime - everything from the ways the rebels could squire weapons, to the ways they could be organized and be more or less impenetrable by the Russian secret service.
The said person lives in a European Union country, and is a Russian citizen.
Soon after, the said person flew to Russia. On the second plane (he took two planes as it's cheaper), which flew to Russia, a tall male (let's call him Person B) sat in front of the said person (person A - the original person), and kept looking back and paying attention at him in various ways. Before the lunch time, the person who sat in front of the said person asked for a newspaper. When the lunch was given to the person A, the person B gave the newspaper back, and handed it under an angle, so that if anything was on the paper it would end up in the lunch.
After eating the lunch and sleeping, person A woke up very dizzy, with blurred vision, and was barely conscious, with a huge time delay. He couldn't feel his limbs, and couldn't even coordinate movements properly.
After the airplane landed, the person A couldn't get up as he felt very sick and dizzy. Virtually everybody left, but person B didn't leave for some reason, and kept looking back. He left in about 1-2 minutes, when the airline pilot approached the person A and asked what was wrong, to which person A replied with the set of symptoms that he was experiencing.
The pilots gave the person A a few chocolate bars at first (because they thought he had hypoglycemia), but it didn't help.
The person A was then taken to the Russian airport medical room, where he was given homeopathic shit which didn't help at all.
For the next week, the person A could barely walk or coordinate his movements. The first 3 days he virtually couldn't walk, and was always dizzy, and couldn't feel his limbs and parts of his body. The next 3 days after that he could walk (more or less), but got dizzy after walking for about 5 minutes.
The person A thought that maybe he was poisoned for a few seconds but then dismissed it.
However, this idea came back to him after he read that a Russian human rights activist - Anna Politkovskaya, was poisoned on an airplane in 2004, before being shot and killed in 2006.
Before her death, in 2004, she wrote (source: [url]http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2004/sep/09/russia.media[/url] - her own 2004 article)
"The plane takes off. I ask for a tea. It is many hours by road from Rostov to Beslan and war has taught me that it's better not to eat. At 21:50 I drink it. At 22:00 I realise that I have to call the air stewardess as I am rapidly losing consciousness. My other memories are scrappy: the stewardess weeps and shouts: "We're landing, hold on!"
"Welcome back," said a woman bending over me in Rostov regional hospital. The nurse tells me that when they brought me in I was "almost hopeless". Then she whispers: "My dear, they tried to poison you." All the tests taken at the airport have been destroyed - on orders "from on high", say the doctors. "
So the question remains - is the person A paranoid? Or are his worried within the realm of possibility?
Yes, Yes you are.
The hell did I just read
Probably just a good story-teller.
[QUOTE=MountainWatcher;36526500]Probably just a good story-teller.[/QUOTE]
What if we would assume that everything that this person said is true, and on top of that, there are medical records and eye witness (including, but not limited to, medical workers and someone the person in question was traveling with) to confirm every statement?
If we would assume that everything that is being said true, is this person still being paranoid?
The person in question still has many documents provided by the 4chan's /k/ board.
Yes they sound paranoid
Also why do you remind me so much of genpol?
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