Alik Bakhshi
Slave Penya and his galleyThere are no irreplaceable slaves on galleries - ancient Roman folk wisdom
Putin about himself: “I worked like a galley slave”
Slave Pynya, who once arrogantly took control of the galley, clearly cannot cope. The turbulent events of recent times inevitably carry the galley onto the rocks, threatening to smash it into pieces, and the foul-smelling, although twice washed, underpants hung on the mast, instead of a flag blown away by the wind, completely drive away all potential rescuers. The galley passengers, who had relied too much on the slave Pynya, now have neither time nor chance to avoid disaster. But from time immemorial it has been known that a slave cannot be trusted under any circumstances, especially in such a matter as management. And everyone followed this truth, from the emperor to the smallest boss, but the Russian people, due to their pathological reluctance to engage in active organizational activities, and perhaps the ability to do so (1), transferred their fate and well-being into the hands of a slave, and now nothing will save the galley and its passengers.
1. The people's fate, or every cricket has its own nest.
https://alikbahshi.livejournal.com/28564.html 12/27/2020