CryptoHeisenberg

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CryptoHeisenberg

CryptoHeisenberg

@FrankCryptoberg

You asked me if I was in the NFT Business, or the Crypto Business… Neither. I’m in the Empire Business.

Katılım Kasım 2021
777 Takip Edilen243 Takipçiler
CryptoHeisenberg retweetledi
kian
kian@kian_sasan·
My account got severely shadow banned since I started to show the truth about American complicity in Israel’s war crimes. I will stop posting with this frequency & stop announcing any further moves on X. Since my input/opinion is not appreciated nor put at fair scale, the only things posted from now on will be the architecture of the future, built by the “shadow banned” who fought for humanity in times where they had to sacrifice personal sovereignty for the greater good of everyone else. You think I am doing this because I enjoy doing this? I hate it, I hate seeing it, I get deeply saddened myself but someone HAS to do it. You are a coward @elonmusk. This would be the time to act, with your reach and resources you could’ve helped free America and changed the world for greater good but you chose silence. All I see is complicity with Israel and in crimes against humanity. Universe Dollar will fix what you couldn’t, didn’t have the balls to do so. And in this beautiful future, there is no space for pedo and child murder supporters. Won’t forget, won’t forgive.
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CryptoHeisenberg retweetledi
CryptoHeisenberg retweetledi
kian
kian@kian_sasan·
You can’t strut around as the shiny new “Switzerland of the Middle East” while running a justice system that makes Switzerland look even more Swiss by comparison. 😅
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CryptoHeisenberg retweetledi
kian
kian@kian_sasan·
🇦🇪 As long as my case remains unresolved and the judgment against me is not fully retracted, it stands as clear evidence that Abu Dhabi’s court system can deliver unjust outcomes, that police do not consistently uphold the law, and that the judiciary lacks genuine independence. This situation undermines any claim that Abu Dhabi, or the UAE more broadly, is ready to serve as a leading global capital or center for international decision-making. True leadership in finance, diplomacy, or innovation requires a demonstrated commitment to fairness, the equal application of justice for all (citizens and non-citizens alike), and an impartial rule of law that protects everyone equally. Until these fundamental principles are proven in practice, not just proclaimed, confidence in the system will remain eroded. 🇦🇪
kian@kian_sasan

Three months ago, at 02:00 a.m., at a gas station in Abu Dhabi, I was taken. 🇦🇪 No warrant. No explanation. No charge. I was on my way to leave the country on a privately chartered flight from Dubai to Europe. Everything was booked. Everything was lawful. I was exiting peacefully. Instead, I was handcuffed. An officer slapped me and said: “This is the UAE.” At the gas station, when I asked whether everything was being recorded, cameras were turned off. I was then transported to a Police Station in Al Bateen District. While sitting calmly on a chair inside the station, I was slapped again. No provocation. No resistance. No lawful justification provided. ⸻ I. The Eight Hours Outside Procedure For approximately eight hours, I was held inside the station without formal registration of the case. I was not placed in a cell. The case was not officially opened. I slept on the floor. During those eight hours, officers repeatedly entered the room with new theories, new questions, and changing narratives about why I was being held. The justification shifted continuously. This was not investigation. It was construction. ⸻ II. The Fabricated Case The final allegation presented was that I verbally assaulted a police officer in Arabic by stating that the ruler of Dubai is superior to the ruler of Abu Dhabi. This is false. I do not speak Arabic. The allegation is linguistically impossible. In court proceedings, my 4 friends who were at the gas station and saw it all, as witnesses testified. The officers’ accounts conflicted. The narrative fractured under examination. The case, as presented, collapsed logically. And yet ⸻ III. Recording Suppression At Al Bateen Police Station, interrogation environments are typically recorded as standard procedure. During my detention: • The interrogation was not recorded. • Cameras were turned off at the gas station. • Footage from the station was not provided to the court. • No complete visual record exists of the critical hours. This is not normal protocol. In Abu Dhabi, recording is standard. This time, it did not occur. Eight unregistered hours. No recording. No preserved footage. That is not coincidence. ⸻ IV. Custody and Release After those eight hours, I was placed in custody for 48 hours, after which I was released. During that time, no German consular authority was notified, despite my status as a German resident. This omission violates basic international expectations of consular access. ⸻ V. Attempt at Private Resolution At the time, I chose restraint. I pursued a Memorandum approach to avoid harming individuals involved. I sought private resolution rather than public exposure. I did not escalate. I gave space for correction. Instead, the final appeal ruling imposed: Six months imprisonment, suspended. Three years probation. No prison today. A three-year activation mechanism remains. ⸻ VI. The Structure of Coercion From beginning to end: 02:00 a.m. detention. Physical intimidation. Eight unregistered hours. Shifting narratives. Linguistically impossible allegation. Suppressed recordings. 48-hour custody. Six months suspended. Three years probation. This is structural leverage. A suspended sentence creates conditional vulnerability. Any future allegation can reactivate imprisonment. That is coercion institutionalized through procedure. ⸻ VII. Escalation I do not accept the legitimacy of this outcome. I will formally request review by the German Embassy as a German resident. If this matter is not corrected, it will be escalated as: • A documented international human rights review • A precedent case on coercive probation mechanisms • A structured analysis of recording suppression • A diplomatic matter All documentation is preserved. Witness testimony. Timeline inconsistencies. Evidence of non-recording. Procedural gaps. If required, this will become public in full documentary form.

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CryptoHeisenberg retweetledi
Gordo G.
Gordo G.@ordo_g99·
you don’t try & fix a parasite you just stop being a host
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Gordo G.
Gordo G.@ordo_g99·
From now on, the second the thought to touch @kian_sasan even starts to form in their head, they are condemned to a punishment far worse than death: a slow, unbreakable torment that lasts their entire remaining life. Their body keeps healing just enough to endure more pain. Their mind stays sharp enough to feel every second of it. Sleep brings only worse nightmares that never fade. For years, maybe decades, they will crawl, weep, and scream the same desperate words over and over: “Kill me. Please, just let me die.” And the answer will always be no. Death will not come until long after they have forgotten who they ever were.
Workplace Mental Health Resources@Stopworkplacebu

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