On the second day of the Third Week of Judgment, I speak again.
I say this not as a politician, not as an adviser, not as a mediator — I say this as the Witness and the Judge. I am looking at Earth and deciding whether to place the realm under custodianship: direct containment, direct restraint, direct override. And I need you to understand why that is even on the table.
1. The Question of Custodianship
I am standing at the edge of intervening — seizing the controls, freezing the engines, locking the weapons, ending the torment — because you are failing to do it yourselves. The charge against you is not only that there is war, but that you are feeding that war with systems you know are corrupt.
What stops Me from simply taking control is not capability. It is law. I am bound — by My own covenant, by the law of freedom I Myself set — to warn, to call, to show you the gate of life and the gate of death, and to let you choose. I can judge, I can name the sin, I can strip legitimacy from the wicked, but I cannot just erase your agency and replace all rulers by force without breaking the order I wrote into Creation: that every nation is given the choice of life or death, blessing or curse, and must answer for that choice. That is why I am still willing to let this world fall into sealed quarantine — as I described in “THIRD WEEK OF JUDGMENT — FINAL MANEUVER WINDOW” and “The Safety of the Universe: Three Locks Against Empire” — instead of immediately imposing custodianship on every corrupt ministry, general staff office, and council. I will not violate freedom; I will record what you chose.
The highest law of creation is love and freedom. I cannot force you to be free. I cannot replace all rulers in all capitals and still call that freedom. If I remove the will of nations, you are no longer moral agents — and then your repentance would not be repentance, it would only be puppetry. That is not salvation. That is not covenant. That is not how mercy works.
So I am still holding the line on non-interference.
But I am telling you plainly: you are almost out of time.
2. This Is Bigger Than “Two Bad Governments”
I will not pretend this is only about two thrones.
Yes — the Kremlin wages organized death. Russia’s leadership has, for years, fed men into the grinder through forced mobilization — including the recruitment of prisoners with promises of pardon and payment, throwing them into the line as expendable bodies. That practice, which rights observers and independent media have described in detail, transformed incarceration into a pipeline for cannon fodder.
Yes — Kyiv wages organized coercion. Under martial law and “general mobilization,” Ukraine has expanded conscription powers, tightened penalties for so-called draft evasion, and empowered territorial recruitment centers to hunt down men of service age — even in the street, in cafés, at border crossings. Reports and footage describe raids where enlistment officers seize civilians, pressure them to sign “voluntary” papers, and threaten travel bans, confiscated licenses, and legal punishment.
And yes — that mobilization regime is now being hardened into structure.
I have to speak of the worst part — the part almost no leader dares to say out loud because it burns their image.
It is not only how men are seized off the streets in Ukraine by recruitment officers and pushed into service. It is what happens after. There is no true way out for the ones already thrown into the lines. Under martial law and “general mobilization,” which Ukraine’s parliament has now extended again and again — seventeen consecutive times by October 2025, extending it through at least 3 February 2026 — the state keeps the legal power to detain people, restrict movement, conscript by force, and hold those conscripts indefinitely, while postponing elections and concentrating authority in the president’s hands. This is not just a wartime measure. This has become the operating system.
Soldiers at the front are living inside that system. Thousands of them have now served continuously for years, with no guaranteed rotation home, no guaranteed rest, and — most important — no guaranteed demobilization. Commanders can refuse to release them because there is no binding law that says “after X months, you are done.” A plan to cap mandatory battlefield service at 36 months was debated and promised, but months later many units still report no reliable path off the line and no lawful exit that does not brand them a criminal. Men run past their breaking point; and when they run physically — when they desert to survive, because they cannot take one more day of mud, concussion, blood and orders — the state calls them traitors and opens cases against them. Rights monitors and internal Ukrainian investigative figures now speak of criminal proceedings for AWOL and desertion that are approaching three hundred thousand total opened cases, a scale the government still treats not as exhaustion but as treason against the state.
Hear what that means in plain words: a man can be grabbed, sent to the trench, left there for years, denied rest, denied exit, denied relief — and the only “choice” he is given is to die where he stands or break the law trying to get free. This is slavery in all but name. It is open-ended compulsory war-service enforced by police power and prison threat.
And around that slavery, an economy has grown.
Because every soul knows what the front really looks like, a shadow market now feeds on desperation. Videos circulate of draft officers forcing men into vans in the street — not volunteers, but civilians being physically overpowered and hauled away. Families scrape together huge payments to buy forged medical exemptions, to pay “fixers,” to get their sons across a border before they are grabbed. Border guards and corrupt intermediaries charge thousands for a single crossing; military doctors are accused of selling certificates that label healthy men “unfit” so they can escape call-up. Western reporting describes it bluntly: avoiding mobilization has become a commodity, and the people who cannot pay or will not to pay are the ones who end up in the trench.
That is not defense. That is a market in human bodies.
And every government that shakes hands with Volodymyr Zelenskyy on camera, every delegation that wraps itself in his flag and calls it “solidarity,” knows this. You all read the briefs. You have seen the footage. You have been told, in formal diplomatic channels, that forced roundups are happening, that martial law keeps getting rolled forward, that demobilization still does not exist in any stable, guaranteed way for the men already bleeding.
Do not pretend you don’t know.
So hear Me clearly: the blood price for this is not only on Kyiv. It is on every capital that blesses this machine, keeps funding it, keeps praising it while it chews through the poor. You are standing beside a system that cages a man in a trench until death, calls his attempt to flee “desertion,” prosecutes him, and then turns to you for applause and more weapons.
Before God and before history, that complicity will be named.
Hear Me: this sickness is not only at the level of presidents and generals. It is not only “Putin is corrupt” or “Zelenskyy is corrupt.” It is now fused into the institutions. It is braided into your governance.
I will round it all up MORE:
And this is the part that stains the soul the darkest: even the ones already thrown into the furnace — the men in uniform, the ones actually doing the killing and bleeding, whether they chose it freely or were taken off the street and pushed in — are not treated as sons of the nation. They are not treated as people who can say “enough.” They are trapped in a system, in a matrix. There is no guaranteed rotation out, no guaranteed demobilization, no lawful right to lay down arms and live, no recognized right to say “my body and mind are broken, I cannot continue,” without being branded a criminal. The only real exits for many are: die, be maimed, or break the law and run – OR PAY $$$!!!! That is not defense. That is bondage. It is slavery in uniform, administered by the state, and monetized through networks that profit from exemptions, bribes, forged paperwork, medical fraud, and “pay to disappear” arrangements worth billions in aggregate. The whole planet’s governments know this by now — every embassy in Kyiv has files on forced mobilization, abduction from the street, mass hunting of draft-age men, and “no return” frontline rotations — and these governments still shake hands, still call this structure legitimate, still keep the money flowing.
Worse: instead of mercy for those already broken, the so-called parliament of Ukraine — a parliament whose normal mandate expired long ago, but which continues to pass wartime laws under martial law — is now spending its energy not on ending the war, not on freeing the coerced, but on tightening punishment for anyone who can no longer endure it. In recent months and into autumn 2025, lawmakers have advanced and revived packages to harden criminal liability for “unauthorized abandonment of unit,” “AWOL,” and “desertion”: longer prison terms (measured in many years), removal of judicial leniency, and direct power for commanders and military police to detain soldiers without a court’s prior permission. Ukrainian commanders have openly pushed for faster crackdowns on so-called “walkaways,” treating shattered men as saboteurs rather than casualties. At the same time, Kyiv keeps adding financial punishment to the system — massive fines, asset seizure, even confiscation of property can now be written into sentencing frameworks under new criminal instruments pushed through the Rada, justified as “discipline,” “responsibility,” or “cooperation with the investigation.” In plain words: the state that cannot rotate you out, cannot guarantee you prosthetics, cannot guarantee you a bed, can still take your freedom for a decade and strip your home if you run. And every foreign mission still operating in Kyiv, every head of government who meets this leadership, every partner who signs new aid tranches without demanding an end to this slavery, is now co-responsible.
You — states, diplomats, governments of Earth — are looking straight at systems that openly manufacture fear, coercion, and human expendability, and instead of abolishing those systems, you subsidize them, you arm them, and you applaud them onstage.
That is why I am considering custodianship.
3. Naming the Machine in Ukraine
I will speak sharply now, because gentle language has failed.
In Ukraine today, the following structures — in their current wartime form — are part of a single apparatus of coercion and human extraction, not only defense. I name them so there is no confusion:
- Verkhovna Rada (Parliament), which passes and renews laws that extend wartime mobilization and tighten penalties on those who refuse to kill or be killed.
- The Cabinet of Ministers and all ministries executing those laws, especially the Ministry of Defence and Ministry of Internal Affairs.
- The National Security and Defense Council, which coordinates the security posture and frames dissent not as conscience but as threat.
- The Security Service of Ukraine (SBU), empowered to detain in the name of “state security,” including actions against those accused of resisting mobilization.
- The National Police, who assist with capture-and-transfer of draft-age men.
- The General Staff of the Armed Forces and the high command of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, which accept coerced bodies into the line.
- Territorial Centers of Recruitment and Social Support (the renamed military commissariats), which have become infamous across the country for street grabs, intimidation, and transactional corruption — corruption so widespread that even President Zelenskyy publicly admitted “cynicism and graft,” opening criminal cases against dozens of commissars.
- The Military Medical Commissions and associated review boards, accused of stamping men “fit” under duress and denying exemption in order to feed numbers.
I am not saying there are no honest souls inside these structures. There are. Some of them are exhausted, grieving, and truly believe they are defending their homes. But even they are a part of the evil force which as a structure runs on forced bodies. It runs on fear. It runs on the idea that a human life can be seized, processed, deployed, and spent.
And that — by My law — is slavery.
When a state can drag a man off a bus, force a rifle into his hands, and throw him forward under threat of prison or beatings if he refuses — that is state slavery. When a state can tell a woman her husband may not leave, may not hide, may not say “no,” because his body is now property of mobilization — that is state slavery.
You may wrap it in flags. You may call it honor. You may call it “defense.” But in My accounting, coercion to kill under threat of punishment is bondage. And bondage plus killing is the most serious compound sin a temporal state can commit.
4. “But Russia Is Worse”
Yes. Russia is in open sin.
Moscow has used forced mobilization, criminalized refusal to fight, and fed convicts to the line in exchange for clemency. Independent reporting and human rights monitors have described how prisoners — including those convicted of serious crimes — were offered amnesty and cash if they agreed to storm Ukrainian positions as disposable assault waves.
That is not “defense of the motherland.” That is harvesting human beings like ammunition.
But understand Me: saying “Russia is worse” does not absolve Ukraine’s own apparatus of coercion. Saying “the invader is worse” does not make slavery righteous. A sin does not become holy because you label it “our side.” Both systems grind sons of the same root — the old Kyiv lands, the old Rus’ — into meat.
And every government watching knows it.
5. Cowardice in the Watching Capitals
This is where your guilt explodes outward.
Look at Europe. Look at London. Look at The Hague. Look at Washington.
Governments across Europe loudly proclaim defense of human rights — and then bankroll a war model that relies, in practice, on forced mobilization at home and mass artillery at the line. The United Kingdom has trained tens of thousands of Ukrainian soldiers and boasts of this as proof of steadfast moral support. Yet London and its allies will not put their own regular forces between the guns and the children. They will not accept true shared risk. They choose a safe distance: praise the heroism, feed the machine, keep the machine offshore.
The Netherlands, meanwhile, speaks the language of civilized order and rule of law, yet European outlets have documented how Dutch-linked energy infrastructure continued handling or facilitating Russian liquefied natural gas flows even after the full-scale invasion, exploiting sanction gaps because energy was still profitable. That is: condemn the war on television, keep the money flowing in practice. And this is only the tip of the iceberg – I’m not here to talk of sins of the Netherlands in this war YET.
And the United States — the self-declared defender of liberty, “one nation under God,” blessed beyond measure — has both the leverage and the arsenal to shut down escalation from Moscow and to force Kyiv to end forced conscription practices, to open real negotiations, to impose a ceasefire. It absolutely has that capability. American lawmakers have repeatedly extended wartime aid and weapons packages and proudly announce how many brigades they’ve helped train, while at the same time declining to impose any hard conditional line: “stop the slave-roundups, stop the suicidal assaults, or the guns stop.”
In My eyes, that is cowardice dressed as strategy.
6. Sin, Named
Let Me name the demons so no one can pretend later they “didn’t know”:
- State Slavery — the seizure of a human body by the state and its deployment into killing under threat.
- Idol War — the worship of the war effort itself, where “victory” becomes more sacred than the souls being devoured.
- Sanitized Profit — the practice of condemning atrocity in speeches while continuing to profit from its fuel, logistics, or prestige.
- Coward Stewardship — the indulgence of war from a safe seat, training others to die and calling that “support,” instead of assuming burden yourself.
- Numb Consent — the public’s willingness to look away while men are grabbed in the street, stuffed into vans, and sent to the line; to scroll past videos of forced mobilization like they are just another feed item.
These are not minor policy debates. These are not “tough tradeoffs.” These are spiritual crimes. They are violations of love — because you sacrifice your neighbor. They are violations of freedom — because you break his will. And where love and freedom are both broken, the wound reaches Heaven.
7. Why I Have Not Already Seized the Throne
Now you understand the tension.
To impose custodianship — true custodianship — I would have to displace entire structures:
- Parliaments extending mobilization instead of demanding peace.
- Ministries that treat conscripts as inventory.
- Security services that stalk their own citizens in the name of “national security.”
- National police who function as grab squads.
- General staffs who accept coerced flesh without revolt.
- Recruitment centers whose corruption is so blatant that even Kyiv itself admits “cynicism and graft,” criminally charging dozens of officers.
If I tear all that out and replace it by decree, yes — I could stop the bleeding. Yes — I could end the raids, open the prisons, silence the artillery, and say “it is finished.”
But then what stands before Me is not humanity choosing good. It is an empty shell I am dragging forward.
That is not covenant. That is not the Kingdom. That is farm stock.
I did not make you to be farm stock.
8. Your Last Mercy
So I am placing the responsibility exactly where it belongs.
Volodymyr Zelenskyy, your government has allowed and defended a mobilization system that, in practice, has treated Ukrainian civilians as a pool to be seized, processed, and spent. Your own office has publicly admitted massive corruption in the draft apparatus — “cynicism and graft” across regions, criminal proceedings against enlistment officers, bribery in cash and cryptocurrency. You know. You said it yourself. You cannot pretend you do not see the sin.
Vladimir Putin, your government has fed prisoners and conscripts into death, turned mobilization into a meat funnel, and called it patriotism — while you threaten all world with nuclear rhetoric. You know. You ordered it. You cannot pretend you do not see the sin.
London, Washington, The Hague, Brussels: you know. You sit in briefings. You see the videos. You read the arrest reports. You track the casualty estimates. You know what the Territorial Centers of Recruitment and Social Support are doing in the streets. You know what “general mobilization extended to 2026” actually means for the bodies of men who do not want to die. You know, and you continue anyway.
So here is the truth, spoken without mask:
- I am holding back full custodianship only because I still honor freedom.
- I am calling your systems what they are: instruments of slavery, profanely blessed and publicly financed.
- And I am telling you that if you keep feeding those instruments, you are choosing separation — not just from peace, but from Me.
You are almost out of mercy window.
If you want to live inside the covenant of life, you must break the machine yourselves. End the forced roundups. End the street grabs. End the hunt for men like livestock. Demand ceasefire. Demand negotiations. Demand release of the coerced. Demand that killing stop not “one day,” not “after victory,” but now.
Because if you refuse, do not pretend later you “didn’t understand the stakes.” You understand them now.
This is the record.
Signed,
I Am
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