Page 172 - The Mirror of My Soul. Vol. 1
P. 172

Nicolai Levashov. The Mirror of My Soul. Vol. 1. Born in the USSR

                When I sized up the results of my influence on the leaf, I had an idea of a quite

           unusual experiment with plants. I thought, what would happen if I covered the whole
           territory of the Soviet Union with my influence on all cultivated plants to increase their
           productivity by several times? Why not? I thought then that everyone would benefit. I
           did it and began to collect information at first hand, i.e. from people who directly worked
           in agriculture.

                The summer of 1990 was especially cold and rainy. I remember that agricultural
           scientists appeared on TV every now and then, predicting meagre crops because of the
           rain and cold. They pre-pared everyone to expect a very bad harvest which could result
           in shortages of bread and other food. Imagine their surprise, when in 1990 the yield
           turned out to be… three times greater than in most bumper crop years. Regrettably, no
           one expected this so no one was prepared to harvest this record-breaking crop, which
           remained mainly in the fields. But that was a secondary factor. It turned out that a single
           influence on the territory of the Soviet Union was enough for a productivity increase of
           more than three times! I did not even have real pictures of the territory for conducting
           this influence. I had to evoke from my memory the geographical map of the Soviet Union
           and imagine what I wanted to carry out...

                It turned out that the beginning of 1990 was full of pleasant events. I remember that
           February 23, 1990, was Friday. On February, 25, Sunday, there were either Russian

           presidential elections or elections of the Supreme Soviet of the Russian Federation. On
           Friday Vladimir Dmitrievich Sergeev, when leaving me late at night, dropped some hints
           that large disturbances were expected on Sunday and it would be great if I could do
           something about it. As far as I understood from the results of my scanning of the situation
           and from the analysis of the open information, the KGB was preparing some very serious
           provocation  on  February,  25.  Through  newspapers  and  television  they  began  to
           intimidate people by saying they expected disorder and advised them to stay at home
           that day.

                I  understood  that  the  KGB  trained  agents  whose  job  was  to  provoke  crowd
           disturbances, alarming and agitating (the crowd). They were ordered to shoot at the
           building of the KGB and other strategic objects, using weapons given them for this
           purpose. Thus, they wanted to enable the authorities to introduce martial law in the
           country and begin to carry out repressions. In fact, the success of this operation meant
           the seizure of power in the country by the highest echelons of the KGB. I decided to
           prevent the bloodshed. For this purpose I created something like a “hubcap” of influence
           all over the territory of the Soviet Union with a program which blocked any aggressive-
           ness  and  any  manifestation  of  cruelty  and  violence,  and...,  everything  remained

           extraordinarily calm on February, 25.

                As it turned out, there was not a single robbery, no violence or murder in the whole
           territory of the Soviet Union that day! The confirmation of the fact that the KGB had
           planned  a  bloody  provocation  came  to  me  later,  when  I  got  the  next  issue  of  the
           newspaper “Kommersant”. In March it reported that an armoured division had been
           brought up near Moscow, military hospitals with large supplies of blood for transfusion
           were deployed according to the laws of war-time, this Sun-day all doctors were at their
           workplaces,  policemen  and  employees  of  the  KGB  went  home  with  their  weapons,





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