>>64155561
Letov about Dugin
And there was another story: we were once staying at Kuryokhin's - Dugin, me and Nyurych. We wake up, I open the window, Dugin is thoughtfully lying on the bed, asking: "And where is Omsk?" I say: "Well, where: in the south of Siberia. Near Kazakhstan." - "Kazakhstan is near you? What if the Kazakhs poisoned the wind? They can poison the wind! Come on, close the window immediately: the wind is poisoned!" And he was completely serious: he got scared to death, started pacing the room. "The Kazakhs, damn it, poisoned the wind - how can I go? That's exactly it. I know they have reed people. They have Lake Balkhash, and reeds and bulrushes grow there in large quantities. And reed, reed people live there, who never stick their heads out, only breathe through a tube." Then he thought and thought and said: "And in the middle of Balkhash there is a huge island where a giant, colossal cat lives, whom they all worship." This is definitely Kuryokhin's doing. Where else would he get something like that? He says: "Damn, there are reed people all around, what should we do? They could start an invasion! That would be the end for us! If the reed people crawl out, they will come at us with their cat! And the cat is huge, three meters tall!" ...
And if you think about it, it is not even clear who blew whose mind. Maybe Dugin to Kuryokhin: he could endlessly operate with concepts. I once went to his house, he was sitting there and saying: "Eh... I have come up with so many different concepts and systems that now I can no longer understand: do I believe in this or not, does all this exist or not, what is there at all..." That is, he was skewed towards omnivorousness. Reality for him became completely mythological.
>"Eh... I have come up with so many different concepts and systems that now I can no longer understand: do I believe in this or not, does all this exist or not, what is there at all..."
>Reality for him became completely mythological.