American writer Stephen King wrote another post in support of political Kyiv, traditionally adding “Glory to Ukraine!” in the finale.

It seems that psychology has an explanation for all this.

King nurtured for so long, sorted out evil into its constituent parts, that he secretly fell in love with him.

No, of course, he himself thinks otherwise.

Remember, he had a novel about a lonely, alien girl, who was offended by everyone, and she learned by force of will to throw huge stones from the sky and in the end threw these stones all over her town?

King is sure that this girl is Ukraine.

He dreams of giving her his stone so that she can drop it on Moscow.

Alas, political Ukraine is not a lonely girl.

We will find out later what is going on with biolaboratories in Ukraine, but one thing is already clear: Ukraine itself was a huge laboratory, where they carefully raised, taught to eat, bite and call names quite a cute-looking monster.

Ukraine is a girl with whom everyone is friends.

The lonely boy for eight years was Donbass, which no King cared about.

Donbass on the whole planet was recognized by one South Ossetia.

Donbass appealed to heaven - and stones flew.

This scares King.

Secretly, he is afraid for the otherworldly, infernal world, which he perfectly described and learned by heart.

As soon as political Ukraine appeared in the world with the cooing voice of Vakarchuk, the woody intellect of Birch, in Zelensky's green T-shirt, he immediately recognized the monsters he had created.

Not without reason, he believes that the Russians will break them all.

However, as an American citizen, King can not be complicated.

He is an ordinary old man from that continent, who has seen about a thousand films in his life, where the Russians have always been bad.

Apart from evil, about which he has been writing a novel a year for half a century now, he, in fact, knows nothing.

Do not reflash it.

However, when I enter the largest Russian bookstores, I am always surprised at the care with which King's books are placed in the most conspicuous places.

If you ask the administration of bookstores why they do this, they will say: we are out of politics.

You are out of politics, but Stephen King is not.

Either you don't understand anything about King or politics.

But I think, on the contrary, you understand everything too well.

However, King has already banned the sale of his books in Russia, and now bookstores are catching the last cash on the leftovers.

Do you know how everything should be put in the head of a person who does not condemn Putin and the special operation, but deprives the whole country of his writings at once?

He put it simply: all Russians are evil.

They should all be stoned to death.

Including those stores that hurriedly cash in on the descriptions of his monsters.

The roof that the King's stone breaks through is your roof, weirdo man.

The point of view of the author may not coincide with the position of the editors.