Run For Exit — Part X
Inside Russia’s Human Meat Grinder: Prison as Ideology, Torture as Policy
There are places where hell is not a metaphor.
Russia’s prison system is one of them.
This is not a story about “abuses.”
Not about “isolated incidents.”
Not about “both sides.”
This is about a system designed to erase humans, administered with bureaucratic boredom, lubricated by propaganda, and justified by an ideology that treats cruelty as patriotism.
What follows is drawn from the lived experience of Maksym Butkevych—Ukrainian journalist, human rights activist, anarchist, Christian, and former prisoner of the Russian Federation.
But it is not his story alone.
It is Russia’s story, told through a body that survived it.
Prison Without Darkness, Silence Without Sleep
In Russian captivity, light never turns off.
Neither does the television.
This is not accidental. It is not neglect. It is psychological warfare.
The lights stay on so guards can always watch.
The television stays on so prisoners can never escape.
Day and night, propaganda bleeds into the cell:
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Ukrainians are “corrupted Russians”
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Ukrainians are “Nazis”
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Ukrainians deserve to die
This loop does not aim to convince.
It aims to occupy.
Propaganda here is not argument—it is atmosphere.
It seeps into conversations.
It colonizes language.
It rewires emotion.
Even prisoners who hate state propagandists still repeat their phrases unconsciously. That is the point.
This is not persuasion.
This is total immersion in a false reality, where empathy is replaced by tribal ecstasy and cruelty becomes normal.
War Porn as Entertainment
Russian prisons broadcast what inmates themselves call “war porn”:
Videos of Ukrainian soldiers dying.
Bodies torn apart.
Execution footage treated as leisure content.
One prisoner tells Maksym to stop reading the New Testament and watch instead:
“Look how your brothers are slaughtered like pigs.”
This is not fringe behavior.
This is normalized sadism.
The most chilling moment comes when another inmate—himself a former fighter in a Russian-backed militia—suddenly explodes in rage:
“Turn it off. You’re civilians. You don’t know what you’re watching. This is propaganda.”
Even inside hell, truth occasionally claws its way to the surface.
No Toilets. No Toothbrushes. No Time
There are no toilets.
There is a hole in the floor.
There is no toilet paper.
No toothbrush.
No toothpaste.
Toenails are shortened by scraping them against walls.
Showers—when they happen—are a cold hose for seconds.
Sometimes weeks pass. Sometimes six.
Medical care is a performance:
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Broken bones ignored
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Fevers dismissed
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Torture injuries waved away
A nurse known among prisoners as “Doctor Death” refuses to treat a critically injured man because she has “too much computer work.”
This is not neglect.
This is policy through indifference.
“Seljonka and Forget It”
After being beaten until unconscious, Maksym is finally seen by a doctor.
Diagnosis:
“It’s fine.”
Treatment:
A splash of green antiseptic—seljonka—on a bleeding shoulder.
Instruction:
“Never come back.”
This is Russian medicine in captivity:
Minimal effort, maximum humiliation.
Painkillers become currency.
Diarrhea medication is survival.
Aspirin is a luxury.
Thirty kilos lost.
Bodies shrinking.
Time dissolving.
No fresh air.
No outdoors.
No horizon.
Torture as Routine, Sadism as Optional Extra
Some guards are reluctant.
Some are enthusiastic.
All obey.
Forced physical exercises are used to break prisoners.
Some guards add punches and kicks for pleasure.
Propaganda fills in the moral gap:
Ukrainian commanders are Nazis.
They are controlled by America.
They are gay.
The ideological cocktail is incoherent—but it doesn’t need to be.
It only needs to dehumanize.
Russia’s Core Lie: There Are No Human Rights
This is the most important truth to understand:
In the Russian worldview, human rights do not exist.
Not as practice.
Not as value.
Not even as language.
They are decorative words used externally, while internally replaced by:
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Obedience
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Power
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Submission
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Violence
Prison is not a failure of the system.
It is the system in its purest form.
Russia does not merely repress dissent.
It feeds on the destruction of moral limits.
Freedom Is Not “From Others”—It Is “Because of Others”
Maksym survives by thinking.
By teaching English.
By praying silently.
By remembering people.
He is freed not by mercy, but by collective pressure, activism, names repeated by strangers he will never meet.
This is the part Russia cannot understand.
Freedom is not isolation.
Freedom is solidarity.
And that is why authoritarian systems fear it.
Why “Freezing the Conflict” Is a Lie
A ceasefire without justice is not peace.
Occupation is not stability.
Silence is not safety.
Every pause only gives Russia time to rearm, reorganize, and repeat.
There is no frozen conflict—only delayed violence.
Run For Exit
This series exists because we are running out of exits.
Russia’s prison system is not an anomaly.
It is a warning.
A warning of what happens when:
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Propaganda replaces reality
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Violence replaces law
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Power replaces humanity
This is not about Ukraine alone.
This is about where Europe goes if it forgets what freedom costs.
There is no neutrality in hell.
There is only the choice to look away—or to remember.
And remembering is resistance.
Run For Exit — Series Mission:
Documenting the systems of collapse we pretend cannot happen—until they do.
