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the link to tonight’s episode is here
How Not to Become Subhuman – New Episode Out Today
Episode 5 is being released at a crucial moment in my legal process. Tomorrow I will have legal representation, but my lawyer will be in London, appearing by Zoom. The court does not require my physical attendance. I could stay home. I could be another silent name in a digital box.
But tomorrow I am choosing to walk into the Lewes Crown Court in the flesh.
I am choosing presence over invisibility. I am choosing to be seen. I am choosing to stand in that courtroom not because the system demands it, but because my dignity does. This is the moment when my case stops being framed as a “criminal process” and reveals itself for what it has become: a political confrontation between an Argentine citizen and a cluster of British institutions that assumed I would be too intimidated, too confused, or too broken to show up.
This is the moment when my case stops being framed as a “criminal process” and reveals itself for what it has become: a political confrontation between an Argentine citizen and a cluster of British institutions that assumed I would be too intimidated, too confused, or too broken to show up.
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Episode 5 shows exactly why this moment matters. It exposes how the only psychiatrist who evaluated me correctly — the only one who took the time, reviewed the evidence, acknowledged trauma, confirmed negative toxicology, and contradicted the police–hospital fiction — was quietly removed. And how a replacement clinician was brought in to overwrite the truth in order to shield those institutions.
Episode 5 shows exactly why this moment matters. It exposes how the only psychiatrist who evaluated me correctly was quietly removed. And how a replacement clinician was brought in to overwrite the truth in order to shield the institutions.
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The CPS has produced no solid evidence. The police have contradicted themselves across every statement. The hospital destroyed or withheld critical records. Mental health services reshaped my clinical reality to protect themselves. What remains is no longer a legal case but a political one: an individual standing against an apparatus that tried to break him through silence, bureaucratic erasure and institutional force.
The CPS has produced no solid evidence. The police have contradicted themselves across every statement. The hospital destroyed or withheld critical records. Mental health services reshaped my clinical reality to protect themselves. What remains is no longer a legal case but a political one
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Tomorrow I walk into court although it is not a requirement. But I will do it anyway because I refuse to be abstracted. I refuse to be reduced to a file number or a remote presence. I want to stand there as the symbol of something the system hoped would never materialise: embodied dignity — a visible, undeniable reminder that I survived the story they wrote about me.
Tomorrow I walk into court although it is not a requirement. But I will do it anyway because I refuse to be abstracted. I want to stand there as the symbol of something the system hoped would never materialise: embodied dignity — a visible reminder that I survived the story they wrote about me.
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Tonight, Episode 5 explains how the system prepared the ground.
Tomorrow, my presence in court marks the moment I reclaim it.
Estreno del Episodio 5: “Cuando el Sistema Elimina al Único Médico que Dijo la Verdad”

How Not to Become Subhuman – Nuevo episodio disponible hoy
El Episodio 5 sale en un momento decisivo de mi proceso legal.
Mañana voy a contar con representación legal, pero mi abogado estará en Londres, conectándose por Zoom. El tribunal no requiere mi presencia física. Podría quedarme en casa. Podría seguir la audiencia de manera remota. Podría ser otro nombre silencioso en un recuadro digital.
Pero mañana elijo caminar hacia la Corte de Lewes en persona.
Elijo la presencia por encima de la invisibilidad. Elijo ser visto. Y elijo estar de pie en esa sala no porque el sistema lo exija, sino porque mi dignidad lo exige. Este es el momento en el que mi caso deja de presentarse como un “proceso penal” y se revela por lo que realmente se ha convertido: una confrontación política entre un ciudadano argentino y un conjunto de instituciones británicas que asumieron que yo iba a estar demasiado intimidado, demasiado confundido o demasiado roto para presentarme.

El Episodio 5 muestra exactamente por qué este momento importa. Expone cómo el único psiquiatra que me evaluó correctamente —el único que se tomó el tiempo, revisó la evidencia, reconoció el trauma, confirmó la toxicología negativa y contradijo la ficción fabricada por la policía y el hospital— fue silenciosamente removido. Y cómo una reemplazante fue incorporada para reescribir la verdad con el fin de proteger a esas instituciones.
La fiscalía no ha producido ninguna evidencia sólida. La policía se ha contradicho en cada declaración. El hospital destruyó o retuvo registros críticos. Los servicios de salud mental reconfiguraron mi realidad clínica para protegerse a sí mismos. Lo que queda ya no es un caso legal: es un caso político. Es un individuo enfrentándose a un aparato que intentó quebrarlo mediante silencio, borrado burocrático y fuerza institucional.
Mañana camino hacia la corte porque me niego a ser abstraído. Me niego a ser reducido a un número de expediente o a una presencia remota. Quiero estar allí como el símbolo de algo que el sistema esperaba que jamás se materializara: la dignidad encarnada, una presencia visible e innegable que recuerda que sobreviví a la historia que intentaron escribir sobre mí.
Esta noche, el Episodio 5 explica cómo el sistema preparó el terreno.
Mañana, mi presencia en la corte marca el momento en que lo recupero.





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