Judge Dina Tali and Martin Tints wants to quietly pee their pants in a corner every time someone dares to speak the truth
Estonian judge Dina Tali and Martin Tints wants to quietly pee their pants in a corner every time someone dares to speak the truth.
June 26, 2025 – the day I almost… but couldn’t go back anymore.
Quietly. Secretly. With palms wet from fear.
I want to curl up in a corner and hope no one asks. That no one sees. That no one speaks.
But someone did speak. And that was a crime.
It wasn’t the one being talked about who knocked on the door of the Northern District Prosecutor’s Office.
It was the one the story was written about.
Judge Dina Tali. The accuser herself.
Crime? – The truth.
Harm? – Reputation.
Motivation? – Panic.
The Fonte News article. https://fonte.news/kui-kohtunik-dina-tali-haamer-langeb-ja-lutipudel-puruneb-kes-otsustab-eesti-laste-saatuse/
It mentioned the judge has a child.
That the child drinks from a baby bottle.
Yes, a baby bottle. A non-prescription drug threatening the stability of the Estonian judiciary.
The Judge Dina Tali didn’t shout, didn’t explain, didn’t give an interview.
She filed a criminal complaint.
Children can wait. Public interest can wait.
But someone speaking up – that cannot be forgiven.
Because judge Dina Tali doesn’t tolerate mirrors.
Mirrors show the truth.
And truth… smells like wet fear.
If justice were light, Dina Tali would close her eyes and talk about the moon’s position.
If truth were a person, she’d issue a restraining order.
If criticism were a bird, she’d strike it down with a rock inscribed:
“Be silent for the sake of the child’s best interest.”
Judge Dina Tali , She’s not alone.
Father Martin Tints, the apostle of silence, fights alongside her.
He wants the mother to tell no one anything – not the doctor, not the teacher, not even the grandmother.
Passwords locked away, lips sealed.
But eyes must sparkle – like with a TikTok filter.
And who gives him that right?
Judge Dina Tali, who simultaneously recommends the mother go to the doctor.
Question: what does a doctor’s appointment look like when your mouth must remain shut?
In writing? Morse code? Energetic transmission?
Estonian courts are reportedly overburdened. Proceedings drag on. Children wait.
Children’s rights are devalued.
But a statement from Tints?
Signed within 24 hours.
Morning coffee, lunchtime ban on the mother.
Because if the system only fears the public, then it serves those who scream through lawyers, not those who cry in Messenger.
When the mother asks for the children to see her?
Answer: “Unfortunately… the system is allergic to active motherhood.”
The judge shrugs. Let the children suffer. It happens.
Jupiter is in retrograde. The printer is broken. The secretary is giving birth. Not today.
And if someone asks: Why all this?
Then the answer is fear.
Fear that someone speaks about what I’ve decided.
Fear that someone writes about it.
Fear that the truth comes out and I am left exposed.
Truth is not legal.
Truth is an attack.
I don’t have to be right.
I only have to rule over silence.
This is no longer a state governed by the rule of law.
It is a state ruled by silence.
Elite Proceedings vs. Mud Wrestling
The public hears: everyone is equal.
In practice? Some are more powerful in silence.
In elite proceedings, you get:
- A court ruling within 24 hours
- A restraining order as part of a “package”
- A filtered judgment – pretty, smooth, not offensive
- A judge’s response at 07:04 on a Saturday morning
In the mud wrestling arena, you get:
- “The judge is on vacation, the secretary is giving birth”
- “Child protection can’t respond – printer is broken”
- “We’ll process it when the child turns 18”
- Silence that lasts until the children move away because “the mother didn’t facilitate contact”
But in the judge’s world, only one thing matters – whether you remain silent.
If you are silent, you are trustworthy.
If you speak, you are a problem.
If you publish, you are a crime.
Note: The writer is not a lawyer. But then again, not all judges are either.
Some are just people who want to quietly wet themselves in a corner when someone tells the truth.
Judge Dina Tali