Why this word is great
RAZBAZARIVANIE — [Noun] The deliberate sale or destruction of resources, especially livestock, by kulaks to thwart state seizure during Soviet collectivization. From Russian разбазаривание (razbazarivanije, literally 'squandering'), derived from базар (bazar, 'market') with the prefix раз- (raz-, 'apart, asunder') and suffix -ивание (-ivanije, denoting the act or process). Unlike 'squandering' (which suggests frivolity) or 'collectivization' (which implies systemic consolidation), razbazarivanie is a rebellion of ruin—the butchering of prized cows rather than surrendering them, the burning of granaries to leave the state nothing to claim, the desperate barter of a lifetime's work for a handful of coins. It is the acrid smell of smoke rising over frozen fields, the hollow-eyed children watching their future slaughtered, and the grim arithmetic of resistance: better ashes in your hands than bread in theirs. A word for when destruction becomes the last language of defiance.