This is it!
https://t.co/7SgXCHAP55
This is my website where you can learn about
Danocracy - A Framework for Absolute Democracy
Download the full 15 page paper via the site!
@Hoss_Hopf @bundeskanzler Deutschland sollte überhaupt endlich wieder gestaltet werden.
Auf welche Art - ob effizienter oder sonst wie - kann einem bei der aktuellen Lage schon fast egal sein.
I’m turning 41, but I don’t feel like celebrating.
Our generation is running out of time to save the free Internet built for us by our fathers.
What was once the promise of the free exchange of information is being turned into the ultimate tool of control.
Once-free countries are introducing dystopian measures such as digital IDs (UK), online age checks (Australia), and mass scanning of private messages (EU).
Germany is persecuting anyone who dares to criticize officials on the Internet. The UK is imprisoning thousands for their tweets. France is criminally investigating tech leaders who defend freedom and privacy.
A dark, dystopian world is approaching fast — while we’re asleep. Our generation risks going down in history as the last one that had freedoms — and allowed them to be taken away.
We’ve been fed a lie.
We’ve been made to believe that the greatest fight of our generation is to destroy everything our forefathers left us: tradition, privacy, sovereignty, the free market, and free speech.
By betraying the legacy of our ancestors, we’ve set ourselves on a path toward self-destruction — moral, intellectual, economic, and ultimately biological.
So no, I’m not going to celebrate today. I’m running out of time. WE are running out of time.
@BowesChay The Polish are a strange bunch of people.
They’re completely split between the russophobes, close to those from the Baltics, and conservatives who just care about their country and culture.
And the Germans just cuck at the moment.
@laszloan I wish you good luck for all the tries you need!
She sticks more to her office than resin to once finger.
It’s gonna be tough to eventually get rid of her.
Long live Democracy!
@ThorstenPolleit There’s only one reason and one reason alone for this:
Mismanagement!
Because the wannabe leaders care only about growing their power and influence.
They don’t care about economy and people.
They only care about power.
Do you still believe those politicians are democrats?!
@BowesChay They really have large issues with their self-perception.
Not a single country in the world outside Europe cares about what the EU Commission thinks or demands.
They’ll fade into nothingness soon.
That’s exactly what any nation needs from a government:
Representing nothing but the will of the people.
Let’s see if he delivers that.
And yes, internationally countries should work in mutual interest.
But if you have a government like France, Germany or the UK, where they don’t give a dime for their people’s interests, your country’s pretty mich fucked.
The EU elites use the classic divide & conquer strategy.
They divide the Europeans as a whole - EU vs Russia & Belarus.
They divide the people within - Left vs the rest.
All to strangle their own citizens and destroy every last bit of Freedom.
And then to abuse their own in a full blown war against Russia.
Nothing they do has the actual intention of doing something good for any people.
The inly intention is gaining more power themselves.
Within the EU both Democracy and Freedom are a lie.
If the people really want them, they’ve got to fight for it.
Otherwise let’s hope the war won’t go nuclear.
@BowesChay In a globalized world with still pretty much unlimited access to news it’s difficult to hide the truth forever.
Especially if it’s about such topics like (proxy) wars between nuclear powers.
They might keep people away from education, but they’re still smart enough.
The French government is collapsing.
How is this even possible in a Democracy?
The government and its policies should be backed by the citizens, since they elected the politicians.
That leaves only two options.
1) What the citizens want is simply too much for the country and its economy. Therefore the government reaches a logical dead end which causes its collapse.
2) What the government does is NOT backed by the citizens. Although they might have elected the politicians, they maybe didn’t vote for the ongoing policies. Without the backing of the people and larger parts of the parliament it’s getting increasingly more difficult to push through said policies. Therefore the number of failures of the government increases until its inevitable collapse.
It’s either of the two.
Come to your own conclusion.
A glimpse of the current state of the EU.
That there’s not much Democracy within is a long known fact.
Now referendums about the accession of new member states are also called into question - by Zelenskyy.
Ukraine must be kept outside.
They’re even worse than the EU Commission itself.
If that country gets accepted, all hope for Europe is gone.
It turns out that President Zelenskyy wants to decide what’s best for the Hungarians.
He is once again using his usual tactic of moral blackmail to push countries into supporting his war efforts.
Dear Mr. President,
With all due respect, Hungary has no moral obligation to support Ukraine’s EU accession. No country has ever blackmailed its way into the European Union — and it won’t happen this time either. The EU Treaty leaves no room for ambiguity: membership is decided by the member states, unanimously.
The Hungarian people have made up their minds. They overwhelmingly said no to Ukraine’s EU membership in a referendum.
If you wish to change that, the media campaign you’re waging against Hungary is probably not the best way to make friends.
The day after the failed coup and the raid on presidential palace in Tbilisi, ex-president Salome Zurabishvili made a statement criticizing the storming of the presidential palace. She criticized the storming not because it was illegal but because, according to her, by doing so, the attackers confirmed the legitimacy of President Mikheil Kavelashvili. According to her, this was wrong because she herself is the ‘legitimate president of Georgia’. One may find this delusional statement odd or funny but the reality behind it is much more sinister than appears on the surface.
Political radicalism leads to terror. We saw the confirmation of this truth last Saturday, when an agitated and violent mob invaded the presidential palace in Tbilisi. While hundreds of aggressive protesters stood back in waiting for the next stage of the violent action, special groups, equipped in paramilitary gear (helmets, gas masks, pepper sprays), broke down the fence and tried to occupy the building. When the police managed to repel the attackers and it became obvious that the attempt of the invasion failed, those leaders of the radicals who prepared, encouraged, and led the coup were quick to distance themselves from the terrorist attack.
Ex-president Salome Zurabishvili were among them. That morning, she had already declared that she was not going to vote in municipal elections, held on the same day, but would be part of the radicals’ increasingly aggressive crowd, which had a clear and unequivocally stated goal – to overthrow the democratically elected government of Georgia. In the weeks leading to the attack on presidential palace, the radicals made massive analogies with the recent bloody events in Nepal as their inspiration and the threat to the government.
Salome Zurabishvili has no credibility among the Georgian electorate. Her public support stands close to zero. She has no political resource left. Then, how did she dare to undertake such an adventurous political gamble against the government? The answer is foreign support, which is the only thread that still gives life to her destructive agenda.
Since leaving the office last December, Zurabishvili has never been seen with the public. She only appears, briefly, with the radicals, or with foreign officials. What is particularly unsettling is her illegitimate use of the Presidential standard, the flag which only the incumbent president of Georgia is supposed to use. Zurabishvili takes this symbol everywhere with her, and the foreign officials, seem to be accepting and normalizing her self-declared status.
This is the kind of behavior, which we emphasized before, and which encouraged the radicals and extremists. However, we met a stonewall of silence. This was because the foreign officials either failed to understand their role or played along the radicals so on purpose. In either case, what they did was wrong. Such stonewalling pushed the extremists to what we saw on 4 October.
This is the first time that the radicals targeted the presidential palace, with Zurabishvili lurking in the background. Months of foreign officials’ cultivation of her image as the ‘legitimate’ president of Georgia would enable them to bring in Zurabishvili and thus spark a ‘revolution’. None of radicals’ foreign patrons has yet condemned the mob’s terror attack in Tbilisi. In fact, condemnation would not suffice any more. Those foreigners should also share the responsibility for what happened because their reckless political intrigues led the radicals to staging a coup in Georgia.
@Panchenko_X It’s called westernization.
The elites solely care about their power.
They feel entitled to use and abuse everything and everyone to gain more of it.
They completely eliminated all morals from their strategy.
@AXChristoforou It already falls on the shoulders of the taxpayers.
What else is happening with EU economies and energy prices, with military spendings and welfare cuts?
Her words are simply a tool to make the citizens agree on stealing Russian assets.
@BowesChay I only see true democrats.
Western media taught me that coordinated and violent protests are democratic while elections are generally influenced by Russia.
@BowesChay Another Western attempt to overthrow an elected government.
And their end goal is clear:
To abuse those countries and their citizens to gain more power.
Georgia specifically would be thrown into yet another war against Russia.
@laszloan The people clearly want a different path than the unelected EU rulers.
Creating a counterweight is the first step to enforce Democracy.
Looking at Romania and Moldova it’s still a long way to go, but we’ll get there eventually.