Fier de voir les militaires ukrainiens défiler aux côtés de nos forces. Un symbole de fraternité, de courage et de destin partagé. Pensées au peuple ukrainien qui lutte pour sa liberté et, avec elle, pour celle de tous les Européens.
Incredibly moving Bastille Day fly past in Paris: the Patrouille de France accompanied by two Mirage 2000B fighter jets co-piloted by 🇺🇦 pilots trained by 🇫🇷
On peut critiquer Emmanuel Macron sur beaucoup de choses, mais deux de ses choix seront fondateurs pour notre avenir:
- des lois de programmation militaire impliquant un effort budgétaire important et respectées,
- un engagement sans faille, depuis 2022, en faveur de l’Ukraine, et en coopération avec nos partenaires.
How Russia Weaponized Migration Against the West
When people think of Russian disinformation, they often imagine bots praising Vladimir Putin, conspiracy theories about secret underground NATO biolabs, or memes defending the invasion of Ukraine or making fun of Western leaders. But Russia’s most effective and damaging disinformation campaign in the West doesn’t feature tanks or tyrants. It features immigrants.
For over a decade, Russian state actors and proxy media outlets have relentlessly amplified anti-immigration narratives across Europe and the United States. These narratives, rooted in xenophobia, fear, and identity politics, have proven to be the Kremlin’s sharpest psychological weapon. By exploiting and inflaming fears around immigration, Russia has succeeded in sowing division, radicalizing political discourse, and weakening democracies from within, all without firing a shot.
In many cases, the migration waves that Russia rails against are ones it helped create.
Take Syria. The refugee crisis that shook Europe in 2015 was not simply the result of a civil war. It was driven by an all-out assault on civilian areas carried out jointly by the Assad regime and the Russian military. Russia bombed hospitals, residential neighborhoods, and critical infrastructure, displacing millions of Syrians. The Kremlin was complicit in creating the very conditions that drove people to flee, and then wasted no time in weaponizing the public backlash to their arrival in Europe.
In recent years, Russian and Belarusian authorities have been accused of orchestrating artificial migration pressure on the borders of the EU. Migrants have been funneled toward the borders of Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, and Finland in what can only be described as a hybrid warfare tactic. Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukashenko, a close ally of Putin, even openly threatened to “flood the EU with drugs and migrants” in response to Western sanctions. This isn’t speculation; it’s declared policy.
The core strategy is simple: use real or exaggerated events involving migrants to provoke outrage and mistrust in institutions. Then repeat, over and over again.
RT, Sputnik, and various pro-Kremlin social media channels flooded platforms with stories—some true, many false—about migrant violence, sexual assaults, and alleged government cover-ups. In Germany, Russian media fueled a diplomatic crisis over the fabricated “Lisa case,” falsely claiming that a Russian-German girl had been raped by refugees. In Sweden and Finland, pro-Russian outlets pushed narratives linking immigration to violent crime, despite contradictory evidence. And during the 2016 U.S. election, Russian troll farms saturated social media with anti-Muslim memes and fabricated stories about “migrant invasions.”
These stories tap into legitimate concerns. Mass migration, especially when rapid and poorly managed, does bring real challenges. Many of the migrants arriving in Europe are young men, often traumatized by war. They are entering societies with very different cultural norms, languages, and values. When this is combined with weak integration policies and failing support systems, it creates fertile ground for alienation, frustration, and social fragmentation. These are real issues that deserve honest debate.
But that’s precisely why they’re so effective as disinformation tools. The goal of Russian propaganda isn’t to fabricate a problem; it’s to take a real problem and twist it into something far more toxic.
Russia’s disinformation doesn’t just highlight the challenges of immigration. It amplifies them into existential threats. Migrants are painted as criminals, terrorists, or cultural invaders. Cultural replacement, no-go zones, and a “Great Replacement” theory are hammered into public consciousness through repetition and emotional manipulation.
The Kremlin doesn’t need to invent new narratives. It only needs to supercharge existing ones.
What makes this strategy especially insidious is the role of local actors. Russia’s narratives are picked up and recycled by far-right politicians, nationalist influencers, and conspiracy-minded media outlets. This process, known as information laundering, allows Kremlin-originated content to be repackaged and amplified through domestic channels, stripping away its foreign fingerprints. What begins as a Russian disinformation campaign ends up appearing as legitimate, grassroots opinion, cloaked in the language of democratic debate.
The political consequences are profound. Anti-immigration sentiment has fueled the rise of far-right parties across Europe, from Nigel Farage’s Reform UK to the AfD in Germany. These parties often align with Moscow on foreign policy, oppose European unity, and undermine liberal democratic norms. It’s a massive strategic victory for the Kremlin.
It’s important to stress: talking about the challenges of mass immigration is not xenophobia. Societies must be able to discuss these issues honestly. But when that conversation is hijacked by foreign powers intent on destabilization, we are no longer dealing with public debate. We are dealing with psychological warfare.
So what should be done?
First, we need to recognize the scope of the threat. Disinformation about immigration is not just fringe noise. It is a central pillar of Russia’s hybrid warfare strategy.
Second, we must invest in information resilience. This includes long-term media literacy, early-warning systems for narrative manipulation, and robust independent journalism.
Third, tech platforms must be held accountable. Disinformation about migration thrives on social media because it is emotionally charged, visually compelling, and algorithmically boosted. Platforms must do more to disrupt coordinated campaigns, not just individual bad actors.
Finally, our societies need to get serious about integration. If we fail to help migrants build new lives, we create the very problems that demagogues and disinformers love to exploit. Strong integration policies are not just humane, they are a matter of national security. But if a country cannot effectively integrate incoming migrants—whether due to resource constraints, societal resistance, or systemic dysfunction—it must also reconsider how many it can realistically take in. Compassion must be paired with capacity.
Russia’s most powerful propaganda doesn’t glorify Moscow. It makes the West hate itself: its openness, its diversity, its democratic values. And it does so by weaponizing the most vulnerable people on the planet—those fleeing war, terror, and persecution.
We need to start treating this not just as a media problem, but as a national security emergency. Because as long as we allow our own divisions to be deepened and exploited, the Kremlin will keep winning without a war.
If you want to measure the impact of a European leader, look at how much energy foreign adversaries spend trying to destroy their reputation.
The constant stream of pro-Russian and pro-China propaganda aimed at @kajakallas proves she is a formidable opponent to them, and while the exact powers of the EU High Representative position can potentially be reformed, Kallas has the ideal mindset to confront hostile autocrats.
European capitals have every right to analyze and potentially adjust the bureaucratic mandate of the High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy. Rethinking how the bloc coordinates its external actions is a standard part of institutional evolution, but any systemic flaws in the office cannot be blamed on Kallas.
The concentrated hostility directed at her from state media ecosystems in Russia and China (and some other enemies too) is an involuntary admission that her strategic clarity poses a major problem for them. Their fixation on Kallas confirms her status as a high-stakes obstacle.
She has a profound understanding of the psychological games autocrats play, and she refuses to grant them the passive diplomatic concessions they crave. Her clear, unyielding communication style helps insulate the European Union from the gaslighting tactics that hostile regimes use to manipulate Western policy.
The narrative attacks against her should therefore be viewed as validation of her approach. Discussions about reforming European diplomacy are healthy, but Kallas herself is not the issue, as her defiant attitude is exactly what is needed to face down modern authoritarian threats
Orbán's Foreign Payroll: How Hungary Spent a Fortune to Buy Influence on the Western Right - https://t.co/ghLzXuEtBx
“Besides the MAGA world, there is significant overlap between DI’s fellows and the editorial staff of the British publication UnHerd” https://t.co/dRW043ATa0
The Orbanization of U.S. Media Has Begun
Donald Trump is following Viktor Orbán’s and Vladimir Putin’s playbook to capture America’s media and silence dissent.
Twenty years ago, Putin snuffed out NTV, Russia’s last major independent TV channel, and placed the country’s broadcast networks under state control. Ten years ago, Orbán did the same in Hungary, handing almost every mainstream outlet to loyal oligarchs and turning the press into a government echo chamber.
Today, we see this same playbook being used in the United States, as powerful businessmen and oligarchs move to seize America’s key media institutions.
This is how democracies die in the twenty-first century: not with overt censorship, but with media capture. The Orbanization of American media has begun.
Putin’s method was simple. First, harass independent media owners with legal pressure until they sell or flee. Second, hand their outlets to loyalists tied to the state or security services. Third, flood the media market with state money (currently to the tune of over a billion euros per year of Russian taxpayer money spent on government propaganda media) while starving dissenting voices.
By the mid-2000s, all of Russia’s major television channels, and most of its print and radio outlets, were either state-owned or controlled by Kremlin-loyal oligarchs. Only then came the final step: laws branding critics as “foreign agents” and banning opposition outlets outright. By then, there were not many left to protest.
After consolidating control, Putin went even further, having dissident voices and investigative journalists imprisoned, exiled, or murdered. This ensured that no independent scrutiny of his regime could survive.
Orbán imported this system wholesale. Loyal allies quietly bought up nearly every major Hungarian outlet, consolidating the country’s mainstream press into the Central European Press and Media Foundation (KESMA). In 2018, he issued a decree exempting this media empire from competition or media pluralism review. The state became Hungary’s largest advertiser, showering cash on pro-government media and starving the rest.
Within a few years, independent journalism in Hungary had almost disappeared. Elections still happen, but voters now live inside a government-controlled information bubble. Independent voices have fortunately begun to resurface on social media platforms, yet most of the country’s traditional media remains firmly controlled by Orbán’s allies.
The United States is not there yet, but the pattern is unmistakable.
In Russia and Hungary, oligarchs used fortunes built on state contracts to buy media outlets and convert them into political tools for their patrons. This was the engine of media capture: loyal businessmen acquiring once-independent outlets, then reshaping them into propaganda arms while maintaining the appearance of normal journalism.
In today’s ultra-capitalistic America, there are several figures who could fill this role — tech moguls and billionaires whose influence over news and entertainment rivals that of entire states.
Larry Ellison is now following a strikingly similar model. In 2025, through his son, he took control of Paramount Global and with it CBS News.
Ellison has not said he will use these platforms as partisan tools, but his recent moves suggest the potential for political influence. By taking control of Paramount, he now owns CBS News, MTV, and Nickelodeon — some of the most influential media brands in the country. Reports indicate he is also exploring acquisitions of Warner Bros., Discovery, and even TikTok. Analysts warn that his close political ties and growing concentration of media power could eventually steer editorial lines, echoing how loyal oligarchs captured the press for Viktor Orbán and Vladimir Putin.
He is not alone. Elon Musk’s X has gutted content moderation and supercharged the reach of extremist and partisan narratives, while Rupert Murdoch turned Fox News into a decades-long political weapon that helped mainstream Donald Trump. These are different strategies, but they share the same endgame: private media power deployed to shape public opinion and tilt democratic systems toward their owners’ political interests.
At the same time, the dominant social media platforms where most Americans now get their news are controlled by men whose decisions increasingly align with Trump’s political interests. Mark Zuckerberg’s Facebook and Instagram at Meta use powerful algorithms that shape what hundreds of millions see and believe. Under their leadership, these platforms have dismantled safeguards and amplified partisan propaganda while maintaining a veneer of neutrality.
This is exactly how Putin and Orbán did it: co-opt the gatekeepers, then dictate the narrative.
Once media capture reaches critical mass, the next phase is predictable and has already begun: using state power to intimidate or punish dissent.
Trump and his allies have openly pledged to prosecute journalists they accuse of “treason” or “disinformation.” The conservative blueprint Project 2025 calls for weaponizing the Department of Justice against political opponents and purging civil servants who resist.
Trump has promised to “root out” and “ban” opponents from government and media. His rhetoric echoes Putin’s “foreign agent” laws and Orbán’s purge of Hungary’s last remaining independent outlets.
Pam Bondi, the current United States Department of Justice Attorney General, has said that in a second Trump administration, anyone using what she deems “hate speech” could be investigated and prosecuted. A stunning move in an America usually very critical of European “hate speech” laws — the very same wording the same Republicans were previously so critical about. Authoritarian regimes often start their censorship drives under the guise of combating hate or disinformation, and this framing would allow them to silence virtually any political opposition.
We are already seeing the early signs: threats to revoke broadcast licenses of critical networks, congressional harassment and lawsuits against independent outlets, and the deplatforming and defunding of civil society watchdogs and disinformation researchers after targeted campaigns from MAGA media. Even late-night satire shows are under pressure: Jimmy Kimmel’s Jimmy Kimmel Live! was suspended indefinitely after controversial remarks about Charlie Kirk, and new episodes of South Park were suddenly delayed, officially due to missed deadlines but amid growing backlash over their unorthodox political tone.
This is the point where bias becomes suppression, when the propaganda machine starts actively silencing its rivals.
If Americans want to know where this road leads, they do not have to imagine it. They can just look at Russia: first they took the media, then they took the country.
And only the American people can stop it from happening.
The world crossed a terrifying threshold yesterday when Elon Musk officially became the first trillionaire in human history.
This insane milestone is a symptom of a broken system, proving that the West must radically reform how it tackles wealth inequality before democracy is completely erased.
No human being should ever possess this level of power, particularly an unelected one. Musk has weaponized his massive fortune to dominate strategic state contracts, buy political influence, and control social media discourse. While his personal instabilities and toxic rhetoric make him uniquely hazardous, the core problem is structural. No single individual, no matter how wise or well-intentioned, should ever have the financial leverage to override the collective will of the public.
The ethical failure of this concentrated wealth is staggering. Musk possesses the resources to eliminate massive global issues overnight with a minuscule portion of his fortune, yet he actively chooses to do nothing. Worse, his interference in politics and dismantling of USAID have stripped resources from the world's poorest, contributing to hundreds of thousands of deaths worldwide.
Musk is securing his place in the history books, but it will be as a warning sign rather than an inspiration. A true democracy cannot coexist with a trillionaire class. If Western societies do not implement strict regulations to cap this absurd concentration of power, we are abandoning the concept of a democratic and fair society altogether.
He is the definition of a Bond villain
Donald Trump might dominate the headlines, but JD Vance represents a far more dangerous threat.
He is not his own man. He is an ambitious avatar completely owned by the foreign-born, anti-democratic tech oligarch Peter Thiel.
The relationship between Vance and his billionaire benefactor exposes the dark reality of modern right-wing populism.
Thiel is a profound hypocrite. As an immigrant and a member of a sexual minority, he fully utilized the freedoms, liberalism, and prosperity of California to build his massive tech fortune. Yet, having climbed to the top, Thiel now openly opposes democracy and funds a far-right movement designed to strip those exact freedoms away from everyone else.
A hypocrite of that magnitude naturally grooms a hypocrite to match. Vance has spent his entire adult life shifting his identity, name, faith, and ideology whenever it serves his upward mobility. He famously labeled Trump a toxic fraud and compared him to Hitler, only to completely bend the knee when he realized submission was the path to power.
Unlike Trump, who acts largely on chaotic impulse, Vance is highly professional, methodical, and disciplined in his execution. He is a pure ideological mercenary (his ideology is Peter Thiel’s ideology of the moment). He is so desperate for political validation that he stood by silently while far-right groypers openly insulted his own wife, refusing to defend her just to avoid alienating extreme voters.
When an ultra-ambitious populist with no personal baseline answers directly to a dangerous and insane billionaire, you get a political figure even more dangerous than Trump could ever be
Why would one of France’s most powerful media magnates leverage his entire network to defend a country that is actively waging a hybrid war against his country?
Whether driven by hidden financial incentives, blackmail, or an alignment of radical ideologies, Vincent Bolloré’s behavior points to a deliberate betrayal of France.
When RT France was banned, Bolloré essentially revived its mission by hiring its former boss, Xenia Fedorova. Under her considerable influence, his media empire has been transformed into a primary vector for hostile Russian state propaganda.
The network routinely manufactures lies to defend Moscow's invasion and shield the Kremlin from accountability. This sustained disinformation campaign systematically minimizes the horrific atrocities being committed in Ukraine.
This Kremlin narrative reached a new peak today with a front-page layout demanding an immediate restoration of French-Russian ties. By interviewing traitorous far-right politicians aligned with Moscow on the topic, the JDNews directly undermines French security during an active hybrid war.
This strategy is a financial failure. Shifting toward overt foreign propaganda has caused a decrease in viewership across key platforms like CNews.
This leaves the public to wonder what the Kremlin truly has on him. Is he on a secret payroll, suffering under blackmail, or simply acting as a traitor to France out of personal conviction?
France needs to finally stand up to him and do something about it
.@Atlatszo obtained Danube Institute contracts — a central hub in Orbán's push to link European right-wing populists with MAGA. Right before the election, it signed record-value deals abroad, spending public funds to expand on the Anglo-American right. https://t.co/O5kGworQdb
CIA Analyst: Please laugh at Donald Trump
If you’ve been on social media the past few days, you’ve probably seen something about the season premiere of South Park being a “brutal takedown” or “making a total mockery” of Donald Trump.
We usually avoid celebrating news items like this because most of us are skeptical that making fun of Trump has any impact at all.
That was until we saw this message from former CIA employee Jessica John that we want to share with you today.
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As a former CIA leadership analyst who spent years covering Putin, let me tell you something: the South Park satire of the president is exactly what we need more of.
For much of my career, I studied authoritarian leaders—especially Vladimir Putin. I watched how power calcifies around them, how their sense of self expands until they see any criticism as existential threat (because it is).
These men (and yes, they’re always men) aren’t just controlling. They’re performing. For their inner circle. For the public. For the mirror. And like any good performance, it depends on the audience taking them seriously.
Which is why satire is so powerful… and so threatening. Not because it challenges their policies, but because it punctures the illusion. It tells the crowd, “This isn’t a strongman. It’s a clown in a crown.”
If you want to get under the skin of a malignant narcissist, you don’t fight fire with fire. You fight with mockery. You starve them of the image they’re trying to project. You take away the awe and replace it with absurdity.
That’s what South Park gets right. It doesn’t argue. It doesn’t moralize. It diminishes. And when a society starts laughing at power, rather than fearing it, change becomes possible.
It’s not about “respecting the office.” It’s about refusing to participate in the myth that power equals greatness. Satire reminds us that emperors are often naked (with small pee pees)… and sometimes extremely dumb.
I’m not saying ridicule replaces policy change or activism (we need a shit ton of that too), but it creates breathing room. It breaks the spell. It helps people see. And for regimes that rely on illusion, that can be fatal.
As someone who studied Putin’s shape-shift from KGB functionary to geopolitical villain, I can tell you—in the beginning, he feared being laughed at more than being criticized. Because laughter is contagious. It spreads faster than fear.
So keep laughing. Keep creating. Keep satirizing. Authoritarians may control institutions, but they can’t survive mass disillusionment. And nothing disillusions like a punchline.
Authoritarianism feeds on reverence. Satire feeds on truth.
Guess which one lasts longer?
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It turns out that all the memes, the jokes, and even calling them “weird” might matter, and that’s good news we couldn’t keep to ourselves.
They are weird. Donald Trump is gross and a joke and extremely self-conscious.
So when the world seems too dark and you don’t know what more you can do to resist, just laugh at them. Laugh at how absurd they are. Mock them publicly. Poke at their egos, and have fun with the chaos.
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https://t.co/Wti1Ifhg2Q is committed to preserving the history of Donald Trump and his lifetime of crimes and corruption. For more messages like these, find us on Substack. You can support our work at https://t.co/GAKOoQwISf
🔴 NEW A Hostile Foreign State Could ‘Buy A UK Election For Just £25m’
By Andy Pryce
A former UK diplomat who spent a decade tracking Russian influence operations explains how open our politics is to foreign capture
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READ ON: https://t.co/wbwXYuSPfH
.@Atlatszo obtained contracts from the Danube Institute, a key node in Orbán's network linking European right-wing populists with MAGA. Just before the election, it signed record-value deals, using public funds to court Anglo-American right-wingers. https://t.co/dvJTykQPPY