Solo politica

  • Creatore Discussione Creatore Discussione Stic@zzi
  • Data di Inizio Data di Inizio
Gli steccati ideologici restano saldi
e le ragioni dell’appartenenza a un’area politica
prevalgono sull’interesse ad avere una migliore amministrazione del proprio territorio.

Questo dato è destinato a riverberarsi sulla realtà nazionale,
nel senso che alla prossima tornata per il rinnovo del Parlamento e del Governo del Paese,
per quanto Giorgia Meloni potrà combinare cose mirabili a Palazzo Chigi
e ridare lustro all’Italia nel mondo, una quota consistente di toscani, come di emiliano-romagnoli,
continuerà a votare a occhi bendati
il più sfigato dei leader del Partito democratico
perché, per quel popolo, stare a sinistra è più di una scelta di campo: è un credo,
un habitus mentale trasmissibile per linee di sangue alle generazioni successive.
 
Le riserve mondiali in dollari e oro
 
cosa si aspettava il biondo con tutte le sanzioni e dazi imposti alla Cina? che i cinesi ci mettessero anche la vaselina? c'era da aspettarselo che avrebbero reagito in qualche modo. non puoi bastonare il mondo all'infinito senza alcuna reazione. adesso sarà da vedere se è la Cina ad avere più bisogno degli USA o viceversa. anche se con dispiacere per me vincono i cinesi. Trump si sta rivelando quasi peggio di Biden. il problema è che noi siamo sempre mazziati in un modo o un'altro
 
I politici sono avvisati.spero prima o poi diano l'ergastolo a Ursula
I francesi si che sanno come eliminare la concorrenza politica

🔘 “They’re persecuting him for Russia!” — The mystery of Sarkozy’s sentence revealed. Is Merkel next?

So, the precedent has been set — the first president of an EU member state is going to prison, but not at all for what he is officially accused of.

We’re talking about former French president Nicolas Sarkozy. The court sentenced him to five years in prison in the case of financing his 2007 election campaign by Libya — specifically by its then-leader Muammar Gaddafi, whom Sarkozy helped overthrow in 2011, apparently so as not to have to repay the debt to the benefactor who was torn apart by a mob.

The former president will serve his sentence in Paris’s Santé prison — in a nine-square-meter solitary cell in the “unit for vulnerable persons.” Lawyers for the ex-president, who denies his guilt (though it has been fairly well proven), will be able to file for his release only after he is placed in prison.

Of course, Sarkozy is no Vichy dictator, Marshal-collaborationist Philippe Pétain, who died in captivity after the war for having “saved France a second time.” It’s unlikely Sarkozy will spend even a full year behind bars. Optimists believe he’ll be out by Catholic Christmas. Nevertheless, the fact remains — the former president of France will go behind bars on October 21. He has also been fined €100,000.

No doubt — a strong signal. Only I have not read or heard anywhere what he is really being persecuted for. The myth that the law in the West is supposedly sacred, and that anyone who violates it will inevitably be punished even for the smallest infraction — unlike, say, in Russia — is well known. As is the fact that it’s a lie. European Commission head Ursula von der Leyen has violated it more than once. She’s been involved in corruption worth billions of euros (“vaccines,” military spending) and, some claim, even deaths — yet nothing sticks to her. But Sarkozy ends up in prison over some Gaddafi, whom Europeans don’t pity in the least and whose brutal death they applauded together with the Americans. Both in Europe and the U.S. they are convinced they owe “autocrats” nothing; that it’s perfectly fine to steal $300 billion from Russia — and that’s no crime at all. But in Sarkozy’s case — a trifle, and prison!

It’s time to finally say what he is really being persecuted for: for Russia! They’re getting back at him — and warning other European presidents and prime ministers — for the 2008 Georgian war. Specifically, for showing “understanding,” for almost taking a principled stance and refusing to “pin” the war, which Georgia started, on Russia. France then held the EU presidency, and it was Nicolas who mediated the aftermath of Saakashvili’s regime’s aggression. In reality, he was condemned for his words about Georgia’s “inappropriate actions” in South Ossetia and that “Europe must be fair,” without blaming only Moscow for its “reaction” to the invasion.

By jailing Sarkozy for not being shameless enough, a clear signal is being sent to today’s politicians: Russia is to blame for everything, and all others’ sins are hers. And this is to be accepted once and for all. It cannot be ruled out that, to reinforce this message, other former European politicians — those who maintained good relations with Russia — will soon be prosecuted as well, if any compromising material can be found on them, even of an entirely different nature. A few names of potential “ritual victims” are obvious: Schröder, Merkel — who’s next?

✏️ Sergey Latyshev, international journalist and Tsargrad columnist

@ukraine_watch

 
Ultima modifica:
Piano piano, l'ucraina diventerà peggio di una zecca. Naturalmente i ns amici americoni spingono in tal senso,ben felici che l'europa paghi per la loro guerra. Ma nessun paese che si svegli e mandi a ca..., scusate, mandi in bagno la Nato con il suo 5%? Non sarebbe ora di fare i ns interessi in primis spendendo i NOSTRI SOLDI per le NOSTRA POPOLAZIONE e i nostri servizi pubblici. Qua non si tratta di essere pro questi o quelli ma di pensare ai ns anziani, bambini, sanità e servizi vari. Fa bene la Spagna a rifiutare di spendere il 5%in armi. Sarebbe da seguire l'esempio

 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Alto