![]()
The world is constantly changing. However, during the Biden regime from 2021 to late 2024, much of the West was embroiled in the "Ukraine Project", the COVID pandemic and committed to bogus WEF constructs stemming from "The Great Reset" like climate change, trans-humanism, gender dysporia, and diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI).
Promoted by a well-funded, obedient censorship and propaganda complex otherwise known as the mainstream media (MSM), Europe, UK commonwealth nations and the United States citizens became transfixed and unmoved by the spectacle of deviancy that was thrown in their faces while the upper echelons of politicians, celebrities, and war-mongers absconded with untold amounts of wealth through bribery, fake news, kickbacks, and corrupt policies.
The most pressing issues for Europe as a whole, plus the British Isles are economy, immigration, and regulation. Many EU nations are suffering under heavy taxation with particular emphasis on the VAT (value added tax) which makes everything more expensive and serves to feed the policymakers in Brussels. Regulations abound, adding to the depth of the bureaucracy and annoyance of the citizenry. Immigration has been the bane of EU countries and has nearly ruined the largest ones. When the economic hammer falls hard on Europe with the end of hostilities in Ukraine and imposition of tariffs by the U.S., there is likely to be further fracturing of the common bonds that currently serve to keep Europe from breaking up into its original conglomeration of separate states.
England, Scotland, Ireland, Canada, Australia (UK): Most, if not all, of England proper's big cities, like Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, Liverpool, but especially London, hav been ravaged with the dystopia of the prior four years and many before that. Much of England has been overrun by immigrants, legal and otherwise, thanks to socialist policies enacted by the British parliament which allowed native Brits to be subjugated into second class status with the favoring of outsiders over originals. The levels of reverse discrimination are extreme and damaging. Many parts of cities are no-go zones for whites, some are ruled over by Sharia law and the degree to which England has acquiesced to the demands and tribalism of the invitees is alarming. There may be no going back and England, as do many of its European neighbors on the continent face a period of radical extremism and apathetic government the likes of which are unprecedented.
The authoritarianism of the British police and legal system is off the charts. British citizens are being arrested, fined, and often jailed for righteous indignation, expressed in street congregations and online. British censorship of its native population has grown into an overwhelming Orwellian dilemma.
Similar conditions are appearing with more frequency in Scotland and Ireland. Commoners, as they are known, are increasingly treated as chattel, subject to the whims of parliament or local jurists. The outcry from the working class is drowned out by indignation from the elites. In many ways, the Magna Carta has been shredded.
Canada and Australia, being much larger land masses, might fare better, especially in the hinterlands and rural enclaves where common sense still has a say in matters of jurisprudence and civility. Life takes on a much different tone in place like Calgary or Winnipeg than in Toronto, Quebec, or Ottawa. Australians are discovering more backbone, though government leadership continues efforts to quell the outspoken and reduce the working class to a singular mob. Where England fails, Canada and Australia, being well removed geographically from the political center force have a chance at normalcy or what life was like 30 years ago. Wokeism and the cultural objectivism of identity politics is being rejected by many who are unhappy and seeking change.
France: Paris is a war zone. French politicians have allowed immigration from Muslim countries to overwhelm the city. There are entire sections of the "city of light" that have become enclaves of the darkest, most vile destitution. As is the case with many large cities and capitals of Europe, Paris has self-fragmented and the government is reluctant, if not powerless, to stop the sectarianism and clash of cultures that has proceeded over the last thirty years. A second generation of Muslims is emerging, more violent and anti-authoritarian than the first. Street violence is commonplace. Infrastructure is dilapidated and dysfunctional in many neighborhoods.
The French parliament, unwilling to accept or even listen to the voices of reason from conservatives, managed to form a coalition of minor socialist parties over the mandate from the people who largely elected conservatives in the latest fiasco voting rounds. France, of all the European states, is likely to suffer worst of all. Their inattentiveness to burgeoning immigration has the entire country on tenterhooks. It's unlikely that the government - largely a lap-servant of the aristocracy in Brussels - can govern, much less survive.
Germany: If France is showing no backbone, Germany, just 35 years out from re-unification, is devolving into a socialist nanny-state. Many native Germans have already left the scene after unopposed immigration on a massive scale, all in the name of advancing the economy, has collapsed the bond between Germans and their government. The conditions in the big cities of Berlin, Munich, Dusseldorf and Hamburg have become unbearable for middle class people, trapped between censorship of their views, hatred from the people they welcomed as workers, and a government that is not just condescending but often outright hostile to its own valued citizens.
Germany just had an election, and, like France, conservatives won a solid percentage of seats. But, also like France, the liberal parties have banded together to form a government that promotes the tired, worn-out values of the Ukraine-Covid-Climate agenda rather than facing the reality that the country has been gutted by high energy prices and massive business failures. The economy is going in reverse in Germany. Many of the larger industrial concerns are considering moving to the United States, on the promise of lower regulatory requirements, a stable, meritorious workforce, and, by relocating, the ability to make and sell products within the United States tariff-free.
As much as the German upper class frowns upon America and its re-invigorated leadership, business is business after all, and Trump has the upper hand.
Italy: Long taken for granted by the leadership in the European Union, Italy has lately been seen as an emergent dissatisfied nation. Under the leadership of Georgia Meloni, Italy has slowly and begrudgingly begun to reverse policies implemented by decades of corrupt leadership, from Silvio Berlusconi to Matteo Renzi to Mario Draghi. The economy has been stabilized, immigration flows slowed or altogether halted and Italian citizens are hopeful for a 21st century Renaissance that will bring about cultural and political change. In many ways, Italy, if it can successfully free itself from EU domination, offers hope for the future.
Spain and Portugal: Sharing the Iberian peninsula, the two countries share similar pasts and are likely to experience much the same fates in the future. More aligned toward peace and independence, the identities of both Spain and Portugal have been maligned over the centuries by in-fighting and political disagreements arising over factionalism, Socialism, Fascism, and Democracy. There's always been arguments over ruling rights at the top, often in deference to those of the lower social strata.
Lately, the socialists have been winning, but, like their neighbors on the Mediterranean, Italy and Greece, the populace has over many centuries developed a sense of disdain toward government and political leadership in general. Most people just want to live and work and raise families much in the tradition of their ancestors. Because Spaniards and Portuguese are generally tolerant of their government's missteps, the countries have never fully embraced the pan-European project out of Brussels and would be among the more likely candidates to leave the EU should defections begin to become realistic. Spanish and Portuguese citizens, having low regard for politics and politicians in the first place, might stand the best chance at surviving upheaval in Europe and possibly thriving in a new. redesigned Europe.
Greece: As the one country in Europe that faced complete bankruptcy and rejection of all of Europe's problems and dictates, Greece may seize upon the opportunity of European disunity to remake itself. Having already been thoroughly gutted financially by the ECB and its tentacles of banking, finance and the unholy euro currency, Grecians have little to lose if Europe disintegrates. Their economy, based largely on tourism, could thrive and the native Greeks have centuries of familiarity with Turks, Arabs, Muslims, and other ethnic travelers.
In many ways, Greece, by its simple complacency, adherence to old world values, and lack of serious debt overhang may already be emerging out from under the heavy thumb of Brussels. As Southern European nations know well, black markets are often the innovators of new ideas and movements. After the damage done to it by the EU bankers, government in Greece is largely hands-off and looking the other way when it comes to commerce, be it licit or otherwise. Along with the island nations of Cyprus and Malta, there's hope in Athens.
Poland: While the Poles have not adopted the euro as the common currency and are one of the more recent entrants into the EU, their acceptance of the basic EU understandings demonstrates that their leadership is not fully trusted by the people for their overall welfare. Poland remains the country most severely stressed by the situation in Ukraine, for obvious geographical reasons. As a people, they remain as untrusting of Russia as they do of Germany, thus their accession into the union was most likely a political placebo, shoved down the throats of the Polish people as a means to establish some degree of security. As conditions evolve, if Poland envisions little to no threat from Russia, they may begin to see European Union membership as more a hindrance than a benefit, especially if the U.S. continues to pull back from NATO guarantees, which is a likely position. Poland might find itself in a tight spot with choices to make and they very well might choose to go their separate way.
Eastern Europe: The countries closest to the Ukraine are still suffering from neocon and EU over-influence. Romania, Austria, Slovakia, Slovenia, Croatia, Hungary, Bulgaria and Czechia have all been treated unfairly by the leadership in Brussels and are on the brink of exploding into outright revolt. Viktor Orban, the strong, defiant, conservative leader of Hungary has allies in the other slavic states, but the degree to which the EU dominates is a great impediment to lasting freedom.
If there's anywhere that the beginnings of a European divorce could commence it is likely to be in one or more of these fringe nations. Conservative values run high and deep and the people are none too pleased with EU policies that condescend to them and treat them as vassals. Trouble is brewing in Eastern Europe. Trump's foreign policy will aid in their struggle and possibly help further dissent, leading to repudiation of the Brussels mandates.
Low Countries: Belgium, Luxembourg, Netherlands: Slave states to the European Union, particularly Belgium, where dictates emanate from Brussels. The countries have barely emerged from old European monarchies or feudalism. The small populations have little voice, less power. People simply survive on whatever is offered by the ruling elites. As nations go, they are inconsequential and totally enmeshed with EU policy, from taxation to regulation to subjugation. In a European break-up, they are likely to be the last remnants of a failing regime as they were among the original founders of the EU.
Scandinavia: Denmark, Sweden, Finland: While these northernmost countries are more autonomous than say, Germany, France or Italy, they nonetheless are an important part of the economic bloc that forms the EU. Other than Sweden, which has had its population ravaged by an influx of North African and Middle East immigration, they are more stable than others, and Denmark, in particular, has shown significant opposition to EU policies. Farmer protests in recent years have yielded some degree of concession to the insane climate regulations pushed upon them, but the fight will not end there. Of countries that may wish to pursue their own interests rather than those of the larger EU bloc, these countries are among the more likely to do so. Of them, Denmark and Sweden have not adopted the common currency, the Euro, which may be an indication of their overall disdain for Brussels.
Baltics: Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania: As small as they are, these countries are not likely to rise up against the EU leadership unless offered better conditions aligning with Russia, which is very close by. That is an unlikely scenario, however, as the EU has dug its claws deeply into the politics and economies of these very dependent nations.
While there's little chance that the EU will implode and countries exit over the next few years, there is no doubt going to be economic, political, and social stress that will lead to less emphasis on policies coming out of Brussels, Paris, and Berlin and towards more autonomy in some of the countries. The largest counties - Britain (which is no longer an EU member), Germany, and France are the ones under the most pressure as their citizens are notably unhappy about current conditions are have already begun to rise up against government control, be it of their own parliament or from the dictates from Brussels. The political over-class that is the European Commission has been blind and deaf to the people's reality and their concerns, a situation that will either be resolved by more authoritarian governing from on high or revolutions from below.
Europe faces grave dangers in the years ahead.
|
Your ad could be in the next issue of idleguy.com for as little as $6 per month. Contact Fearless Rick using the form on page 12 for more information.
|