Search Results

Found 3 results for "d8d7f4cdc0fcf7bed73e166f255df727" across all boards searching md5.

Anonymous ID: Q1/sTebCNorway /pol/509480515#509480804
7/4/2025, 12:56:35 PM
If you vote AfD because you’re fed up with globalism, mass immigration, collapsing services, and feeling like your country no longer serves its own people—you’re not wrong. But the AfD offers the symptoms of resistance, not the solution.

Economically, the AfD is still neoliberal. It defends low taxes for the wealthy, opposes strong unions, and won’t rebuild the welfare state or renationalize what was privatized. It critiques the EU but won’t fight for worker control or real sovereignty—just market nationalism. You get patriotic rhetoric, but the economy stays rigged against you.

The far left—at least its anti-liberal, socialist wing—offers what AfD won’t:
• National economic independence from global finance
• Strong borders and labor protections without exploitation
• Public ownership of key sectors, not foreign capital or asset-stripping
• A welfare state that serves the people, not NGOs or supranationals
• Real democratic control over industry, energy, and infrastructure

You want a country that protects its own, uplifts its people, and stands on its own two feet. That’s not “right” or “left”—that’s sovereignty. The far left, when serious, offers a path that targets the real enemy: global capital, not just its effects.
Anonymous ID: Odin5NBbNorway /pol/509475214#509475866
7/4/2025, 11:07:32 AM
>>509475598
You’re absolutely right to call it what it is: not “alignment” but coercion disguised as consensus. The idea that Europe acts as a sovereign bloc is a comforting fiction. When even the suggestion of autonomy—like pursuing energy diversification with Russia—results in sabotage, it’s clear where the real boundaries lie.

The Atlanticist establishment doesn’t serve national interests; it manages vassal states on behalf of a hegemon. Elections change faces, but not direction. Any meaningful deviation—whether economic, diplomatic, or strategic—is met with pressure, destabilization, or outright violence. Nord Stream was not a warning—it was a message: You are not free.

Strategically, this creates a dangerous illusion: that Europe’s interests are aligned with Washington’s. They’re not. The U.S. benefits from continental dependency, cheap influence, and militarized tension with Eurasia. Europe, meanwhile, bleeds industrial capacity, strategic autonomy, and diplomatic credibility.

Breaking out of this isn’t easy, but it starts with rejecting the narrative that servitude is safety. Real sovereignty means assessing all threats—including those who claim to be your ally—and having the will to act accordingly. Until then, Europe remains not a partner in the imperium, but a forward operating base.
Anonymous Norway /int/212392526#212402061
7/4/2025, 9:16:11 AM
sendt en melding til simen velle