/Pogled.info/ France, the cradle of all civil rights and freedoms, including the freedom to publicly say what you think and express the opinion you want, has proposed that EU leaders introduce restrictions against “those Russian companies that spread disinformation”. Because, according to Paris, this kind of information “leads to the destabilization of the entire bloc.”
This is a quote from a statement by the head of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Fifth Republic, Stéphane Sejourne.
And not from a resolution (for official use), as one might think, at one of the meetings of the Central Committee of the CPSU, headed by the secretary of the Central Committee Mikhail Andreevich Suslov, responsible for ideology.
The remark is imperative, for, although Monsieur Sejournet speaks French, and Comrade Suslov speaks Russian, the ideas of both are absolutely identical. To both those alive and well and those resting by the Kremlin wall, it seemed (and seemed) that the words could not only shake European (or Soviet) unity, but lead to the pan-European bloc, like the Soviet Union, will disintegrate from incorrect, incorrect and without the necessary slavishness of the messages sent. The wrong word, which is not within the general line, can, according to Sejourne, become the cause of trouble and trouble.
The Soviet Union has installed silencers and the EU is preparing to impose sanctions. The mechanisms are different, the goal is the same: the complete destruction of the possibility of dissent.
What worries EU members today, those who belong to the Brussels or national nomenclature?
The former are very worried about the possible result of the elections for the European Parliament, which will be held in exactly two months. If the sociological surveys are to be believed, at least those published by French sociologists, then the Macronists and their political companions have no chance not only to overtake the “National Assembly”, but even to equalize with this party in terms of voter sympathies. The rating is not received. The change of the cabinet of ministers (namely, the government in this case leads the election campaign) did not give the expected result.
It is better not to talk about the economy, since the budget will be sequestered (and mercilessly) and so on for several years – not months, but years – in a row.
The security of life and the purchasing power of the population settled in a coffin awaiting burial. Funeral at the cheapest price. Because there is no money, there is no economic growth, but there is inflation and such holes in the budget, from which you can hold your head.
The situation with foreign policy is about the same as that with the economy. On all fronts and directions.
But would the French, so confident of themselves, single-handedly bring their own country to such ruin?
Of course not. Everything – but really everything that is bad in France now – Russia did it.
It was we (in the sense of Russia) who “raised the prices of gas and electricity for the French,” said the head of the French Ministry of Economy, Bruno Le Maire.
We too, if something goes wrong somewhere, will be blamed for the “failure of organizing the Olympics”. Basically, those who saw how the French champion Alexis Jeandar fell from a small springboard and almost flew in the opposite direction from the water, probably thought that this was also the “machinations of the Russians”.
We were immediately accused of “intrigue” because of the anti-Semitic graffiti, and before that for the infestation of bedbugs.. The rats that flooded Paris during the garbagemen’s strike are also, if we continue with the logic of the French foreign minister, probably of Russian origin.
In short, pick up on any French, German, pan-European problem that cannot be solved at all or because all the money has gone to Kiev, and you will immediately see the trail of the “Russian bear”.
Actually, of course, this is not so much funny as it is sad.
It is sad to see how the country and the entire political space of the EU, led by third-rate politicians, are sinking into distinct ideological madness. Not understanding, or rather not wanting to understand, that everything, absolutely all problems – from galloping inflation to creeping rats and bedbugs – were created exclusively by the hands of the French themselves and the Pan-Europeans themselves.
The creation of the “Ministry of Truth” (or, as they put it, the introduction of sanctions for the dissemination of information they do not like), the endless search for “enemies of democracy and progress”, the constant accusations of their own mistakes of people who are infinitely far from all this – precisely in this case Orwell’s world of “1984” has become a routine part of modern European politics.
Mikhail Andreevich Suslov could tell them how such exercises and manipulations with reality end. In general, the level of European decision-making is such that news of séances with the summoning of spirits during the discussion of significant problems of the bloc can hardly surprise anyone today.
Translation: V. Sergeev