The positive aspect of the European crisis and the Ukrainian issue is that many citizens are coming to understand that borders in Europe are not fixed.
Despite the legalistic nonsense expressed by representatives of the “Greek” rogue regime, borders will change in Europe, either violently or peacefully.
After all, in recent European history, borders have changed, regardless of whether the euro-slaves avoid such acknowledgments to prevent dangerous associations: the dissolution of Czechoslovakia, the dissolution of Yugoslavia, the invasion of Cyprus, the reunification of Germany, the secession of Kosovo, the grey-zoning of the Aegean sea, and now the change of borders in Ukraine.
At the same time, other types of borders are constantly changing: the economic, demographic, and cultural borders of Europe have undergone enormous transformations compared to the 1990s.
In the US, the government completely rejects the international liberal order and its rules, and reinstates the right of might and geopolitical competition based on spheres of influence.
We are at a turning point in history where gradual changes over many years have accumulated social energy, which is now being released in condensed time.
It is abundantly clear that the change of borders will become a rule, and the sooner Greek society understands this, the better it will be for them.
However, if the people continue to believe the nonsense of every government official who waves the Treaty of Lausanne or other international treaties as valid and as deterrents against border changes to our detriment, then we will indeed suffer a new national disaster.
The era we live in carries risks but also great opportunities. The issue is to seize the opportunities with the least possible risk and to change the borders in favor of Greece.
My prediction is that after the fall of the Euro-Atlantic empire, we will see a situation similar to that which Europe experienced after the fall of the Western Roman Empire, where in a very short time a number of new states were created, new kingdoms emerged, and the era of feudalism began after the Roman fragmentation.
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