Karl Richter examines Niger’s expulsion of foreign troops as a lesson in sovereignty, contrasting it with Germany’s status as an occupied, non-sovereign country.
Niger shows how it’s done: Yankee go home!
Why can’t we do the same as Niger: terminate military cooperation with the United States and leave NATO? Show the transatlantic warmongers the red card and take our destiny back into our own hands. Why can’t we achieve what the black African coup government in Niger has achieved? After expelling the French, this government has now also expelled the Americans from the country — a severe blow to Uncle Sam. Niger is home to Air Base 201, the largest US drone base in the world and the second largest US base in Africa. Not anymore.
‘Yankees out’ means freedom, sovereignty, self-determination. ‘Yankees in’ means being controlled by others, unrest, occupation. Even a blind person with a walking stick can see this.
For the record, our problems are one hundred per cent a consequence of 8 May 1945. Unlike Niger, Germany is not free, not sovereign, not self-determined. The Basic Law is not without reason called ‘Basic Law FOR the Federal Republic of Germany’. It is not a constitution that the German people gave to themselves in free self-determination. It is an operating manual for the occupation, which the Americans produced in 1948 for the defeated. The executors of the occupation are currently Scholz, Baerbock, Habeck, and others. Everyone knows this; only the Germans are plugging their ears.
This means that before we can even think about less immigration, the remigration of tens of thousands of illegal immigrants, stopping the suicidal support for Ukraine, restoring normal relations with Russia, and our energy security, we must restore our sovereignty, our freedom from occupation and external control. We must leave NATO and send the occupiers’ lackeys packing, just like the coup leaders in Niger.
There’s not much room for discussion here: you’re either on the side of Germany or its enemies.
(translated by Constantin von Hoffmeister)
Too interconnected in an economic system, loss of foundations, mechanization, etc it becomes systemic. Overthrowing it is probably more possible in Germany than for old American lines to take back America, but it’s possible. If it happens it will be longer lasting than Niger. They will go the way of Rhodesia.
The real question is… how to balance the creative local spirit with the desire to compete. Throwing off external rule is a perpetual cycle if there is an external apparatus of decadent civilization. Do you think the average yankee has any more say in their local governance (let alone foreign policy) than you?
Germany and rest of the European nations are too dependent and too in love with the money that the U.S. supplies to NATO so those countries can in turn continue to shirk their fiscal responsibility to that organization and line their own coffers with the money they would have otherwise used for NATO to instead prop up their overextended social welfare programs. European nations one great fear would be a U.S. pullout of NATO, as that would mean those nations would have to pony up the rest of the funding for their mutual defense to make up for the shortfall of a U.S. withdrawal which could put a real crimp in any future funding of their welfare state programs. Don't get me wrong, I would like to see Europe as a whole get off the U.S. horse, I just think they are far too gutless to do so. I don't believe I need remind you about how the U.S. sabotaged a major piece of European energy infrastructure and how the Europeans just sat on their collective asses and took it to illustrate the point.