The attack on Slovakian PM and the shadow of Soros

 

The attack on Slovakian Prime Minister Fico and the shadow of Soros

CESARE SACCHETTI

These are dramatic moments in the life of the Prime Minister of Slovakia, Robert Fico.

As soon as a government meeting in the city of Handlova ended, Fico went to greet the crowd waiting for him outside the government buildings, and it was there that a man fired several shots at him.


The security service managed to stop the attacker, whose identity turns out to be that of Juraj Cintula, a supporter of the country’s progressive left party, Progressive Slovakia.

Several doubts arise about the ease with which the man managed to extract a gun a few steps from Fico and how the security who was with him did not act promptly to prevent Cintula from firing shots towards the prime minister.

As soon as the attacker fired, conflicting reconstructions were received, as often happens in these cases, on the dynamics of the events.

Initially it was said that at least 3 or 4 shots would have hit the Slovak Prime Minister, but then subsequent reports report that instead it would have been only one bullet that had hit the target and Fico would not have been, the conditional in these hours is obligatory, in danger of his life even if the next few hours will be decisive to be sure of the health condition of the Slovakian politician.

Robert Fico and the clash with Soros

Fico had already been prime minister of the country in the past and had served two terms in this position: the first from 2006 to 2010 and the second from 2012 to 2018.

Leader of the conservative Smer party, the Slovakian politician stood for election again last year and had already expressed his opposition to the fact that Slovakia sent weapons to Ukraine and had suggested that the two countries involved in the conflict proceed to negotiations separately.

Fico had also antagonized quite a few actors and entities of various types in Slovakia, when already in 2018 he accused George Soros of interfering in his country’s affairs.

Slovakia is a country in which the presence of the George Soros network NGO has been quite large and deep-rooted for several years.

Soros, who describes himself on his website as a “philanthropist”, can be defined in all respects as the prince of subversion and destabilization of the countries in which his well-known, or infamous, Open Society operates.

A river of money was spent by the American speculator of Ashkenazi origins amounting to more than 30 billion dollars.

Soros aims to export the model of the open society everywhere, which is nothing other than the demolition of national states, their borders and their religious traditions, to be replaced instead with a liberal-Marxist philosophy in which all Christian institutions and Catholic, especially the family, end up being swept away by the idea of ​​a liquid society, where there is no longer a homeland, family or religion.

In this sense Soros can be considered to all intents and purposes as the worthy heir of Adam Weishaupt, founder of the Bavarian Illuminati in 1776, who already at the time of the Enlightenment society had in fact conceived an idea of ​​a universal society where the homelands and their traditions would have been removed.

Despite itself, Slovakia has not remained immune to this type of infiltration and if you take a look at the report written by the Hungarian site Tuzfalcsoport, you have a more precise idea of ​​how profound and profoundly invasive this process of interference by the “philanthropist” in Slovak society is.

Soros’ network in Slovakia

The New York tycoon’s Open Society Foundation was established in the Slovak capital, Bratislava, as early as 1992.

Since then, the OSF network has penetrated every sector of civil society in Slovakia and it is estimated that from 2016 to 2021 alone, at least 6 million dollars were spent by Soros in favor of organizations and media groups that promote the interests of open society.

Among these organizations there is also that of the current Slovak president, Zuzana Caputova, who is considered very close to Soros and who had had very tough clashes with Fico precisely because of her devotion to the cause of the American speculator.

Fico had not beaten about the issue too much and had clearly accused Caputova of being nothing more than a Soros agent in Slovakia in disguise.

The Slovak president had responded to these accusations with a defamation lawsuit against Fico, yet Caputova’s profile seems to be in all respects precisely that of the politician who was formed within the US organizations that are the heart of the Anglosphere.

In fact, Caputova has completed at least two courses at USAID, the American agency for international development, where Soros’ presence and influence is very marked, so much so that this agency is believed to be one of those most frequently used by American intelligence services to overthrow heads of state or government who are considered a “threat” to the interests of the Anglosphere and world governance, as happened, among others, to the former Ukrainian president Viktor Yanukovych, overthrown by Washington on Soros’ orders.

The Slovak president’s ties to the Open Society don’t stop there. Caputova is the author of several studies and research that were subsidized through the Soros foundation, and therefore when Fico stated that the president of the country had a relationship of close dependence with the American tycoon, he could hardly be blamed.

Soros then extended his influence to the Slovak media as well. Currently the second largest media group in the country is Petit Press, whose shareholder base includes the Media Development Investment Fund (MDIF) group.

The MDIF received 21.5 million dollars from Soros’ foundation between 2016 and 2019, and therefore to say that George Soros today is the second largest publisher in Slovakia is not at all far-fetched, as it was he who provided the MDIF the liquidity needed to buy a major Slovakian media group.

The list of Soros’ beneficiaries in Slovakia then extends to other NGOs, such as the omnipresent Transparency International Slovakia as well as associations such as Inakost which has the aim of promoting the “rights” of homosexual minorities.

The destructuring of Slovak society, where the observance of the Catholic faith is the majority, is the aim of Soros and this infinite network of NGOs and globalist associations that act as fifth columns of finance and Western liberal elites.

The man who shot Fico as previously said turns out to be Juraj Cintula, an activist of the progressive party of Caputova, very close, as we have seen, to George Soros.

The Slovak prime minister, through his policy that is hostile to NATO and open to dialogue with Russia, was causing quite a bit of irritation from parts of the Anglosphere.

At this moment, the Anglosphere finds itself in a profound crisis and its very existence is called into question by a political process that is leading to the gradual end of the international liberal orderborn after the Second World War, which saw the absolute supremacy of Washington and liberal thought on the Western sphere.

This world is facing an existential crisis due to the United States’ renunciation of exercising the role of guarantor of this geopolitical architecture and, at the same time, due to the birth of the multipolar world, which is bringing national states back to center stage.

Fico, through his hostile positions in support of NATO in Ukraine, had probably irritated more than a few Atlanticists in Brussels.

Around the attempt on his life, we seem to see the shadow of the Anglosphere. Around this attack, we seem to see the shadow of one of the men who symbolize this power.

The shadow of George Soros seems to be visible around this attack.

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