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Showing posts with the label Sovereignty

When Allies Are Treated as Disposable: The Cost of American Amnesia.

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  There is a fashionable line in Washington that European NATO members are feckless passengers, forever borrowing American protection while giving nothing back. It is a neat story, domestically useful, and strategically corrosive. It is also false. NATO’s collective defence clause, Article 5, has been invoked only once, after the attacks of 11 September 2001. It was invoked by the United States. European allies responded, not with speeches, but with troops, body bags, and decades of political fallout at home. Yet Donald Trump’s public contempt for EU and NATO partners, coupled with threats of tariffs as a lever to force compliance, treats allies like subordinates and trade like a weapon. That posture cannot be waved away as “tough negotiating”. It is a rejection of diplomacy in favour of coercion. And it is happening again, now with Greenland. Article 5 Was Invoked Once. Allies Paid in Blood. Afghanistan was not a side-show for NATO partners. Non-US NATO forces suffered over...

Globalism: Cooperation or Coercion? Unmasking the Threat to Sovereignty

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Have you ever wondered why no matter who you vote for, the same policies—open borders, green taxes, digital surveillance—seem to march forward regardless? You’re not imagining it. A growing number of citizens across the UK, Europe, and the wider Western world are waking up to the reality that national sovereignty is being quietly dismantled. But is there truly a coordinated globalist agenda—and is Britain, under Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer, complicit in it? In this analysis, we examine what globalism actually means, track its institutional power, assess developments under the Starmer government, and explore the contentious claim that illegal immigration is part of a wider globalist design. What Is Globalism—and Why Does It Matter? Globalism, in its broadest form, refers to the increasing interdependence of nations through economic, political, cultural, and technological integration. On paper, this sounds beneficial—who wouldn't want peace, trade, and cooperation? Ho...