PATCHING HOLES IN
HISTORY
Why was the
commemoration of the Normandy landings manipulated?
By Sidney Hey
For the past 80 years, 6
June has been a date that revives an episode in history that changed the course
of geopolitics for the rest of the 20th century. The landing of the Allied
forces on the beaches of Normandy was one of the largest and most calamitous
military operations of the so-called Second World War in which, according to
official figures (which halve the real numbers), 10,000 Allied men died as soon
as they stepped off the barges.
For decades the
commemoration was just one more, a solemn act recalling the sacrifice and
horror born of political pettiness and colonial squabbles that led to the birth
of ideologies such as fascism, Nazism that would end up leading to a war that
should never be repeated.
Normandy was one of the
steps to defeat the Third Reich and not the only one, as governments and their
media in the West have been saying for some time now. If the then Soviet Russia
had not broken through the eastern front and advanced on Europe, things would
have been complicated for the Allies, as US General Patton and his
Franco-British colleagues knew very well, but so did the alcoholic war criminal
and Russophobe Winston Churchill.
Today, in the midst of
the current geopolitical circumstances, this commemoration is given a new,
clearly Manichean and argumentatively distorted narrative that only seeks to
create a sort of historical equivalence between that mega battle and the one
that NATO, through its neo-Nazi puppet in Kiev, is trying to make prevail today
against the Russian Federation.
Those who have at least
studied history will realise this. The two situations are not only impossible
to equate, they also demonstrate the crass contradiction that the leaders of
the collective West are incurring in, as evidenced by their current
interference in Ukraine. That 1944
Normandy landing was part of the fight against Nazism and what these corrupt
Western ‘democracies’ are doing today in Ukraine is resurrecting it to further
Washington's interests under hilarious semantic disguises.
No doubt it was Joe
Biden who took advantage of the occasion at the ceremony held at the
‘Colleville sur Mer’ cemetery to deploy this discursive tactic by claiming
‘that he will continue to defend Ukraine from falling under the Russian yoke’
while warning that ‘democracy is more threatened than ever’. But Biden should
ask himself, what have we been doing for democracy, peace and global stability?
Indeed, that is a
question that neither he nor any of his cohorts will be able to answer, for
they have done the opposite. Washington's foreign policies over the last thirty
years have been the cause of the destruction of countries, their societies and
the creation of continuous migratory flows that end up landing on European soil
with the consequent economic, social and cultural impact that their governments
deny. Thanks to Biden and his unconditional European subjects such as Macron,
Sunak, or the ‘sausage’ Scholz, they have made this war a fabulous business for
the arms industry, especially the US, of course.
Once again. Biden's
speech might have been credible if it had not been the US president who, after
having been part of the Obama administration in 2013, had worked to engineer
the coup in Kiev in February 2014, installed an adept regime, instigated
together with his Atlanticist partners the unleashing of the current war in
Ukraine and its open support for a pro-Nazi regime led by a shoddy comedian
like Volodymyr Zelensky. Contrasting all this, one can see the historical
contradiction we are talking about.
No matter how much is
spent on stagecraft, bombastic speeches and falsifiers of history, the evidence
and facts do not support Joe Biden's words at all, but much worse, they show
him for what he really is. Today the culture clash that the continuous landing
of immigrants in Europe is creating tensions with the eugenic and transhumanist
subculture that makes LGTBQ an anti-family way of life irreconcilable with the
values of the Islamic migratory currents that make the family a way of life.
This is what annoys the
European elites that lackeys like Von Der Leyen, Borrell and their cronies, who
under the garb of freedom and broadmindedness see in these values brought by
migrants a threat to their twisted way of life.
In conclusion, that
landing in Normandy is a fact of history without comparison to the delusional
lucubrations that currently try to justify criminal agendas of powers that
ironically behave as did the Third Reich and its mad dream of perpetuating its
hegemony for a thousand years.