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Παρασκευή 19 Δεκεμβρίου 2025

Russia’s Response Shocks Europe as the EU’s $105 Billion Asset


I was in Brussels three weeks ago for a closed-door meeting with European finance officials. One senior official said words that made my blood run cold: "We thought freezing their assets would bring them to their knees. Instead, we have created a monster we cannot control." He was right. Because what Europe did with $105 billion in Russian assets has triggered a chain reaction that will reshape global finance—and almost nobody understands what's really happening. In this video, we expose how the EU's May 2024 decision to seize interest earnings from frozen Russian reserves triggered Russia's surgical mirror retaliation—targeting $105 billion in European corporate assets including Volkswagen ($3.5B), Raiffeisen Bank ($2.8B), and dozens more. From the death of property rights to the acceleration of de-dollarization, we break down why this might be the greatest strategic blunder in financial history. In this video, we uncover: The $105B Seizure: How the EU's May 2024 decision to confiscate Russian asset interest earnings—$3B annually for Ukraine—crossed a line that can never be uncrossed and broke the sacred principle of property rights. The Mirror Retaliation: Why Russia's decree within 48 hours to seize equivalent European corporate holdings ($200B+ exposure) is strategic genius—exploiting divisions, rewarding hesitant countries, punishing aggressive ones. The Corporate Panic: How Volkswagen, Raiffeisen, Danone, Shell, and BP are now screaming at their governments—caught in the crossfire of a financial war they never chose. The Global Precedent: Why every central bank from Asia to Latin America is now asking "if they did it to Russia, could they do it to us?"—and quietly diversifying away from Western assets. The headlines say Europe stood firm. The reality is Europe sacrificed the credibility of its entire financial system for $3B/year that won't change the war's outcome. Watch to understand the long-term cost.

Τρίτη 16 Δεκεμβρίου 2025

Brutal End of Nazis who Massacred 153 Greeks: Hard do Watch


Narrator: Marchand Steenkamp. About the story: The Mousiotitsa massacre stands as one of the most tragic episodes of the Nazi occupation of Greece during World War II. In the summer of 1943, as German forces tightened their grip on Epirus, the 1st Mountain Divisionm, the feared Edelweiss Division, launched brutal reprisals against villages accused of helping the Greek resistance, particularly EDES. Their operations were part of a wider pattern of German war crimes, in which civilians were labelled as “partisans” and entire communities were destroyed under the pretext of anti-guerrilla warfare. On 25 July and 27 August 1943, Mousiotitsa was hit twice. Homes were burned, families terrorized, and 153 villagers, including 63 children, were murdered. The attacks mirrored atrocities committed across German-occupied Greece, from Epirus to the Peloponnese, as the Wehrmacht and SS sought to crush local resistance through intimidation and fear. The massacre became one of the clearest examples of how the occupation blurred the line between military action and deliberate targeting of civilians. Yet the violence did not break the Greek spirit. Instead, the cruelty of the Edelweiss Division strengthened the resolve of resistance fighters who continued to fight across the mountains, forests, and ravines of northwestern Greece. Their retaliation, including the killing of key German officers, eventually triggered further German reprisals and deepened the cycle of suffering. After the Second World War, several German perpetrators faced trials and punishment for their actions, while others disappeared in the chaos of the collapsing front. But for the survivors of Mousiotitsa, rebuilding life after 1945 was an act of courage in itself. Today, monuments in the village commemorate the victims and preserve the memory of those who perished, a reminder of the resilience of the Greek people and the enduring need to confront the crimes of the past.

The Battle of Plataea - Η ΜΑΧΗ ΤΩΝ ΠΛΑΤΑΙΩΝ



History remembers the 300 Spartans who died at Thermopylae, but it has largely forgotten the Battle of Plataea, the colossal clash that actually won the war. In 479 BC, one year after Leonidas's sacrifice, the full might of Sparta finally marched north to exact a brutal revenge. This was not a skirmish; it was the largest battle of the ancient world, pitting 100,000 Greeks against a Persian war machine commanded by the ruthless General Mardonius. This documentary reveals the grim reality of ancient warfare that Hollywood ignores. We explore the tactical genius of the forgotten Spartan Regent, General Pausanias, and the terrifying "Iron Discipline" that allowed his men to stand motionless under a storm of arrows. Beyond the phalanx, we uncover the untold story of the 35,000 Helot slaves forced to fight alongside their masters and the pivotal role of the Athenians in the final slaughter. From the comedic failure of the night retreat to the horrific "Black Sacrifice" that unleashed the Spartan rage, this video breaks down the Battle of Plataea phase by phase. We analyze the specific Greek Hoplite Tactics that crushed the Persian Immortals and the logistical nightmare of fighting in the heat of August without water. Finally, we examine the dark aftermath of the victory. The immense wealth captured from the Persian camp didn't just save Greece; it corrupted its heroes. Witness the tragic fall of Pausanias, a man who defeated an empire only to be starved to death by his own mother. This is the complete, uncensored story of the Battle of Plataea—the ugly, violent, and necessary victory that saved Western Civilization. HISTORICAL SOURCES: Herodotus, The Histories (Book IX) Plutarch, Life of Aristides & Life of Pausanias Diodorus Siculus, Library of History Modern analysis based on topographical studies of the Boeotian plain. #BattleOfPlataea #SpartanHistory #AncientGreece #PersianWars #MilitaryHistory

Σάββατο 13 Δεκεμβρίου 2025

DELPHIC MAXIM INSCRIPTION OF AFGHANISTAN

 THE DELPHIC MAXIM INSCRIPTION OF AFGHANISTAN

Ai-Khanoum (lit. "Lady Moon" in Uzbek) is located in Kunduz Province of Afghanistan. 
The city was founded by Alexander the Great around 328 BCE. Ai- Khanoum is possibly 
Alexandria on the Oxus, or later named Eucratidia. 
The site was excavated through archaeological searches by a French DAFA 
mission under Paul Bernard between 1964 and 1978.


Σάββατο 6 Δεκεμβρίου 2025

German Command Laughed at this Greek Destroyer



For decades, the Greek Navy was dismissed as obsolete—“scrap metal” ships nobody expected to matter in WWII. Yet in the Aegean Sea, these underdog destroyers and escorts humiliated German E-boats and destroyed entire Axis convoys, turning the tides of night raids and supply missions. From the legendary Vasilissa Olga to the daring Adrias, Greek crews executed impossible maneuvers, ambushed faster enemy ships, and proved that courage, strategy, and audacity could outmatch technology. This is the hidden story of how a small fleet changed the game in the Mediterranean, one night battle at a time.