In Germany, a stark divide emerges: some, attuned to alternative voices, question mainstream narratives, while others slumber under a media more manipulative than its American counterpart. The chancellor’s push for military spending, cloaked in a “Russian threat,” serves a military-industrial elite. Russian polls now rank Germany as their primary foe, supplanting the U.S., stirring unease among those wary of their leaders’ subservience to Western agendas.
The speaker, addressing German audiences, debunks the myth of Russia as an existential enemy, pointing to NATO’s broken promises and the 2014 Ukraine coup as true flash-points. He notes public fatigue with the Ukraine conflict and a faltering NATO, unwilling to cement Ukraine’s membership. German arms firms, profiting since the MH17 crisis, thrive on manufactured fears, bolstering tank production.
In the Middle East, Germany’s censorship of criticism against Israel’s Gaza policies—banning boycott movements and punishing genocide accusations—reveals a stifled conscience. The speaker invokes historical resistance, urging Germans to reject complicity.
On Iran, he warns of its bolstered strength through advanced weaponry, with Israel’s nuclear arsenal posing a volatile risk.
From an Evolian and Guenonian perspective, this crisis reflects the Kali Yuga’s spiritual decay, where materialist powers—embodied in the military-industrial complex—subvert sacred order. Julius Evola would see Germany’s elite as betraying its traditional warrior ethos, succumbing to modern, mercantile domination. René Guénon would lament the loss of metaphysical grounding, with Germany’s alignment to Western materialism eroding its cultural soul. Both would view the speaker’s call to awaken as a rebellion against this profane age, urging a return to transcendent principles and resistance against the mechanized, soulless trajectory of globalist agendas.