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Sunday, November 17, 2024

The more dead, the better for the revolution

by Bogdan Sajovic

The pandemic of the Chinese virus is still going on, and unfortunately, the number of deaths has already exceeded two thousand. The Bolsheviks of all fifty shades of red are bleating together that Janša is to blame for everything.

Not the Chinese who created this filthiness and allowed it to spread around the world, not the left-wing of the government who left empty warehouses of protective equipment and ruined the health care system, but Janša. Which is nothing new, for the Bolsheviks Janša is already to blame for everything possible, from the extinction of the dinosaurs onwards. Nor is it a new leftist hypocrisy. For the duration of the pandemic, government action has been undermined through NGOs, media, unions, and influencers. They problematized the purchase of protective equipment, shouted of fascism about every announced measure, and applauded those who openly violated measures. After the deaths due to covid began to multiply, however, the same screamers began to roar together that the government was to blame for the measures not working.

The measures, of course, would work if people strictly adhere to them, but unfortunately there are too many naïve people in this country falling for left-wing rampage, and so we are where we are, at two thousand and more deaths. Which, of course, is an intimate option for the Bolsheviks, who thrive best when there is chaos and death, which was once nicely explained by the main ideologue Yugo Communists, Moša Pijade: “We must create misery, drive the masses to despair, we are mortal enemies of all prosperity, order and peace.” Pijade drew inspiration from the superintendent Lenin, who in 1891 refused to cooperate in eliminating the consequences of the catastrophic drought and the consequent severe famine around the Black Sea, saying, “the more dead, the better for the revolution.”

It follows that our dear homeland will flourish in prosperity, order, and peace only when specimens inspired by psychotic criminals such as Lenin, Pijade, or Broz are pushed to where they belong, that is, to the landfill of history.

Bogdan Sajovic is a journalist of the magazine Demokracija.

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