Why is Lithuania not in trouble in German disaster time? Because
Lithuania cannot be worse. Because Minister Gabrielius Landsbergis personally
destroys Lithuania's exports to China and to Germany, which lives mainly from
exports. Lithuania is the only one in the world to have invented a hybrid war with China
over Taiwan's independence. As a result, the patriotic Chinese are
buying less and less of our goods (few) and German goods that contain our parts (many).
Lithuanian ministers usually cannot do anything. If a
minister bites a bigger piece of bread abroad, there is a scandal in Lithuania -
how dare the minister? But this is not an ordinary minister - here is Landsbergis
himself. Everyone is cursing that hybrid war, everyone, including President
Gitanas Nausėda, who is in charge of foreign policy. He curses, but he can't do
anything. Here is Landsbergis ...
Meantime the situation in Germany is difficult:
"German
business: the worst economic crisis since World War II could arises.
The head of the
German chemical industry giant BASF has warned that Europe's largest economy
could face an unprecedented crisis if it ceases trade with Russia altogether or
bans imports of Russian gas and oil.
"This could
lead to a major crisis in the German economy since the end of World War
II," Martin Brudermueller told the Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung, a
newspaper.
Mr Brudermueller
predicted that many small and medium-sized businesses could not survive.
BASF chief has
rejected calls for Europe to boycott Russia's energy supplies. “Do we want to
deliberately destroy our entire economy? Everything we’ve been building for
decades? I think such an experiment would be irresponsible," - Brudermueller
said, adding that few people in Germany seem to realize the grave consequences
of doing so.
A full moratorium
on the purchase of Russian natural gas for Germany would only be possible in
the medium term, he said. "If we hurry, we can do it in 4-5 years,"
Brudermueller said, arguing that imports of alternative energy sources, such as
liquefied natural gas from the United States, could not simply be increased at
the touch of a button.
He also said that
the consequences of gas shortages could not be mitigated by state subsidies or
financial aid, as the state would simply not be able to allocate such large
sums: "The scale we are talking about here is much higher than in the case
of a coronavirus pandemic.""
Here in Lithuania, we may not buy Russian gas, electricity, oil, fertilizers, food, nickel, palladium, etc. Why do we need it? Gabrielius Landsbergis will soon defeat China and become world Emperor. And we, all the rest, will be accepted by Queen Martha to work in her schools for pennies. We will teach Ukrainian children to organize Maidans.
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