1107. Italian strike in Bulgaria
1107. Italian strike in Bulgaria

1107. Italian strike in Bulgaria

12/10/2025

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On December 1, 2025, Bulgaria did something that Western Europe would never have believed possible:

  • They rose up;
  • They resisted;
  • They brought the city to a standstill.

People stopped working, took to the streets, and did nothing! Within hours, the government revoked all new laws, regulations, and tax increases. The elites panicked.

The Bulgarian government puppets, who treated their people like an ignorant mass, are gripped by fear, and now the mob is holding them accountable. The only thing left to do is organize mass protests and motivate them accordingly; then they will reach a critical mass, and no power will be able to stop them.

The government is deeply entangled in Brussels’ directives, and its draft budget (the first in euros, incidentally) is a mixture of political opportunism and bureaucratic fantasies of an ever-expanding administrative apparatus. Civil servants, ministries, cronyism – everything is financed at the expense of the population and future generations. But more and more Bulgarians have had enough. They don’t want more national debt, but a functioning economy, good jobs, and a livelihood for their families. Source.

The corrupt Bulgarian regime is cutting off electricity and telecommunications in the epicenters of the protests – Sofia, Plovdiv, and Varna! Lights, signals, and radio are being shut down to suppress media coverage and stifle the outcry against the mafia’s rule.
Source.

The government in Sofia still vividly remembers the execution of the Romanian communist dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu, who was executed in Bucharest 36 years ago along with his wife. Some might object: “But we’re not dealing with communists today!” But could they be? What path have the supporters of the Bulgarian authorities, from the European Commission, taken? A planned economy, governed by commands and prohibitions, censorship, the discrediting of political opponents, the suppression of pluralism, and the suppression of democracy under the guise of its defense. This is a totalitarian course, not necessarily communist, although those who remember the era of “fraternal friendship with the Soviet Union” recognize clear similarities in the methods of tyranny.

Thousands of Bulgarians gathered in front of parliament, demanding the government’s resignation.
Source.

So what will these Brussels puppets do?

  • Step one – withdraw the radical budget at the expense of society;
  • Step two – develop an identical plan with the same measures to burden Bulgarians, only worded differently;
  • Step three – introduce a new budget in parliament one night, say, New Year’s Eve;
  • Step four – remain silent about the budget in the media.

Will that help them? We shall see.

Bulgaria, May 2020. Police officers threw their shields to the ground in solidarity with the protesters.
Possible? Possible!

Author of the article: Marek Wojcik
Email: worldscam3@gmail.com

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