09.04.2015 | Source: Pravda.Ru
Europe has quietly
become a hotbed of political repression amid the
talks about "liberal democracy" and "freedom." As it turns
out, anti-war protests in Europe are not
allowed, while other groups - fascists that praise Nazi collaborators of the
World War II period, feminist and gay rights groups - can express
themselves freely.
If Europeans take to
the streets to set out their protests against war, against NATO, European mass media portrays such
activities as "pro-Russian" acts staged by Moscow puppets.
Police and state
repression, often of a violent nature, has been carried out under the auspices
of "fighting terrorists" in Ukraine all throughout the conflict that erupted in early 2014. So too has such
repression reared its ugly head in Lithuania in recent months, as
anti-imperialist leftist organizers have been singled out for political
persecution by the vehemently Russophobic, Euro-sycophant government.
Additionally, Estonia has continued its systematic oppression of its
Russian-speaking population which has been forced to exist as second class
citizens, with dubious legal protections to say the least.
Meanwhile anti-NATO sentiment has been gaining
pace throughout Eastern Europe. In Poland and in the Czech Republic, many citizens form
anti-imperialist movements advocating peace in Europe and rejecting the
insanity of aggression against at Russia.
The US-staged coup
and civil war in Ukraine unveiled various political factions in Europe. In
today's Ukraine, people face political persecution for "pro-Russian"
or "anti-Ukrainian" views.
The infamous May 2 Odessa massacre of fascist thugs of Right Sector and their soccer hooligan co-conspirators coupled with the impunity provided them by the police
and the Ukrainian government, served as a message to the world. The message said
that the so called "New Ukraine" was neither democratic nor
respectful of the rule of law. Needless to say that the western media turned a
blind eye on the massacre. Western news agencies referred to the bloody chaos
at the House of Trade Unions in Odessa as "clashes." However, the massacre in Odessa was no clash, it was a one-sided slaughter of defenseless human
beings.
Pravda.Ru
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Source: English Pravda 09-04-2015