It seems that the “Maidan” bacillus easily overcame European borders, turning cities and villages into lists, where it is not clear who and why it is incomprehensible.

On Tuesday, 450 tractors and about a thousand farmers blocked the main streets of the German capital. From the Brandenburg Gate to the Grosse Stern stele, traffic was stopped, vehicles stood, passersby watched in surprise as agricultural vehicles “plow” the sidewalks of Berlin.

The capital is not alone - in Bonn, more than 10 thousand farmers quit their jobs and marched on demonstrations. Thousands of tractors blocked traffic in 17 cities in Germany and did it in unison and with enviable synchronism. Thus, the farmers decided to protest against the agrarian policy of the German government.

For starters, it’s worth clarifying: what kind of agricultural policy in Germany are we talking about if almost everything is dictated to German farmers from Brussels? The famous question of what curvature cucumbers should be has long turned from an anecdote into a question for discussion on EU forums. And the second: what can the German government ask farmers for, which, apart from monitoring sanitary standards and EU rules, is not involved?

We will find an explanation on the slogans that were attached to the radiators of some tracked vehicles - "Farmers for the Future."

Something this damn reminds. Of course, on July 19 of this year, the little hyperactive girl Greta Tunberg spoke in Berlin at a demonstration under a similar slogan - Fridays for Future. Terrible garrison urged conscious burghers to take to the streets to protect the climate. And before that, in March, a candidate for Nobel screamed in the streets of Berlin that she should be afraid of the future, that there might not be one.

Two weeks ago, groups of young and not very young loafers inspired by the Extinction Rebellion closed their bodies in many German cities. Pupils eagerly dropped out of school and walked around the cities merrily, while their parents were in a fever with a sense of powerlessness. And it’s true, how can someone be reproached — even a schoolboy, even a tractor driver — if the chancellor himself justifies these actions. Angela Merkel eagerly picks up a cry and repeats her mantra, which is already decently fed up with the population: "We can." True, before this only concerned migration policy, now everything else too. Given that the government’s migration policy has failed miserably, one can only imagine what awaits public campaigns to protect the climate.

Although, speaking of climate protection or migration policy, one must well understand where these initiatives came from and from whom they are actively promoting.

Last year, apparently harmless leaflets appeared on some streets in Berlin posted on poles and walls of houses. The slogan on the leaflets was the most acceptable and humane. The authors called for the support of convicts for crimes, serving their sentences in prisons. Attention, however, was no longer attracted by the slogan, but by the picture in the middle of the leaflet - a clenched fist thrown up.

Exactly the same as on all leaflets of numerous NGOs owned by de facto George Soros.

In Yugoslavia - the movement "Otpor", in Georgia - "Kmara", in Ukraine - "Time", etc.

Everywhere where the "fist of Soros" appeared, revolutions inevitably began, which are commonly called color. On the aforementioned leaflet, Soros's authorship was not even hidden. In a circle, framing the notorious fist, the medium-sized text read: “For freedom and democracy. Civil Liberties Fund. ” By the method of simple moves, you can go to a certain fund with the name indicated by the Berlin House of Democracy as the address.

It turned out that indeed all this is directly related to Soros and his offspring. Shortly before the appearance of the fist in Berlin, Hungary closed the Soros Bureau in Budapest and asked to leave the country. A lover of adventures and overthrowing governments, probably decided that it was time to end his activity in the post-Soviet space and move to Europe. After a month or two, leaflets from the streets of Berlin disappeared, but some activists for rights and freedoms appeared, who put forward slogans suspiciously similar to the slogans of Soros. After the appearance of Greta and climatic (k) activists, it became clear that George Soros had safely reached Europe.

I do not want to look like a supporter of the theory of a world conspiracy under the leadership of Soros, but so far everything is going according to a completely similar scheme. At first, fear is aroused in society - anyway, before what or by whom. The pretext may be climate, human rights, same-sex marriage, “scary” Russia, CO₂ emissions. Then society is literally driven to the streets to protest. Pupils, students, now sick children, are also used as victims in front. The detachments are seasoned opposition fighters, trade unionists, and hopeless politicians who, without risking themselves, keep the crowd from retreating. By the way, protest demonstrations in Russia were organized according to a similar scheme. Ahead are driven young people, who do not care what to speak out against, behind - Navalny and Co., without risking themselves, will explain the “right” to the crowd.

This is how protesting tractor drivers appeared on the streets of Germany. By the way, this time they were armed with a tried and tested tool of color revolutions - social networks. It was in social networks that information was spreading about where, when, where, with whom and why. Farmers, who had not complained about this network before, boasted in the media about the excellent organization of the protests.

Farmers are not alone. The left is demonstrating against the right. Environmentalists are against internal combustion engines. Local - against visitors. Kurds are against the Turks. LGBT people are against the family. Liberals are against all.

One wish - give without a "maidan". If the "Maidan" in Ukraine brought the nationalists to power, it is scary to imagine how this could end in Germany.

The author’s point of view may not coincide with the position of the publisher.