Đorđe Trikoš
50.4K posts

Đorđe Trikoš
@trikosh
Communications strategy / Cognitive operations / Counter-FMI / All just happened to me 🌐🛰️📊🗳️

@BrankoMilan @FedjaPavlovic What Trump (effectively) is doing is to smash hard-right political parties in Europe his boys had been so excited about to propagate even in the U.S. National Security Strategy. Case study: 🇨🇦 Pierre Poilievre was just about to win the election when Trump showed up.

Thanks indeed to @FT for publishing me on the anti-US turn of the European right. From moderate conservatives to nationalist radicals, it is nimbly shifting towards a politics of autonomy. The centre and left must move fast - or risk being outflanked. ft.com/content/cba21e…

In about a week, everyone, not only America, will be finally talking about the fourth systemic risk-driven global crisis - much worse than GFC, Covid or Russia’s war on Ukraine. And I will be like: I’ve been trying to warn you for the last six weeks despite all the rude bashing.

@trikosh Ovo je SNS-ovski psyops. Moguće je da ni jedan od aktera nije svestan da učestvuje u njemu, ali je tako. Zna onaj koji režira šta radi.

Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa watches a dance performance in Damascus.

Until 31 May, the Orbán puppets may voluntarily step down from their positions. This applies to the President of Hungary, the President of the Curia, the President of the National Office for the Judiciary, the President of the Constitutional Court, and the Prosecutor General. On 12 April, the Hungarian people voted for a complete political transformation. If these officials do not step down voluntarily by 31 May, then — on the basis of the mandate received from millions of Hungarians — we will remove them from office.

JUST IN: US to refund $166 billion in tariffs after Supreme Court ruling



EXCLUSIVE Sir Keir Starmer will be accused of pressuring the Foreign Office into approving the appointment of Lord Mandelson despite being aware of his friendship with the paedophile Jeffrey Epstein and his business links to Russia and China Sir Olly Robbins was sacked by Starmer last week as head of the Foreign Office after failing to inform him that Mandelson had failed his security vetting. The prime minister accused him of a cover-up and said that the fact he was not told “beggars belief” The Times has been told that Robbins will use an appearance before the foreign affairs select committee on Tuesday to reveal that he did not see the formal recommendation by UK Security Vetting (UKSV), the body that vets public appointments, stating that Mandelson should not be given clearance He was given a verbal briefing by the Foreign Office’s security team and told that UKSV considered Mandelson’s case to be “borderline”, although if the decision was UKSV’s alone it would be likely to oppose giving clearance. Robbins assessed the “outstanding risks” and concluded that they could be mitigated Robbins is expected to highlight the “prevailing atmosphere” at the time of the appointment, including the fact that Starmer chose to press ahead with announcing Mandelson as ambassador to the United States before security vetting had been conducted In doing so he went against the advice of Simon Case, the cabinet secretary at the time and now Lord Case, who recommended conducting vetting before making the announcement Robbins’s “overarching” narrative is expected to be that the vetting process is confidential and shielded from ministers. He is expected to highlight the fact that during a debate in the Commons about Mandelson’s appointment in September, Stephen Doughty, a Foreign Office minister, said that it is “rightly independent of ministers” He will say that he did nothing wrong and that the role of UKSV is ultimately advisory. As permanent secretary it was for him to make the decision on whether Mandelson should be granted clearance One Whitehall source said Robbins’s appearance before the committee would be “box office”, adding that he would “not hold back” in defence of his actions thetimes.com/article/088674…




