“So, when this system starts to collapse in on itself, you can expect the rise of left-wing terrorism. The terrorist protest being organised in Ljubljana poses a serious security risk, as ties are being forged between the real terrorists and the amateur revolutionaries of Slovenia, which, once they lose their grip on the country, will allow them underground funding, access to weapons and a terrorist network,” commented political commentator Tomaš Štih – also known under the nickname Libertarec – on the rise of left-wing terrorism in Slovenia. This is the result of the great power of NGOs that the government of Robert Golob has allowed into the institutions. Below, we are publishing the full transcript of Štih’s post from the social network X.
Willy Brandt became Chancellor of Germany in the midst of an anarchic left-wing uprising. Violent protests were taking place across Germany, the KGB was controlling youth organisations and sowing chaos across the country, and Rudi Dutschke was planning his long march through the institutions, following the example of Mao Zedong. Brandt’s prescription for calming Germany was to involve left-wing NGOs elected by nobody in the decision-making process.
This seemingly conciliatory and peaceful approach not only fatally loosened democracy and allowed socialist organisations to sabotage state institutions from within, but also gave them the means and platforms to spread their ideas. After the initial calm and the end of the left-wing protests, the most violent period in Germany since the Second World War followed.
Infiltrated far-left groups started their purges
The far-left Baader-Meinhof group murdered intellectuals, journalists, businessmen, judges, and government officials; mostly those that did not share their left-wing views. They were trained for terrorist actions by Palestinians in Jordan. Someone advised Robert Golob that the same approach would now have different effects.
The results so far are very similar – the courts, the government, and the public media have been infiltrated by far-left groups elected by no one that cannot be held accountable by anyone, writing laws, carrying out political purges in the public media, attacking political opponents in the streets, conducting migration policies, etc., and the state budget is funding them with millions from the budget so that they can do so as unhindered as possible.
These days, the umbrella “NGO”, the Legal Centre for the Protection of Human Rights and the Environment (Pravni center za varstvo človekovih pravic in okolja – PIC) is importing Hamas protests to Ljubljana. This organisation alone has received 2.5 million euros from the state for its work so far. These people have tasted a comfortable life on a budget without financial worries; power (power!) without elections; the possibility to carry out political purges of dissenting voices in public institutions (for example, the national media outlet RTV!) without consequences; a media-constructed reputation without professionalism and effort.
The emergence of left-wing terrorism
They will never give it up again. Not without violence. So, when this system starts to collapse in on itself, you can expect the rise of left-wing terrorism. The terrorist protest being organised in Ljubljana poses a serious security risk, as ties are being forged between the real terrorists and the amateur revolutionaries of Slovenia, which, once they lose their grip on the country, will allow them underground funding, access to weapons and a terrorist network. The protest is doomed to failure, and the organisers know it. Slovenia cannot stand up for Hamas today, as they are demanding, because to do so would not only condemn itself to isolation within its own cultural milieu, but would also be pandering to a large section of its own citizens in the name of a radical minority. Their aim is to further radicalise misguided young people. When a government falls, and such people lose their resources and their positions, what do you think they will do? Prepare for a wave of left-wing violence, arm the people and step up security for opposition leaders.
Andrej Žitnik