“Inspiring meeting with Alexander Soros of the Open Society on supporting civil society and free media, with special focus on Moldova. For our democracies to thrive, it is vital to uphold democratic values and empower independent voices,” European Commissioner Marta Kos wrote on the X social network.
European Commissioner from Slovenia, Marta Kos, wrote on the X social network that she had met Alexander Soros, the son of financial speculator Geroge Soros. They reportedly discussed support for civil society and the media, with a particular focus on Moldova. Her note also shows that both are committed to democracy.
We know what this looks like in practice, particularly in the case of Soros, who, during the Biden administration, frequently visited the White House to meet with top government officials. He is a man of enormous political influence, but he has not been elected to any official state office and is the heir to the Open Society Foundation, which manages some 25 billion euros in assets.
It is also worth noting that after the new US President Donald Trump ordered a freeze on most US foreign aid funding due to suspicions of non-transparency, more evidence emerged that the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) was regularly channelling huge amounts of funding to causes linked to the Soros non-profit empire, terrorists, and drag queens (LGBTQ).
Kos has been exposed
Even before Kos’s election as European Commissioner, we warned that her “baggage” was simply too heavy for such a high-profile post. In her youth, she was associated with the Yugoslav secret service, meaning – an undemocratic regime. She denied that she was backed from behind the scenes by Aleksandar Vučić, a good friend of the Ljubljana Mayor Zoran Janković. She even denied any links with Janković himself, although she had carried out various advisory tasks for him as a consultant. That she is a candidate of the Slovenian deep state and of the former State Security Administration of Yugoslavia (UDBA), which still has a dominant influence on politics in Serbia, is becoming increasingly obvious and also burdensome.
Domen Mezeg