An article without voices, but with questions. Why does the world seem to be driven to internal explosions everywhere?
Something is rumbling in our world. Not sirens. It is quieter and more dangerous: the division from within.
It's not a war of states. It's a slow-burning global civil war. And the question looming, ever more intensely, is:
Who is provoking him and why is no one reacting?
From Los Angeles to the George Floyd incidents...
We remember the episodes of 2020. Anger, fires, hatred, demonstrations. But also paid conflicts – not rumors, people's testimonies that back then, "they were paying $50 an hour to break windows and set fires in the states."
People sold their homes, their businesses, to save their families from a war that didn't have an enemy in uniform. It had masks, encouragement, and cameras.
And today;
Rumor has it that the same “powers” are giving $200 a day. For what purpose?
What exactly is being "set up" and who is subsidizing it?
And if we leave America... let's look at Greece
Greece currently hosts approximately 9 million immigrants.
A large percentage, according to unofficial estimates, are Muslim men of working age – that is, eligible for military service.
Our country is diplomatically supporting Israel in the war in Gaza. Already, reactions from Pakistani and other Muslim communities have begun to be expressed strongly.
What will happen if religious or ethnic tension breaks out within the territory of Greece?
And the most worrying: many of these groups do not act randomly or autonomouslyBehind them, there are organized NGOs, organizations that supposedly protect “rights,” but in practice control, direct, organize.
Many of them are funded from abroad or have ideological cover from left-wing mechanisms that they also operate in our country.
What is the goal? Destabilization.
The profit? Only they know.
And then, I ask...
When the conflict between communities begins, what will become of the remaining Greeks?
Will there be a civil war within our homeland between populations that neither know each other nor are connected to the Greek identity?
And when this happens, where will the Greek who lives quietly, with historical memory, stand?
Who protects him, who defends him?
I'm not complaining. I'm just wondering.
I am not against any people. I am not asking for separations, I am not saying “foreigners out”. No.
I'm just saying: I'm scared. And I don't see anyone talking.
A silence before the explosion. That's what I feel. And even if I'm wrong — I hope so.
But what if I don't...?
Is it time to ask before we scream?
Is it time to look at who benefits from the division, and not get caught up in its game?
photo EyeEm, Image license by freepik.com



























