Western European leaders reach peak dystopia on Victory Day
By: Rachel Marsden
Top EU officials showed off their revisionism skills as Russia 
commemorated the 78th anniversary of Nazi Germany’s defeat
On the day that Russia was marking the victory of the Soviet Union and its 
Western allies over Nazi Germany, the unelected president of the European 
Commission, Ursula von der Leyen, thought it would be a good idea to head over 
to Kiev, where neo-Nazis have recently been re-emerging in Europe. 
“Nazi defeat day” is an odd occasion for a Western figurehead to go praise 
Ukraine as “the beating heart of today’s European values”considering the country 
integrated neo-Nazi fighters into the military and welcomed Western countries in 
training and equipping them. Perhaps next year’s Paris Olympics can introduce a 
new event for Queen Ursula to showcase her world-class mental gymnastics skills.
Von der Leyen then praised Ukrainian President Vladimir Zelensky for rebranding 
May 9 as Europe Day, just like in the European Union where countries mark 
Victory Day on May 8, the date to which Zelensky also moved Victory Day this 
year. Suddenly, Victory Day in Ukraine wants to self-identify as Europe Day and 
it’s a done deal with the simple stroke of a pen. 
European leaders treated Victory Day in Russia like it was the birthday of an ex 
who lives full-time and rent-free in their heads. Speaking at the European 
Parliament, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz said that “2,200 kilometers north-east 
of here, in Moscow, Putin is parading his soldiers, tanks and missiles today. 
Let us not be intimidated by such outward manifestations of power!” 
Right, because Russian President Vladimir Putin was totally trying to scare 
Scholz and not at all just hosting an annual historic commemoration of the 
78-year-old victory of the Red Army over fascism. Maybe if people are 
intimidated enough by a ceremonial parade, they’ll conveniently forget all about 
Nazi Germany. 
Meanwhile, French President Emmanuel Macron took to Twitter with a lengthy ode 
to Europe that mistook stated ambition for actual reality. 
“During the pandemic, it was our democracies that took the necessary steps to 
protect our most vulnerable citizens. It was our open societies that looked to 
science to develop, manufacture and provide vaccines to the entire world,” 
Macron said, in celebration of the jabs that enabled people to catch and 
transmit Covid enough times for governments to stop caring, while ignoring that 
lockdowns, mandates, and government-mandated QR codes to access basic venues of 
daily life were anything but open and democratic. He also failed to mention that 
rather than actually just protecting the most vulnerable, everyone else was also 
made more vulnerable as a result of government action that controlled their 
basic rights of work, travel, and freedom of movement. 
“We drew a line under European dependence on Russian fossil fuels,” Macron said, 
conveniently omitting the fact that they’ve switched out that energy security 
for an over-reliance on pricy American fuel – over which Macron himself has 
lambasted the US. Not to mention that Europe is still actually buying Russian 
fuel, except that it gets effectively laundered through third countries such as 
India which conveniently allows the EU to keep up virtue-signaling appearances.
Macron tweeted on about Europe boasting “the most ambitious climate plans.” 
Nothing says climate ambition like firing up coal plants as the bloc’s economic 
engine, Germany, did in the wake of effectively cutting itself off from cheap 
Russian gas. “By 2050, we will have achieved carbon neutrality,” Macron added. 
So be sure to mark that down on your calendar for 27 years from now so you can 
see if he kept his word. 
“It is together as Europeans that we will preserve our ability to decide for 
ourselves,” said the French president. Too late. You had that chance, but 
decided to hitch yourselves to Uncle Sam’s regime change bandwagon and be 
dragged along for the ride. Chalk it up to a lack of courage when it mattered.
It’s one thing for Macron to talk a good game about strategic European autonomy, 
as he did recently en route back from China. Or for German Economy Minister 
Robert Habeck to underscore the need for Europe to carve outits own independent 
trade agenda, but every time such words get put to the test when it counts, 
European leaders fail. Instead, they end up finding refuge in their own 
propaganda and revisionism. Burrowing out from under their own nonsense and 
doing the heavy lifting to match their actions with words takes far more 
courage.
COPYRIGHT 2023 RACHEL MARSDEN