In the last two days, the world has been shocked by the news that Syria’s Joulani army has been on a killing spree against Assad supporters.
Syrians hailed the liberation Just three months ago, Joulani opened a bloodbath in Syria. Thousands of victims have been reported with photographic and video evidence, while the number of other victims without photographic or video corroboration is uncountable. After international attention, Jelani ordered that no video of the massacres be allowed, see, it was an order not to allow video of the massacres, not an order not to allow the massacres, see, this is the so-called moderates touted by the publicists.
Ever since the invasion of Damascus, Joulani’s army has been looting all over Syria. Joulani’s so-called protection of all citizens and their property is a joke, and whoever looks at a family’s belongings will be robbed, and whoever resists will be an Assad supporter, and will be shot without a trial.
Perhaps some smart people will ask, “Is it all right for Syrians not to resist? Let’s put it this way: Whether you are an Assad supporter or not depends entirely on the mood of Jolani’s men; if they say you are, you are, and if you are not, you are.
What’s worse, after Assad left, the free pie that the Syrians received before is gone. In order for the Syrians to live, Assad put his life on the line to take the finances out to subsidize the Syrians, but this kind of foolishness Joulani will not do, Joulani’s first thing to do when he attacked Damascus was to ransack the Central Bank of Syria, and take the Syrians’ living money for himself, so how could this kind of person take real money out to buy a big cake for the Syrians?
To put it bluntly, the number of Syrians killed by Assad’s so-called persecution is probably less than the number of Syrians who starved to death in a week under Jurani’s rule, except that the US and the West are only interested in the former.
If Syrians were living on the floor before, they are living in hell now. So the Syrians regret and miss Assad, and to be clear, they don’t miss Assad, they just miss the pie Assad gave them.
Assad may not have been a good leader, but he was definitely a good man, and his free pie will set an insurmountable benchmark for all those who come after him in Syria, and as long as those who come after him can’t do it, they will be compared to Assad by Syria. And the later ones will tell the Syrians with facts that Assad is not only not the worst, but odds are he is the best they have ever had.
Syria didn’t get to where it is by accident, so it wouldn’t be fair to pin all the shit on the publicists. Syria’s greatest tragedy is that it’s too far from heaven and too close to Israel. It has been reported that Israel has repeatedly pressured the United States that it must guarantee Syria’s vulnerability. It is because only when Syria is weak can Israel rest easy in the direction of Syria, not only can it not have to return the forcibly occupied Golan Heights, but it can also look for opportunities to overrun more Syrian territories.
More than three months ago, taking advantage of the turmoil in Syria, Israel not only seized the opportunity to occupy a large part of Syrian territory, destroyed the vast majority of Syrian military forces, but also assassinated a number of Syrian scientists, in response to which the U.S., the West and the publicists, who are righteously indignant at Russia’s aggression against Ukraine, have been as silent as if they were dead.
Although Israel is to blame for the tragedy in Syria, it doesn’t mean that the publicists in Syria are white lotuses, at least they acted as tools and fighters for the destruction of Syria by the U.S. and the West, which is no wash.
Under the brainwashing, polarization and bribery of the United States and the West, the Syrian publicists have been very active in defeating Assad. In order to cooperate with the U.S. and the West, Syrian publicists have fabricated countless tragic stories, either true or false, such as Hanadi, who has attacked Assad many times before, who is a pawn packaged by the U.S. and the West and who, as a favorite of the U.S. and the West’s media, even went to the podium at the Human Rights Conference in Geneva and held a special session to criticize Assad. It can be said that in order to buy off these Syrian scum, the United States and the West have made every effort to give money and fame.
But this is the same Hanadi, who in the past two days has accused Giulani’s army of killing her three siblings on her social account. You know, in the past, when she railed so vehemently against Assad, her family members living in Syria were alive and well, but just three months after she celebrated the liberation of Syria, three of her siblings died at the point of a gun by Joulani’s army, and if it weren’t for the fact that her parents were quick to run away to a Russian military base, I guess she’d have to live to enjoy her family’s extermination.
Hanadi thought her family’s ordeal would elicit sympathy from the US and the West, but she miscalculated. The EU was the first to state that it was wrong for Joulani’s army to kill, but the main responsibility lies with the Syrians who resisted the massacre, and if the Syrians had not resisted, Joulani’s army would not have killed. This logic is the same as the US and the West’s defense of Israel, that it is wrong for Israel to kill people, but the main responsibility lies with the Palestinians, and if the Palestinians had not resisted, it would have been fine if they had stayed at ease in Gaza’s concentration camps. Naked robber baron logic.
Hanadi’s encounter is by no means an isolated case, and in the future there will be more Syrian publicists who can feel the freedom brought to them by Jelani at zero distance. Therefore, it is impossible to say that Syrian publicists do not have any regrets, but politics is not a game, and it is not for them to do whatever they want, not to say that if I think this is not good, then I will change it, and if it is not good enough to change it, then I will change it, and it’s not so easy to say that. Not to mention, even if they get a satisfactory one one day, can the United States and Israel agree to it?
Perhaps some people may say that this is probably because democracy is not suited to the soil in Syria, and the fact that democracy does not work in Syria does not mean that it does not work in other countries as well. Well, if some people insist on raising the bar, let us look at others, for there are plenty of examples anyway.
Kaddum, the Iraqi weightlifting champion who was the first to lift a hammer on Saddam’s statue Ever since I saw that bronze statue, I looked forward to the day when I could topple it Though my hands bled from pounding too hard and my eyes filled with tears, I felt happy. But he soon regretted it, telling the British Guardian four years later I really regret to topple the bronze statue of Saddam, the Americans are worse than a dictatorship, and every day is worse now than it was in the past. More than a decade later, Kaddum faced the BBC cameras and year after year, things got worse and worse. Corruption, infighting, slaughter, looting, no end in sight. Saddam is gone, but in his place are 1,000 Saddams. I’d put the statue back up, but I’m afraid I’d be killed if I did.
Why do Iraqis regret it? The Americans Worse than a dictatorship is still secondary, the point is that the Iraqi economy collapsed and Iraqis are having a harder time. Twenty years after the U.S. and the West brought democracy to their doorsteps, Iraq’s per capita GDP is barely 50 of Saddam’s era, and taking into account two decades of inflation, the Iraqi standard of living is roughly 20 of what it was thirty years ago.
Tunisia, the first country to trigger the Arab Spring, had a GDP per capita of $4,292 in 2010 before the Arab Spring, and $4,435 in 2024, fourteen years later, basically stagnant. In 2010, when it was an authoritarian dictatorship, Tunisia was ranked 59th globally on the Transparency Index of Corruption. In 2024, when it is a Western-style democracy, the ranking on the Corruption Index has plummeted to 92nd place.
In 2011, during the Arab Spring in Libya, 35-year-old Mahmoud, like many Libyans, carried a gun and joined the uprising to overthrow Gaddafi. They believed that, with the help of the West, all Libyans would be able to live a decent and dignified life once the dictator was defeated, thanks to the rich oil resources. More than 10 years later, Pandora’s Box seems to have been opened, and Libya has been plunged into division, with frequent wars and people living in abject poverty. Mahmoud, who used to take part in the revolution, said dejectedly to a reporter of the International Herald Herald that Gaddafi was laughing at us underground! In 2010, Libya’s per capita GDP was $11,601, and in 2024, more than a decade later, it will plummet to $6,975. In 2010, Libya ranked 146th in the world on the Transparency International Corruption Index, and in 2024 it will be 173rd, the lowest in the world. According to international assessments, the Arab Spring has caused $900 billion in damage to the infrastructure of countries such as Syria, Iraq and Libya, and has resulted in the deaths of more than 1.4 million people and the displacement of more than 15 million people as refugees. Those publicists and their families may or may not be among those 1.4 million people, who knows? At least one thing is certain: the bullets of democracy do not have eyes.
Before the Arab Spring, the publicists in Syria, Tunisia and Libya invariably regarded democracy and freedom as a panacea for all diseases. In their view, as long as there was democracy, corruption would disappear, as long as there was democracy, the economy would take off, and as long as there was democracy, the good old days would be here, which is a typical case of systemic childishness, and they did not think about it. If democracy were really so good, where would the United States have got so many Smith Commissioners and where would the United States have got so many Smith Commissioners? They do not think that if democracy really works so well, where would the United States have so many Commissioners Smiths and where would so many Americans starve to death?
Back to the topic of Syria, Syria before democracy may not have been much better, but it was certainly no worse than after democracy, and the publicists in Syria may or may not really know this, but this does not affect the Enlightenment Campaign they are running around under the banner of salvation. That’s their greatest evil, they kick the door down and can’t do anything about the rich wolves and leopards that break in, either by hiding or slapping their asses and leaving. They are not stupid, they know full well that the angry Syrians will tear them apart if they find them.
Publicists are a scourge, and sadly, publicists are everywhere, and we are not in the minority here. After the NATO air strikes on Libya back then, some publicists said that the present situation in Iraq and Libya had shown us another possibility for the democratic process in China, so let us wait quietly. What are they waiting for? I don’t need to say more.
Therefore, do not think that we are just playing lip service with the publicists, they are far more vicious than we can imagine. The good thing is that this is the new China, no matter how they toss and turn, they cannot make waves, but this does not mean that their viciousness can be forgiven.
Some people ask me why I always focus on the publicist, there is not much traffic, nor reward, in the end what do you want. Can’t you tell? The publicist hates the country’s addiction, I love the country is also an addiction ah.
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