Quote:
Originally Posted by Breha
Are you really so eager to be ruled by Rome (the present one, not the ancient that is sadly gone)? If the byzantines in Rome would agree I would happily fight for Malta to be reunited with Rome, to take our place. Enjoy your autonomy, just try to fight multiculturalism and british freemasonry. Well, just a suggestion, Rome is waiting for you to tax y ... err to give you a big warm hug.
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Never ever, have I politically auspicated an end to Maltese autonomy in order for it to be transferred to Rome or even Brussels for that matter. Nor do I think I will ever do.
My struggle is primarily indigineous to Malta and does not really relate either to Britain or the Italian Republic nowadays. Unfortunately, it is when the British Empire and Fascist Italy were at loggerheads did Malta's
indigineous Italian culture suffer. Notice the term in bold, please.
If the British did not start their policies of cultural deitalianisation in the 19th. century, the problem would not even exist. Fascist Italy actually caused more benefit to the pre-fascist British imperialistic cultural plans for Malta and more detriment to the cultural aspect of Maltese nationalism.
My nationalist struggle, is essentially a cultural struggle and any other potential effect would be due to cultural considerations. I certainly, like Maltese nationalists of the past, always favour greater autonomy for Malta and any transfer of power from Malta to any other centre of power is to be considered negative.
However, hypothetically speaking, since the majority of the Maltese actually voted to join the European Union with its deleterious liberal progressivist agenda, how would I for example oppose myself to an autonomous Malta in a federation of autonomous Italian regions? As far as I'm concerned, what I am referring to would actually give greater autonomy to Malta and other regions compared to the current European Union membership.
This notion, would actually tie in with my current view for a new and true Europe of the Nations, proper nations. A federal Europe united on lose terms for the common benefit and with the principle of subsidiarity and free association and disassociation according to popular will as the guiding light. I don't doubt that the EU's current mania of concrete centralisation, is the greatest cause for rising skepticism for this common European project. I see a federal Europe made up of heads of clusters of ethno-culturally related nations rather than a federal Europe of the current nation-states often themselves artificial and centralised in their own respect. The current EU nation-state arrangement going towards federalism, a false federalism I may add, is only a manner to allow the creation of a centralised European superstate and nothing more.
Given that this is not plausible for the immediate future, and I have my doubts about its implementation, I believe that Malta should maintain its independence and reassert its traditional Italic heritage. Fighting multiculturalism and the masonic liberal anti-Christian agenda is part of the struggle, incidently both feature prominently in the EU-wide propagandistic agenda.