Poland Steals Russian High School Building Near Russian Embassy

One of the biggest regrets that the West is going to have when they are living in the nightmare of the post-war world they are creating is that private property doesn’t exist anymore.

If you can take private property from Russians, then you can take private property from Russian agents, and, some of you might have the ability to recall that during the 2016 election up through at least the events of January 1, 2021, every supporter of Donald Trump was accused of being an agent of Russia.

Other right-wing Europeans have been accused of this.

De facto, under existing rules (I don’t even know if these are laws, or what is going on exactly), there is no reason that any right-winger in the Western world can’t have their property seized by the state, with zero compensation, under the premise that “Russians are metaphysically evil.”

New York Post:

Moscow lashed out at Poland after authorities seized a high school near Russia’s embassy in Warsaw, promising a “harsh reaction” over the impounding that it claimed was a blatant violation of international agreements.

The 1970s multi-story building, which serves children of diplomats and has been nicknamed the “spy nest” by Warsaw locals, belongs to the Polish government, said foreign ministry spokesman Lukasz Jasina, who said the move was OKed by a court.

Jasina said Moscow could protest the move, but that Polish authorities had acted within the bounds of the law.

“Our opinion, which has been confirmed by the courts, is that this property belongs to the Polish state and was taken by Russia illegally,” he said.

Just to be clear, he’s talking about something that allegedly happened during the Cold War.

Russia’s foreign ministry ripped the seizure as being “hostile” and violating the 1961 Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations. It also deemed the move an encroachment on Russian diplomatic property in Poland.

Such an insolent step by Warsaw, which goes beyond the framework of civilized inter-state relations, will not remain without a harsh reaction and consequences for the Polish authorities and Polish interests in Russia,” it said.

This is just the latest example of “you can just take stuff from Russians.”

America has obviously been the biggest promoter of this practice, and America has engaged in it. And the official position of the US government is that anyone who posts about QAnon or vaccine safety on the internet is a Russian agent.

So you can go ahead and do the math on that and then maybe wonder if this wasn’t something we maybe should have been paying a little bit more attention to.