EU's proposed survival kit is just an attempt to instill fear in people: Lacale

 


The European Union has gone so far as to suddenly recommend that its citizens stock up on a survival kit, including water, to survive for at least 72 hours, in case, they say, of a crisis. See why.

In what the European Union has called its "Preparedness Strategy," it has listed items that citizens should have in their survival kit: a small radio, a lighter, matches, medication, some cash (because credit cards are useless (even though they're the same people who want to impose the digital euro), water, a power bank to charge cell phones, a Swiss Army knife, a first aid kit, food, glasses, and a board game.

All of this comes from possible war, cyberattacks, diseases, and climate events, according to the discredited organization of European states, which, according to analysts, wants to instill in citizens the need for "protection," even at the cost of their freedom.

The warning, European geopoliticians maintain, specifies a power outage, a shutdown of the internet, and a shutdown of the financial system—in other words, it speaks of an impending calamity.

"It's a message of intimidation. They're treating us like sheep, manipulable objects... they're trying to convince us of a devastating war... Social control is being sold as a need for protection from an 'external enemy.' In short, they want to instill fear..." said Danielle Lacalle.

Of course, the message has been received with mockery and harsh suspicion by European citizens, who by now have opened their eyes to this type of bureaucratic suffocation by the European Union.

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