Difference between revisions of "Eastern Europe"
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− | [[Yugoslavia]] was ''not'' occupied by the Red Army and followed a relatively independent path. | + | [[Yugoslavia]] was ''not'' occupied by the Red Army and followed a relatively independent path. In the [[1990s]], it was broken into statelets after a determined US/NATO effort. |
==1989== | ==1989== | ||
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+ | ==Soros and education after 1989== | ||
+ | Foundations controlled by [[George Soros]] founded new or financed existing [[universities]] all over the region, and gave hundreds of scholarships and travel grants to [[economists]], [[bankers]], [[physicians]], [[teachers]], and [[NGO|local government activists]], in order to create a network of dependent clients. In the former [[Soviet Union]], Soros gave $200 million between [[1993]] and [[1994]] to support some 30,000 scientists who had lost official research funding.<ref name=Soros>https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/uploads/fa141f34-3f1e-43b3-ac95-eff80f39cdc8/george-soros-and-the-fall-of-communism-in-europe-20191106.pdf</ref> | ||
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+ | His foundations across the network funded the production of new [[school textbooks]], while also changing the system for early childhood education.<ref name=Soros/> | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
{{reflist}} | {{reflist}} |
Latest revision as of 23:33, 26 March 2023
Eastern Europe (Region) | |
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One broad definition of Eastern Europe | |
Eastern region of Europe. |
Eastern Europe is a geographical and cultural area sometimes used interchangeably with the Eastern bloc or Warsaw Pact countries 1945-1990, especially during the Cold War. The confusion is further increased since the term is associated as somewhat low status, hence many of the countries try to pass themselves off as Central European. Russia is sometimes classified as Eastern Europe, at other times in a class of its own.
Contents
WW II
During World War II many of the countries were allied to Germany, and after the war, the former Axis countries (Romania,Hungary, Bulgaria and East Germany were occupied by the Red Army. In the Yalta agreements and the 1944 Percentage agreement with Britain, all of Eastern Europe was apportioned to the USSR, except for Greece, which went to the British, and Yugoslavia, where the influence was split 50-50.
Yugoslavia
- Full article: Yugoslavia
- Full article: Yugoslavia
Yugoslavia was not occupied by the Red Army and followed a relatively independent path. In the 1990s, it was broken into statelets after a determined US/NATO effort.
1989
The report of the 1989 Bilderberg records that “The great risk is that of explosion. Prediction is notoriously difficult, and in Eastern Europe more than anywhere. But on a sober assessment one can see a serious possibility of some kind of an explosion of popular discontent in four out of the six East European states over the next few years: Romania, Poland, Hungary and Czechoslovakia. (Some analysts would add the GDR). No one can predict what course such an explosion would take, nor how the Soviet Union would react to it. A direct military intervention could spell the end of 'perestroika' not just in the country concerned but in the Soviet Union itself.” [1]
The report of the 1989 Bilderberg predicted, incorrectly, that “The political stability of Eastern Europe will continue into the nineties.” [2]
Soros and education after 1989
Foundations controlled by George Soros founded new or financed existing universities all over the region, and gave hundreds of scholarships and travel grants to economists, bankers, physicians, teachers, and local government activists, in order to create a network of dependent clients. In the former Soviet Union, Soros gave $200 million between 1993 and 1994 to support some 30,000 scientists who had lost official research funding.[3]
His foundations across the network funded the production of new school textbooks, while also changing the system for early childhood education.[3]
Related Quotations
Page | Quote | Author | Date |
---|---|---|---|
1989 | “The political stability of Eastern Europe will continue into the nineties.” | 1989 | |
Stef Blok | “I don't think you'll ever be able to centrally organize the EU countries accepting refugees in equal amounts. Eastern-Europeans would never agree to that. Even if we would force them, hands on their back and they'd say "yes", even then, walk a week through Warsaw or Prague. There are no colored people there. They would be gone within a week. They would be literally beaten up. They don't have a life there.” | Stef Blok | 2018 |
Related Documents
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Document:Chris Donnelly proposal to FCO | document | 24 May 2018 | Chris Donnelly | The local partner then needs to do or commission an assessment of the agents or promoters of corruption and influence, eg key businessmen or politicians, as well as opposition politicians and clean businessmen, journalists etc who can be allies. These we bring out on trips to London, HQ NATO etc. |
Document:Would-be German chancellor Scholz jumps the gun on EU expansion eastward, which may provoke more states to follow the UK and exit | Article | 15 August 2021 | Paul Nuttall | Olaf Scholz is a possible candidate for Chancellor of Germany at the September 2021 German parliamentary election. He has warned Russia to expect further European integration and expansion into Eastern Europe. Will this encourage more countries to follow the UK and leave the European Union? |
References
- ↑ https://wikispooks.com/wiki/File:Bilderberg-Conference-Report-1989.pdf 1989 Bilderberg Conference report p.23, 1989
- ↑ https://wikispooks.com/wiki/File:Bilderberg-Conference-Report-1989.pdf File:Bilderberg-Conference-Report-1989.pdf Conference report p.23, 1989
- ↑ a b https://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/uploads/fa141f34-3f1e-43b3-ac95-eff80f39cdc8/george-soros-and-the-fall-of-communism-in-europe-20191106.pdf