German Chancellor Merz Says Entitlement Programs No Longer Sustainable


Posted originally on CTH on August 25, 2025 | Sundance

CTH noted several months ago, end the Marshall Plan for Europe and things will change quickly.

Germany is in a tight economic place as a result of: (1) former leftist Chancellor Olaf Scholz alignment with climate change policy, radically changing the German energy base and driving up costs; (2) the financial support for Ukraine; (3) the financial burden of mass African/ME migration, and (4) the new Trump-era EU tariffs that effectively end the Marshall Plan.

Put all four elements together and the German economic contraction is only forecast to worsen. This is the reality that current German Chanceller Fredrich Merz is facing. Thus, as a non-pretending former businessman, Merz recently told his party and the German electorate that current financial conditions no longer support the expansive entitlement state.

Pensions, benefits and even healthcare are potentially going to be impacted. Germans are not happy.

GERMANY – The German welfare state is no longer financially sustainable, Friedrich Merz said on Saturday. The chancellor argued for a fundamental reassessment of the benefits system as spending continues to soar past last year’s record of €47bn (£40bn).

In a state-level party conference meeting on Saturday, Mr Merz said: “The welfare state as we have it today can no longer be financed with what we can economically afford.”

Once the export champion of Europe, Germany’s economy has slowed dramatically since 2017, with GDP growing by only 1.6 per cent since then versus 9.5 per cent for the rest of the eurozone.

Germany’s economy shrank by 0.2 per cent last year following a 0.3 per cent dip in 2023 – the first time since the early 2000s the economy has retreated two years in a row.

Industrial production fell under the Left-leaning “traffic light” coalition of Olaf Scholz and continues to slide under the new government, with GDP declining by 0.3 per cent in the second quarter of 2025.

Meanwhile, spending on social welfare has exploded, and is set to increase further this year as Germany’s population ages and unemployment rises. Although the majority of benefit recipients are German, large numbers are non-German citizens.

[…] Germany has in place a so-called “debt brake”, which limits how much the government can borrow to fund its spending plans.

Mr Merz’s views on the welfare state are likely to provoke discontent among his Social Democratic Party (SDP) coalition partners, whom he relies on for a thin majority in the Bundestag.

[…] Lars Klingbeil, the SPD leader and vice-chancellor, hit back at Mr Merz’s announcement with calls for increased taxation on top earners. He called for a summit focused on helping industry leaders respond or adapt to US tariffs and said “no option is off the table” when it comes to plugging the 30-billion-euro gap in Germany’s budget. (more)

A note of caution.  Historically speaking, when the German economy gets bad enough, Europe ends up in a war.

.

BANNON: Forget Kiev. The Real Battle Is New York City. Marxists And Foreign Money Are Digging In Deep. If You Think They’ll Just Collapse On Their Own, You’re Delusional. We’ll Have To Take It Back


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: August 19, 2025

Is Woke Dead… Or Just On Vacation?


Posted originally on Rumble By Charlie Kirk show on: August, 16, 2025

THOUGHTCRIME Ep. 95 — Female Umps? Liberal Charlie Kirk? To Weed or Not to Weed?


Posted originally on Rumble By Charlie Kirk show on: August, 17, 2025

ALEX SWOYER: In 2015, Kim Davis Became The Face Of Resistance To Same-Sex Marriage. Now She’s Asking The Supreme Court To Erase Her $200K Fine And Even Reconsider The Obergefell Ruling.


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: August 14, 2025

SHOCKING: GOP Virginia Lawmaker Set Ablaze with GASOLINE – Suspect Captured! | Elijah Schaffer


Published originally on Rumble By The Gateway Pundit on August 1, 2025

Woke Cincinnati Police Chief Sued For Discriminating Against White Officers | Drew Hernandez


Published originally on Rumble By The Gateway Pundit on July 30 2025

Matthews: “What Is All Common In These Mass Killings Is Withholding Of Mental Health Records.”


Posted originally on Rumble By Bannon’s War Room on: July 29, 2025

The Bias of Academia


Posted originally on Jul 29, 2025 by Martin Armstrong 

Saturninus Aureus

My problem with academics is that they sometimes overthink and claim that someone writing about events 200 years or more in the past cannot be considered a historian. We still write about the American and French Revolutions today. They recently made a film about Napoleon from the early 19th century. I have written before about the Historia Augusta and how academics have called it a fraud because it mentions emperors like Saturninus, for whom there is no other source, so it must be fake. They were proven wrong when coins were discovered showing all the names they rejected were real.

2025_07_27_13_13_06_Archaeologists_on_the_Greek_island_of_Ithaca_discovered_ancient_inscriptions_and

We are plagued by fake news on every front, and academics are no exception. Just recently, evidence of a sanctuary dedicated to Odysseus, the legendary hero of Homer’s Odyssey, was found. The site, often referred to as the “School of Homer,” contains amazing Mycenaean artifacts and structures. It points to early cult activity and ancient traditions that connect the island to its most famous resident. For more than a century, academics have insisted that Homer was merely a story for children and that there was no Troy or Mycenae.

Mycenae the Lions Gate MAA

I have been to Mycenae, the city that the academics claimed never existed. When it came to Homer and his works, The Iliad and The Odyssey, academics pronounced that it was not history and was a story written for children.  That was the argument of the French scholar François Hédelin, Abbé d’Aubignac (1604–1676). In his work Conjectures académiques, ou Dissertation sur l’Iliade written around 1664 but published posthumously in 1715, d’Aubignac argued that Homer never existed and that the epics were compilations of older, shorter folk tales. He declared, with NO EVIDENCE, that the Iliad and Odyssey was not historical but rather entertainment for young audiences, akin to fairy tales or children’s stories. Another academic, Friedrich August Wolf (1759–1824), in his Prolegomena ad Homerum (1795), further developed the “Homeric Question”—debating Homer’s authorship and the origin of the poems.

Today, no credible academic can argue that Homer was solely for children. Many still insist, without any evidence whatsoever, that the epics blended myth, folklore, and oral tradition rather than strict history. I suppose Paul Revere’s ride never actually took place, since all we have are accounts from people who were not eyewitnesses, and perhaps these are just folklore. The problem these academics have is that the historical basis (e.g., Troy’s existence) was debated until archaeological discoveries (like Schliemann’s excavations) suggested some factual underpinnings.

Schliemann

Anyone who has been to the ancient cities mentioned only by Homer will find a plaque that notes it was discovered by Heinrich, a wealthy non-academic who believed that Homer was a historian. He not only discovered Troy, but also Mycenae, mentioned by Homer.

Heinrich Schliemann, the German archaeologist, heavily relied on Homer’s Iliad as a guide to locate the ancient city of Troy. Schliemann was convinced that the epic poem contained historical truths about the Trojan War and used its descriptions to pinpoint the site. In the early 1870s, he focused on a mound at Hisarlik in northwestern Turkey, which he believed matched Homer’s depiction of Troy’s location. His excavations there, beginning in 1870, uncovered multiple layers of settlements, one of which he claimed was the Troy of Homer’s epic.

Schliemann 2

The academics NEVER sought to verify that Troy never existed. The problem was merely a story for children, and they did not conduct any investigation to substantiate their thesis. When Troy was found, the academic accused Heinrich Schliemann of fraud. They accused him of embellishing or even fabricating some of his discoveries—including the so-called “Jewels of Helen” that his wife, Sophia, was famously photographed wearing.  In 1873, Schliemann claimed to have discovered a hoard of gold and silver artifacts at Troy, which he dubbed the “Treasure of Priam.” This included diadems, earrings, and other jewelry, which he later had Sophia wear in photographs, suggesting they were ancient Trojan royal treasures.

Some scholars refused to admit that they were wrong and accused Schliemann of assembling the treasure from finds made at different times or even other locations, presenting them as a single, dramatic discovery. Schliemann was accused of sensationalizing and possibly misrepresenting his finds, but the jewels themselves were likely authentic ancient artifacts—just not necessarily the “Treasure of Priam” as he described. His reputation remains a mix of groundbreaking archaeology and self-aggrandizing academics who were flat-out wrong.

Mycenae Homer Lion Gate

Homer does not explicitly describe the Lion Gate of Mycenae or the exact location of Agamemnon’s burial in his epic poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey. However, he does provide some indirect references to Mycenae and Agamemnon’s tomb that later inspired archaeological discoveries. In the Iliad, Mycenae is described as a mighty city ruled by Agamemnon, the leader of the Greek forces against Troy. Homer calls it “rich in gold” (πολύχρυσοςpolychrysos), a phrase that aligns with the wealth found in Mycenaean tombs.

The Lion Gate, the monumental entrance to the citadel of Mycenae (built around 1250 BC), is not directly mentioned by Homer. However, the grandeur of Mycenae in his epics matches the archaeological evidence of its impressive fortifications. The gate was given its modern name due to the relief sculpture of two lions (or lionesses) above the lintel, but Homer does not reference this structure. In the Odyssey (Book 4), Menelaus mentions that Agamemnon was buried by Orestes (his son), but no specific tomb location is given.

Gold Mask Of Agamemnon

Later Greek tradition (e.g., Pausanias, 2nd century AD) claimed that Agamemnon was buried within the walls of Mycenae. In 1876, Heinrich Schliemann excavated the so-called “Grave Circle A” inside Mycenae, uncovering gold-rich shaft graves. He famously, but perhaps mistakenly, identified one mask as “Agamemnon’s Mask” (now dated to 1550–1500 BC, earlier than the Trojan War era).

Homer’s epics and the portrayal of Mycenae’s wealth and power align with the archaeological remains. The connection between Homeric legend and Mycenaean archaeology was primarily shaped by later interpretations, including Schliemann’s excavations.

Galbraith Great Crash PNG

What I learned in school is that it was not honestly teaching history, but opinion. The socialist will NEVER admit they were ever wrong, any more than these so-called academics of ancient history that pronounce conclusions without ever investigating anything. As I have said, I had to read Galbraith’s Great Crash in high school. He was a socialist and omitted any discussion of the sovereign defaults of 1931. It had to be blamed on corporations, for the solution was complete power to the state.

Inez Stepman Explains Everything Wrong With Feminism


Posted originally on Rumble By Charlie Kirk show on: July 24, 2025