A Continental Failure: Germany Pays the Price for Outsourced Security
LONDON — Today, the "European Dream" was unceremoniously unplugged. The catastrophic cyber-attack that has plunged 20 million Germans into darkness is the inevitable, terrifying result of trusting national security to the whims of an interconnected, borderless bureaucracy. When you connect your vital infrastructure to a continent-spanning grid, a weakness anywhere becomes a vulnerability everywhere.
For years, conservative voices have warned against the relentless drive to digitize and integrate the fundamental pillars of the nation-state. Power, water, and defence are sovereign responsibilities, not services to be outsourced to transnational clouds managed by "global partners." Germany, the supposed economic engine of the EU, is now discovering the hard way that a nation that cannot keep its own lights on is not truly a nation at all.
"We are witnessing the absolute failure of the integrationist model," observes Alistair Vance. "While the technocrats in Brussels boast about 'smart grids,' hostile actors have effortlessly bypassed their porous defences. The United Kingdom must learn from this continental disaster." The Berlin Blackout is not a glitch; it is a systemic warning. True security is found in physical borders, localized control, and a fierce commitment to national sovereignty. The lights are out in Berlin, and the ideological darkness of the EU is entirely to blame.