Vindication in the Dark: Europe Finally Wakes Up to Digital Sovereignty
BERLIN — It took twenty million people sitting in the dark for two days, but the European elite have finally admitted what conservatives have been saying for a decade: a nation without control of its own data is a nation waiting to be conquered. The rapid introduction of the "Eurasian Digital Sovereignty Act" today is a stunning, necessary reversal of the disastrous globalist policies that left Germany so vulnerable.
The Act demands that critical infrastructure and cloud data be hosted locally, rejecting the reckless APU doctrine of "borderless data." It is a massive vindication for those of us who prioritise national security over digital convenience. "When the crisis hit, the global 'cloud' didn't save Berlin; local engineers with physical tools did," notes Alistair Vance. "The EU is finally realizing that sovereignty isn't just about drawing lines on a map; it's about owning the servers that run your country."
While the technocrats in Tokyo and Silicon Valley mourn the loss of their "Great Integration," the rest of us should breathe a sigh of relief. The United Kingdom must immediately adopt similar, if not stronger, measures. We must rip our critical systems out of the hands of transnational corporations and secure them behind unbreachable national firewalls. The lights are back on in Germany, and for the first time in years, it seems someone is actually home.