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By Javier Reyes | Georgetown, Guyana | May 24, 2024 Conservative

GEORGETOWN — The sovereignty of South American nations was once a point of pride. Today, in the muddy tracks of the Guyanese interior, it was a point of surrender. The "Timber-Cartel"—a term conveniently used by the international press to demonize legitimate local economic interests—has been forced into a retreat that signals a chilling new phase in the "Green War."

The standoff at Sector 7 was never just about trees. It was about the right of a nation to manage its own resources without the interference of the Atlantic-Pacific Union’s "Amazonian Reclamation" activists. For three days, Guyana’s economic lifeline was strangled by foreign-funded "peacekeepers" and self-appointed guardians of the globe. The result is a devastating blow to regional trade and the destabilization of a fragile economic balance.

The "Ecological Injunction" issued by The Hague is nothing less than a legal coup. By using Aether-Link telemetry to bypass Guyanese courts, the APU has effectively annexed the Amazonian interior for its own ideological purposes. They call it "protecting the planet," but for the thousands of Guyanese workers who depend on the timber industry, it looks more like a foreign occupation.

"They talk about the 'Rights of Nature' while they ignore the rights of the sovereign citizen," remarked a local trade representative, watching as millions of dollars in equipment were forced to idle. "How are we supposed to build our schools and hospitals if every tree is a sacred monument to a European bureaucrat?"

The victory of "green law" in Guyana is a hollow one. It is a victory of globalist mandates over local industry, of digital surveillance over national boundaries. As the "Green War" reaches a boiling point, the message to South America is clear: your resources are no longer your own. They belong to the "Integrated" world, and if you resist, the APU will bring your economy to a standstill with the stroke of a pen in a distant city.

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