Vice president of the EU, Kaja Kalas.
Vice president of the EU, Kaja Kalas.
That's why the EU commission heads are always, if you look them up, royalty. Herman von Rumpi, Vanderladen. I mean, look them up. They're formerly royal, no longer. You know, just a few decades ago, they were wearing crowns.
I mean, von Rumpi was the head for 20 years, and he's the king of Luxembourg.
I mean, if you look at who the EU commission has been headed up by, they're all royalty.
And Herman von Ruppe was the last head of it before Ursula von der Leyen. And Herman Von Ruppe is the main heir of all the Nazi fortunes and owns Luxembourg. All the Nazis. Way richer than Elon Musk, but his wealth is so great. The real rich, you never hear about it. He's royalty, by the way. So you have royalty owning the EU, owning countries in the EU outright. He's the guardian of Luxembourg. Look it up. And then he hands the baton to her, all part of the same group, same families.
So, the EU's executive branch is known as the European Commission, which includes 27 members. The current president is Ursula von der Leyen, who has seven children. There are three executive vice presidents. Franz Timmermans has four children. Margeth Vestager has three children. And the third, Valdis Dobrovakis, doesn't have any children. So, there's one. There are four vice presidents. Marcos Sefkovic has three children. Vera Jarova has two. Dobrovka Suica has one. And Margaritas Shinias has two. So almost all of these people have kids. Right. The stuff Alex is saying is just completely made up from his imagination. It would make sense that the EU leadership wouldn't have children if they were intent on breaking up the family and destroying everything. And thus, it must be true that they don't have kids, even if almost all of them do. No, no, no, no. What you do is you have a pre- Predetermined conclusion and then work backwards from there. By making things up. Exactly. Because the reality doesn't fit the predetermined conclusion and it feels better if you're right. Yeah. I'm going to be overly generous to Alex and pretend that he meant the heads of countries that are members of the EU. But even then, things get dumb really fast. There are 27 member states of the EU, and here's a rapid fire of the country and the number of kids their head of state has. All right, I like it. Austria, two kids. Belgium, two kids. Bulgaria, two kids. Croatia, two kids. Cyprus, two kids. Czech Republic, two kids. Denmark, two kids. All right, this is getting freaky, man. I'm not liking this now. Now I'm believing there's a weirder conspiracy. What's going on? The two-kid conspiracy. The two-kid conspiracy. But here's where it changes. What's going on? Estonia, three kids. Finland, three kids. France, no kids. Germany, one kid. Greece, one kid. Hungary, four kids. That's the president, but if you want to talk about the Prime Minister, Viktor Orban, he has five kids. Ireland, four kids. Italy, three kids. Latvia, two kids. Lithuania, two kids. Luxembourg. No kids, but their head of state is gay, and he just got married in 2015. Right. Malta, three kids. Netherlands, none. Ooh, there's one more example. Poland, one kid. Portugal, two kids. Romania, no kids. Oh my god. Slovakia, two kids. Slovenia, one kid. Spain, two kids. Sweden, two kids. That was excessive, and I apologize for putting you through that, but I did decide to not... You had to do it. But I also didn't say all their names. No, you weren't going to lose. You had no shot there. I think it's important, though, to lay this out in detail to really make sure that the picture is clear that there is no basis for the things that Alex says.