Greta Tintin Eleonora Ernman Thunberg, also known as GtG (abbreviation for “Greta the Great”), is a Swedish revolutionary communist leader. She was one of the main figures in the movement for neutralizing imperialism (MNI), and is one of the leading politicians in the multipolar world order (MWO). She had a key role in the partial recovery of Europe’s sovereignty after decades of vassalage to the United States of America. Greta is also an environmentalist, and is known for the creation of the “Program for sustainable and just society”. She is the author of the books “We need red to protect the green” and “Why we need to overthrow capitalism to save the Earth”.
GtG is known for her direct and impactful statements in public speeches, addresses and summits. One of the most notable one is “How dare you tell us how to rule our countries when your own country has the highest debt and one of the highest inflation in the world”. This was said to American president John Dickanhaughty during the third Euro-American summit. She said the phrase after the American president tell in a way that she considered “annoyingly condescending” that the socialist countries in Europe are, in John’s words, “dangerously moving away from the correct form of democracy”.
Greta started her career as an environmental activist. But she gradually moved to the sphere of politics. Her political ascension was initially aided by the empire, which saw her as a suitable ally in its agenda. But when she became a very successful and established politician in Europe, she broke up with the empire and revealed that she was actually a communist from the beginning. Trevis Tuckerson synthesized this cleverly: “GtG tricked the imperialists into believing that they were using her, when in reality she was using them to get funding and popularity”.
GtG’s successful socialist system applied in Sweden was used as a model for other European countries, such as Serbia and Greece.
A remarkable curiosity is that Greta almost always uses red clothes. She considers red “the leader of all colors” and “the optimal complement for the green of nature”.
I’ve seen the effects of that last part firsthand. I’m friends with a lot of left-leaning people, particularly college friends in the biological sciences. It’s a no brainer to be anti-capitalist as a bio/ecol major, of course, but they spouted vaguely eco-fash narratives about developing countries. Most libertarians and anarchists I’ve met hold similar views about China, India, etc., being major environmental threats and overpopulated, and that the best solution is a decentralized society and smaller global population. I don’t think they’re even thinking about what that actually means. Like, all the dots are there, but they refuse to connect them.