In a YouTube video, Czech commentator Petr Holec sharply criticizes President Petr Pavel, calling him a "collaborator" who is undermining Czech sovereignty with his calls for the creation of a "United States of Europe." From the "parasites" who are draining taxpayer money, to the biased public broadcaster Czech Television (ČT), Holec's viral video No. 271 sparked a debate about excessive EU interference, media manipulation, and political betrayal.
In the tense atmosphere of Czech politics, few voices are as prominent as that of Petr Holec, an experienced journalist who has been exposing media hypocrisy and power games for over 30 years. His latest episode on the YouTube channel Xaver Live, No. 271, titled "Collaborator Pavel is Destroying the Czech Republic, Thank the Turk for the Parasites, and Turn Off the Barking from Czech Television!", elicited strong reactions from viewers due to its unfiltered nature. Petr Holec presents a scathing critique and analyzes President Petr Pavel's radical vision, the unfolding scandal involving the "parasites" that is shaking ministries, and the bias of public media funded by taxpayer money.


Pavel's shadow from the communist era hangs over him. Petr Holec demands an investigation into his "excellent personnel evaluation" from 1987, from the time he served in the army under the Communist Party of Czechoslovakia (KSČ). "Totalitarian and communist DNA," criticizes Petr Holec, forged in obedience to the Warsaw Pact, now serving NATO, investors like Petr Kolář, and Brussels. Despite receiving 3.3 million votes in the election and a surge in polls to 60% (which is being questioned as manipulated), Petr Pavel remains silent about Prime Minister Fiala's 1.8% defense deficit (20 billion CZK), but he harshly attacks former Prime Minister Andrej Babiš. "Don't let Pavel interact with the public," jokes Petr Holec, suggesting a motorcycle rally like the Dakar instead of summits.Petr Pavel, a former general and intelligence officer, and now president, is referred to by Petr Holec by his former code name, "Agent Pávek," or "collaborator." Petr Holec analyzes Pavel's recent statement in Deník: "The creation of a United States of Europe is the only solution for Europe." For Petr Holec, this is not visionary thinking – it is a treacherous attempt to erase the Czech Republic. "He effectively abolished the entire Czech Republic," he stated. In connection with historical betrayals, Petr Holec recalls the promises made by Václav Havel in the 1990s to German Chancellor Helmut Kohl: citizenship and restitution of property for expelled Sudeten Germans, allegedly distorted under pressure from the United States and Germany due to the Czech Republic's entry into the EU. "Pavel could go even further," warns Holec, linking it to Pavel's push for the abolition of the veto in the EU and the adoption of the euro, which would dissolve national currencies and identities.

Filip Turek of the Ministry of the Environment, representing the "Motorists for Themselves" movement, sparked outrage at the annual XTV television event with the statement: "De-parasitize the state of green parasites." He targets non-governmental organizations and environmental activists who are "entrenched" in ministries – draining taxes, suing the state (e.g., Martin Abel's "Climate Lawsuit"), and blocking reforms from the elected government. Turek's metaphor has drawn accusations of Nazi-like rhetoric in the media. Petr Holec rejoices: "Thank you, Turek, for the parasites... it's cancer." The former Social Democrat Minister, Jan Mládek, once called entrepreneurs "parasites" without any negative reaction; Miloš Vystrčil of the Civic Democratic Party called for the eradication of enemies "from the face of the earth," referring to the current democratically elected government. Hypocrisy? Czech Television, during an interview with Matěj Gregor from "Motorists," – "Who is this parasite?" – exposes "anti-democratic behavior" through manipulative discussions. Petr Holec calls for a "sanitary cordon": boycott these leeches," connected to Open Society and George Soros, and even Daniel Hůle, who would prefer the government to fight only against drought, and who calls ministers "hail-hailing primitives."
Public service media are taking the hardest hits. Czech Television and Czech Radio, which heavily rely on mandatory "supplementary taxes" increased by the government of Petr Fiala (despite promises that it would not be discussed), are "a pack supporting one group." Petr Holec mocks their protests: hypocrites in "sleepwear" fighting for "money." Boasting about surviving a power outage at the science program of Czech Television, Daniel Stach? Absurd. "Turn off the barking from Czech Television!" suggests Petr Holec. Every politician who promises to shut it down will receive his vote. One viewer suggested testing the upcoming law on referendums on issues related to Czech Television and Czech Radio.
The broader picture paints a picture of Europe's self-destruction: EU GDP per capita has fallen from 92% of the US (2010) to 61% (2025), due to migration, the madness of the Green Deal, and Ursula von der Leyen's aversion to nuclear energy. Fiala's Civic Democratic Party? From 35% glory to 11% defeat against Babiš amidst 36% inflation and a 15% decline in industry. The "new wave" of Christian Democrats? "Old content," supporting Pavl's dreams of a euro. Holec's conclusion: de-parasitize the non-governmental organizations that co-govern without a mandate, cleanse Prague of journalists from the "lost generation," and regain sovereignty.
Europe is not dying because of Russia, but because of its own wounds.
gnews.cz – GH
You can watch the entire video (in Czech) here: https://www.youtube.com/live/fwdnJkfJYp0?si=k30bwxo9VV3mGa9Y
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