FACT CHECK: Speech Made By Slovakian Prime Minister Predates Recent Shooting

Fico delivered the speech in November 2023, not recently

Slovakian prime minister riddled with bullets in assassination attempt



Slovakian Prime Minister Robert Fico was riddled with bullets Wednesday in an apparent assassination attempt. Fico, the 59-year-old populist leader of the Direction-Social Democracy party — a political hybrid with both leftist and social conservative elements — is, however, expected to pull through.

Deputy Prime Minister Tomas Taraba told the BBC that Fico's surgery, which dragged on for five hours, "went well," adding, "I guess in the end he will survive."

'This assassination attempt was politically motivated and the suspect made the decision to do it shortly after the presidential election.'

A witness told Reuters that the attempted assassination took place Wednesday as Fico made his way out of a building to shake hands with a group of people in the central Slovak town of Handlova where he was chairing a government meeting. Before Fico could exchange pleasantries, gunshots rang out. Security guards carried the bloody leader away while police tackled the 71-year-old suspect to the ground.

Fico was reportedly shot a total of five times. According to Taraba, one bullet tore through the prime minister's stomach and another hit a joint.

\ud83d\udea8 NEW video of the assassination attempt on Slovakia Prime Minister Fico
— (@)

According Slovak news, the suspect charged in the shooting is Juraj Cintula, a liberal activist and former shopping mall security guard who fancies himself a poet. The suspect's son said, "I have absolutely no idea what my father intended, what he planned, what happened."

Cintula allegedly told police that he had planned the attack days prior but did not intend to kill Fico, reported Politico.

While Fico is set to survive, it is unclear how the country of 5.4 million will fare. After all, the prime minister's allies appear to suspect the hit was politically motivated.

Interior Minister Matúš Šutaj Eštok insinuated a connection between the shooting and the presidential election last month where Fico's ally, Peter Pellegrini, secured 53% of the vote, beating former Foreign Minister and Fico critic Ivan Korcok.

Korcok has been highly critical of Pellegrini and Fico's stance on Ukraine.

Upon taking office once again in October, Fico immediately drew the ire of the European nation's NATO allies and centrists at home by fulfilling his central campaign promise to halt all military aid to Ukraine while maintaining "comprehensive" nonmilitary aid to the beleaguered nation. Fico also ruffled feathers by underscoring his opposition to the possibility of Ukraine's membership in NATO as well as sanctions against Russia.

'I am horrified by where the hatred towards another political opinion can lead.'

After Pellegrini's election, Fico reportedly expressed concern that progressive voters' dehumanization of their political foes and their mounting frustration, "amplified by the newspapers, the media or the news, will translate into the murder" of a government leader.

"This assassination attempt was politically motivated and the suspect made the decision to do it shortly after the presidential election," said Eštok.

Pellegrini joined outgoing Slovak President Zuzana Čaputová in condemning the attack Thursday and calling for cooler heads to prevail, reported DPA International.

"Let's get out of the vicious circle of hatred and mutual accusation," said Čaputová, who further suggested the shooting amount to an attack on democracy.

Pellegrini wrote on X, "An assassination attempt on the Prime Minister is a threat to everything that has adorned Slovak democracy so far."

"I am horrified by where the hatred towards another political opinion can lead. We don't have to agree on everything, but there are plenty of ways to express our disagreement democratically and legally," continued the incoming Slovak president. "An assassination attempt on one of the highest constitutional officials is an unprecedented threat to Slovak democracy. If we express different political opinions with guns in the squares, and not in polling stations, we endanger everything we have built together in 31 years of Slovak sovereignty."

President Joe Biden stated Wednesday, "We condemn this horrific act of violence. Our embassy is in close touch with the government of Slovakia and ready to assist."

NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg wrote, "Shocked and appalled by the shooting of Prime Minister Robert Fico. I wish him strength for a speedy recovery."

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky similarly condemned the attack, noting that "every effort should be made to ensure that violence does not become the norm in any country, form, or sphere."

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'A real hero': 11-year-old Ukrainian boy traveled over 600 miles by himself to escape war-torn country



Since the Russian invasion of Ukraine on Feb. 24, there have been more than 2.3 million refugees who fled the war-torn country, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. One of the most astonishing Ukrainian refugees is an 11-year-old boy who escaped the nation by traveling over 600 miles to neighboring Slovakia.

Last Friday, Russian forces seized the nuclear power station in Zaporizhzhia – which is the largest nuclear power plant in Europe. During the Russian capture of the nuclear plant in southeastern Ukraine, a fire broke out near one of the station's six reactors.

With war waging in Ukraine, Yulia Pisetskaya wanted to get her 11-year-old son to safety. However, Pisetskaya's mother is sick and is unable to move on her own, according to a video posted on Facebook. In an effort to get her son out of harm's way, Pisetskaya put her 11-year-old son Hassan on a train in Zaporizhzhia.

Pisetskaya – who is a widow – wrote the phone number of relatives who live in Slovakia on his hand. The young boy had his passport and a small red backpack.

The boy traveled by himself for approximately 620 miles by train to the Slovakian border.

Once he arrived at the border of Slovakia, kind volunteers provided Hassan with food and drink. Border officials were able to contact Hassan's relatives living in the Slovak capital Bratislava and reunite him.

11-year-old Ukrainian boy escapes to Slovakia by himself www.youtube.com

Yulia Pisetskaya thanked everyone who assisted in her son's safe arrival in Slovakia, "I am grateful you have saved my child’s life."

"In your small country, there are people with big hearts ... Please save our Ukrainian children and give them a safe haven," the mother said, CBS News reported.

According to a Facebook post from the Slovak Embassy in the U.K., a Slovak interior ministry representative said of Hassan, "He conquered everyone with his smile, fearlessness, and determination of a real hero."

Roman Mikulec – Slovakia's interior minister – penned a touching tribute to the triumphant boy.

"Little Hassan is only 11 years old, but in his way he has shown huge determination, courage, and fearlessness that sometimes adults don't have," Mikulec wrote on Facebook. "I am really very sorry for him and all the other children and their families who have to flee their country because of what is happening in Ukraine."

Mikulec proclaimed that people in Slovakia are "ready to help" the refugees fleeing the war in Ukraine.

"You will find security with us and if you ask for temporary protection, you will be provided with health care, social security, food, accommodation, education, and job opportunities," he said on social media.

Horowitz: The country that ‘succeeded’ against COVID with masks has the highest case rate in the world



Those who believe in the freedom of bodily autonomy are celebrating a slew of recent court rulings enjoining the Biden administration’s injection mandate. However, no GOP state attorney general has bothered to fight the equally immoral, illogical, and inhumane mask mandates that are still in place. Despite nearly two years of evidence that strict mask-wearing has zero effectiveness in stopping the spread, the mandates on 2-year-olds on planes and in many schools still continue. Slovakia is a perfect case study of the mask mendacity.

On May 13, 2020, the Atlantic published an article lauding Slovakia for, at the time, having the lowest per-capita COVID death rate in Europe. The article’s prediction should now be the laughingstock of the world:

When this pandemic ends, and when the reckoning over how the world responded invariably begins, Slovakia will likely be among those highlighted as a success story, whereas the United States—which was supposed to be the country best prepared for such a crisis—will be remembered as among those that suffered the worst. How Slovakia was able to flatten its curve comes down to more than just quick decision making and the widespread adoption of face masks. Perhaps the greatest lesson to be learned from Slovakia is of the value of leading from the front.

Slovakia was so worried about masks that the country even got Taiwan to donate hundreds of thousands of these useless cloths as part of a bilateral trade agreement.

Well, that was before Slovakia’s first winter wave. One can excuse people for mistaking low spread at the time for mask efficacy rather than the fact that the country just didn’t get its turn yet. But for countries to continue this inhumane mandate despite what we now know demonstrates that masks are not a means to public health but an end in themselves of tyranny.

At over 2,000 new cases per million per day, according to Our World in Data, Slovakia now has more cases per capita than any country in the world. To put this in perspective, that is almost three times the level of the winter peak in the U.S., a country that has not exactly performed well in the pandemic!

It’s true that some individual states closer to the size of Slovakia have had more severe waves. However, even the worst counties in the upper Midwest are tracking about 1,200 new cases per million per day.

And here is the epidemiological curve presented by the inimitable Ian Miller, juxtaposed to policy solutions:

Slovakia now leads the world in case rate, which is odd because The Atlantic last year said that \u201cWhen this pandemic ends...Slovakia will likely be among those highlighted as a success story\u201d due to their commitment to masking and lockdowns\n\nWonder if we\u2019ll get any updates!pic.twitter.com/zVjeNjf5S4
— IM (@IM) 1638299206

It’s not just Slovakia. Wherever you turn in Europe, both masks and vaccine mandates have failed miserably, and the spread is now worse than ever. Belgium is now six weeks into the new mask mandate, and it has more cases than ever before, even though the Belgians already suffered one of the deadliest waves in all of Europe. Oh, and 87.4% of adults are vaccinated.

Cases in Belgium are the highest they\u2019ve ever been, over a month into their new mask mandate and with 87.4% of adults fully vaccinated so I\u2019d love to know why the media hasn\u2019t done a story on how Ron DeSantis managed to create his Florida state guard and invade Belgium so quicklypic.twitter.com/z6fkjV2z9k
— IM (@IM) 1638644529

To begin with, the CDC, as late as May 2020, was citing the 10 randomized controlled trials that showed “no significant reduction in influenza transmission with the use of face masks.” The Centre for Evidence-Based Medicine at Oxford also summarized six international studies that “showed that masks alone have no significant effect in interrupting the spread of ILI or influenza in the general population, nor in healthcare workers.”

The only randomized controlled trial studying mask efficacy against COVID published last year was the now famous Danish study that failed to show any meaningful reduction in spread from mask-wearing. Then, several months ago, the media trumpeted a large study done in Bangladesh that seemed to show efficacy. Well, now that the authors have released the actual data, we see that indeed no such claim can be made from the study. It turns out that out of over 340,000 individuals over a span of eight weeks, there were only 20 fewer cases of COVID detected in the mask group over the control group – 1,106 symptomatic individuals confirmed seropositive in the control group and 1,086 such individuals in the treatment group.

Even these results are hard to interpret because of numerous confounding factors. University of California Berkeley professor Ben Recht critiqued the study as follows:

This study was not blinded, as it’s impossible to blind a study on masks. The intervention was highly complex and included a mask promotion campaign and education about other mitigation measures including social distancing. Moreover, individuals were only added to the study if they consented to allow the researchers to visit and survey their households. There was a large differential between the control and treatment groups here, with 95% consenting in the treatment group but only 92% consenting in control. This differential alone could wash away the difference in observed cases. Finally, symptomatic seropositivity is a crude measure of covid as the individuals could have been infected before the trial began.

Given the numerous caveats and confounders, the study still only found a tiny effect size. My takeaway is that a complex intervention including an educational program, free masks, encouraged mask wearing, and surveillance in a poor country with low population immunity and no vaccination showed at best modest reduction in infection.

In other words, you can now add this to a list of 400 studies compiled by the Brownstone Institute that fail to find any correlation between public policy interventions and better pandemic outcomes.

It’s not OK for Republican-controlled states to continue to ignore the facts that masks are inhumane and they simply don’t work. Consider the fact that Head Start has now mandated masks on 2-year-olds, many of whom have special needs. Oregon has moved to make its mask mandate permanent. Why are no red state governments at least suing against the federal mandates, and why are so few red states even banning mask mandates within the states?

The courts are all political. They only responded to the lawsuits against the vaccine mandate when they saw robust political opposition within the political branches of the red states. They see no such opposition regarding the mask mandates. Thus, absent a unified effort from state attorneys general, they are unlikely to respond to a handful of individual lawsuits. The same legal rationale denying the feds the power to force vaccines also denies them the power to cover our breathing holes. But the courts only respond to political momentum.

If nearly two years of masking failing to work anywhere is still not enough to end the most invasive human mandate of all time, then we truly are no longer a free people.