Elon MUSK, Giorgia MELONI, Nayib BUKELE, Javier MILEI, Viktor ORBÁN – The global alliance EL4DEV of the Philosopher Kings – Analysis of Paul Elvere DELSART’s book.pdf

Aperçu texte
Elon MUSK, Giorgia MELONI, Nayib BUKELE, Javier MILEI, Viktor ORBÁN – The global alliance EL4DEV of the
Philosopher-Kings – Analysis of Paul Elvere DELSART’s book
Subtitle: From libertarian chaos to a decentralized civilizational structure
A – Back cover of the book
What do Giorgia Meloni, Nayib Bukele, Viktor Orbán, Alice Weidel, Nigel Farage, Javier Milei, Vladimir Putin,
Fidias Panayiotou and Donald Trump have in common?
Why do these figures, often presented as the faces of the New Global Right or of a Sovereignist International, seem
to appear at the heart of the same historical moment?
What if, behind the political crises, the media clashes and the geopolitical upheavals a civilizational project was
actually taking shape?
In this geopolitical and intellectual thriller, three women come together in Spain, in Torreblanca, Castellón, and
dive into the heart of a bold vision.
The courageous Spanish journalist Elena Berberana determined to understand the deep dynamics reshaping the
global order.
The young and talented Laura Bodis, from Spain’s Generation Z, capable of deciphering the invisible architectures of
power and the new models of governance.
And the young and dynamic mayor of Torreblanca, Carmen Ortiz, propelled, despite herself, into the center of a
political project of unexpected magnitude.
For in the shadows, one man orchestrates a global vision: the strategist Henry Harper, who joins forces with Elon
Musk and his international circle of friends.
His idea: to transform a simple coalition of sovereignists, innovators and rebels against the old system into a genuine
force for global refoundation.
His tool: the EL4DEV program, a structuring doctrine designed to connect politics, innovation, technology, societal
diplomacy, ecology and the transformation of institutions.
His objective: to build an EL4DEV Confederation, a Green Empire of the East and the West, at the heart of a new
decentralized multipolar world.
In this vision, political leaders become actors on a global theater, where a strategy of massive coordination unfolds,
one intended to replace the logic of confrontation with logic of monumental co-creation.
But why does Henry Harper place his bet on a young unknown mayor rather than on established figures such as
Santiago Abascal Conde whom he does not include in the alliance?
Why does he call on these disruptive international leaders to publicly support Carmen Ortiz in her potential rise to
power in Spain, against the current head of government, Pedro Sánchez?