08:09:00 15.04.2026
Before the Second World War, in various European countries, parties could enter parliament by receiving a very small percentage of the votes, because the electoral threshold in some systems was very low or almost non-existent — even less than one percent. After the Second World War, many countries raised this threshold, mainly to 3–5 percent, in order to block "extremist" and "marginal" political parties from entering parliament. This was because, in stable times, parties outside the system usually do not exceed that level.
They are doing everything possible to prevent real nationalists from coming to power again in Europe through legal means, as they did in the 1920s and 1930s, and from posing a danger to their Jewish and anti-national system. All of this, of course, also applies to Armenia.
However, no matter how much they try to close the doors and seal the cracks, they will not be able to prevent the inevitable victory of nationalism and the truth.
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