THESSALONIKI, Greece — A FULL-SCALE RIOT erupted from the heart of one of the nation’s most prestigious universities, exposing a shocking new front in Europe’s culture wars. In a terrifying pre-dawn assault, a MOB OF OVER THREE HUNDRED hooded attackers, some emerging from university grounds, launched a BARRAGE of more than 100 FIREBOMBS at Greek riot police. This wasn’t a spontaneous protest; it was a calculated, militarized attack on state authority emanating from a supposed sanctuary of learning.
While university officials meekly blamed outside “extremists,” the truth is more disturbing: the campus has become an UNGOVERNABLE NO-GO ZONE, a breeding ground for anarchist violence masked as revelry. Police units, routinely stationed to contain the lawlessness of all-night campus parties, found themselves under a hailstorm of Molotov cocktails. The result? A police officer with severe burns and a cloud of tear gas where academic discourse should reign.
And in a move that will shock law-abiding citizens, ALL 313 DETAINEES WERE RELEASED WITHOUT A SINGLE CHARGE. This stunning capitulation sends a clear and dangerous message: attack the state from within these hallowed grounds, and you will face NO CONSEQUENCES. The system is paralyzed, terrified of confronting the very institutions it funds.
This is no longer about rowdy students. This is the deliberate weaponization of academia, where lecture halls provide cover for the assembly of a violent, anti-social force. When universities become launching pads for Molotov cocktails and the justice system refuses to act, the very foundations of civil society are under direct assault. The question is no longer about policing a party, but whether the state has already surrendered its campuses to the mob.




