COPENHAGEN — A DANGEROUS DIGITAL REVOLT is sweeping Europe. Fuelled by rage over President Trump’s brazen attempt to BUY Greenland, tens of thousands of Danes and other Europeans are weaponizing their smartphones in a SHOCKING new form of economic warfare. They are using covert apps to systematically ERASE American products from their lives, scanning every item in grocery stores to identify and DESTROY U.S. brands.
The viral app “Made O’Meter,” built with chilling AI precision, saw downloads EXPLODE by 30,000 in just 72 hours. Its creator, Ian Rosenfeldt, declares this is no mere protest—it’s a PERSONAL betrayal. “We’ve lost an ally and a friend,” he states, his voice a stark warning of the fractured trans-Atlantic bond. The message is clear: Europe is FIGHTING BACK, and your shopping cart is now the front line.
This is not a symbolic gesture. At its peak, the app recorded a STAGGERING 40,000 product scans in a single day, a 7900% INCREASE from just months prior. A second app, “NonUSA,” boasts over 100,000 downloads. Young Europeans like 21-year-old Jonas Pipper speak of “gaining power back,” revealing a generation that sees consumer choice as its only weapon against American geopolitical BULLYING. This is a calculated, tech-driven insurgency designed to cripple U.S. soft power from the ground up.
But the HYPOCRISY is breathtaking. These digital patriots are launching their boycott FROM iPhones and Android devices, using American technology to wage war on American goods. Economists call the effort futile, noting U.S. products are a tiny fraction of shelves. Yet the movement’s true goal is far more sinister: to normalize the idea of America as a TOXIC brand, to seed distrust, and to fracture the Western alliance one barcode at a time. This is psychological warfare dressed as activism.
The chilling question now hanging over the global order: if allies are willing to digitally purge the U.S. from their supermarkets over a real estate dispute, what’s next? The very fabric of postwar alliances is unraveling, not in diplomatic chambers, but in the frozen food aisle. The next world war may not start with a missile, but with a SCAN.




