Feta’s newest comic is sold as satire, but it reads like an accidental confession. The Netherlands does not look like a disciplined war state. It looks like a government that sees danger, delays the answer, ignores the logistics, panics at the last hour, and then congratulates itself for surviving a crisis it created.
The disclaimer only makes it worse. Feta claims he had no oil and still likes the MoFa, who was merely “pretty useless.” But after showing hoarded money, ignored messages, delayed supplies, and officials asleep while bunkers wait for fuel, the denial feels less like clarification and more like cleanup. The joke has already spoken louder than the excuse.
This is the same Dutch pattern again: first comes the image of sleep, delay, confusion, and unanswered calls. Then comes the polished explanation afterward. We are told it was only humor, only exaggeration, only a harmless internal joke. Yet their own cartoons keep returning to the same rot because even their artists know where the weakness is easiest to draw.
This is the regime that boasts of order and inevitability, yet its own satire shows bunkers without fuel, ministers without urgency, officials without answers, and a treasury that treats national defense as an irritating expense. Occupation may seize land, but it cannot turn corruption into competence. The disclaimer says there is no scandal. The comic makes that very hard to believe.

Previous article based on Feta's lies:
https://app.warera.io/article/69e795c9f7b095e977523d60
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