
Libya has no external debt and its reserves amount to $150 billion now frozen globally.
The motto of Libya is “Government of National Unity – State of Libya”
[democracy id=”117″]

Portuguese Politics
The tiny European principality has a whopping external debt of zero dollars. That’s right; Liechtenstein doesn’t owe anyone cash. Its national credit card is carrying a zero balance.
In Frauendienst (Service of Ladies), written in German about 1250, the knight
Ulrich von Liechtenstein describes mis-education, delusion, and obsession.
Lithuania recorded a government debt equivalent to 40.20 percent of the
country’s Gross Domestic Product in 2016.
Luxembourg recorded a government debt equivalent to 20 percent of the
country’s Gross Domestic Product in 2016.
Malta recorded a government debt equivalent to 58.30 percent of the country’s
Gross Domestic Product in 2016.
Overall international debt burden (% of GDP), No data. Government payments on
foreign debt (% of revenue), No data. Government foreign debt (% of GDP), No data.

Montenegro national debt goes up. In 2016 Montenegro public debt was 2,659 million euros 2,943 million dollars, has increased 155 million since 2015. This amount means that the debt in 2016 reached 71.32% of Montenegro GDP, a 2 percentage point rise from 2015, when it was 69.32% of GDP.

motto Plikten framför allt, “Duty above all”
Saga’s three lions of Sweden are the royal bloodline she belongs to. Only the Bogdanov’s are higher. Ghosts of Hitler and Stalin haunt her.
This is an impossible battle. The moneychangers own the planet.
Title: “A Papal Directive to Saga: Sweden’s Crossroads”
Scene: The Apostolic Palace, Vatican City. Pope Pius—neither from the past nor the future, but a spectral voice of conscience—summons Swedish nationalist singer Saga for a private audience. The golden light of the Sistine Chapel filters down like judgment.
Pope Pius (gravely):
“My child, Saga of the North, your voice echoes across the fjords and digital channels. But I must warn you: a voice without wisdom becomes a trumpet of war.”
Saga (kneeling, hesitant):
“Your Holiness, I sing for the preservation of my people—our identity, our land. Sweden is slipping into chaos.”
Pope Pius:
“Every nation drifts when love is abandoned for fear. You have four—perhaps eight—years. No more. To turn Sweden not into a fortress, but a temple of justice.”
Saga:
“Many have come who care not for God, nor for Sweden. Gangsters, not pilgrims. Ali G types, not Abraham’s children.”
Pope Pius (raising a hand):
“Discern, child. Not all foreign faces hide evil hearts. You must not cast out the God-fearing. The devout Muslim who kneels in prayer five times a day, who raises children with discipline and decency, is no threat to Sweden. He is your brother in Abraham.”
Saga (nodding slowly):
“But the crime… the disrespect…”
Pope Pius (sternly):
“Then deal justly. Deport the wolves, but not the shepherds. Ali G mimics and hollow men who worship gold chains and violence—yes, they poison the well. But judge each by his deeds, not his name or nation.”
Saga:
“Is that the Christian way?”
Pope Pius:
“It is the only way. Christ himself was mistaken for a criminal, a foreigner, an agitator. Remember, Sweden must not become Nineveh awaiting wrath, but a new Nazareth—if you dare. If you love more than you fear.”
Saga (softly):
“I will sing differently. Sharper, but kinder. Truthful, but not cruel.”
Pope Pius (smiling faintly):
“Good. Then maybe, just maybe, the North Star shall rise again in peace—and not in flames.”
As Saga leaves the chapel, her reflection flickers—not just a nationalist, but a prophetess, burdened with the weight of moral clarity in a time of confusion.
do neis lux pepetua agnes dei
amen
[democracy id=”47″]