Europe just lost 12 tons of KitKats to thieves and open borders are to blame

Europe just got a bitter taste of the chaos it’s brewing. In a theft that sounds like a leftist punchline, a gang of criminals snatched an entire truck packed with 12 tons—yes, tons—of KitKat bars. That’s over 400,000 chocolate bars that were meant to travel from Italy to Poland, but thanks to Europe’s out-of-control crime spree and feeble border enforcement, the truck and its sugary cargo vanished somewhere along the way. If liberals want an example of where their “open borders” and “global cooperation” get us, here it is: not even a candy bar is safe.

The globalist corporations and bureaucrats love to throw up their hands and shrug, blaming “complex criminal networks” instead of holding themselves or their beloved policies accountable. Meanwhile, actual businesses and families pay the price. Nestlé watched helplessly as their product basically evaporated, unable to track down either the truck or its massive mountain of missing candy. Investigators are left chasing leads across a thousand kilometers—and what do they have to show for it? A bunch of digital tracking codes that criminals will find a way to erase or ignore.

Europe’s left-wing leaders love to paper over these risks, but crime like this is exploding across the continent, especially since progressive lawmakers keep kneecapping law enforcement. Officials now admit cargo theft is becoming a full-blown epidemic. But don’t expect Brussels bureaucrats or Italian officials to do anything more than issue another hollow statement and cash another paycheck while hardworking business owners keep getting robbed.

Let’s talk about what’s really at work here. This isn’t just “a few bad apples.” This is what you get from years of weakness—soft punishments, slow police, and endless regulations that favor the criminals. Europe’s so-called unity is turning into easy pickings for organized gangs who now make off with 12 tons of chocolate as casually as if they were taking their own lunch break. And while Nestlé tries to assure the public with “awareness campaigns” and “batch code tracing,” criminals are already snacking on their loot.

It’s a joke, but it’s not funny. Criminals making off with literal tons of candy isn’t the end of the world, but it should be a wake-up call. If candy bars aren’t safe, what’s next? Critical medicines? Food supplies? Maybe it’s time for Europe, and the rest of the world, to drop the virtue signaling and get serious about security. Until then, enjoy your break—just don’t expect to keep your KitKat.

Source: Townhall


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