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https://profpeter.online/the-architecture-of-profpeter-online/Physical Address
Jalan Presint 5, Apartment 5R1 Putrajaya 62200 Malaysia

Focus: The clash between historical self-determination and modern global regulations. Date: February 16, 2026 | 🦁 4 min read
There is a memory deeply etched into the Dutch collective consciousness: a memory of a time when citizens could no longer recognize themselves in the systems that ruled them.
In the seventeenth century, when the Low Countries were dominated by Spain, a fundamental clash arose between a distant, centralizing empire and the local “street.” The lesson of the Eighty Years’ War is simple: The Dutch cannot be bullied endlessly. We stood up for our identity then, and today we face a similar pressure—not from armies, but from abstract globalism.
While the Wilhelmus is our official anthem, there is a modern “loud song” that captures the current mood perhaps even better. It is the chorus of 15 Million People:
“15 million people on this very small piece of earth, you don’t dictate the laws to them, you respect their value… they shouldn’t be in a straitjacket, you respect them.”
Europhiles and politicians in The Hague would do well to listen to those lyrics again. There is a growing tendency to place “international agreements” above the “smallest element.”
The smallest element is the citizen of all ages. When that element is ignored, the structure begins to crack. We see this disconnect everywhere:
The Dutch tradition is one of “poldering” (consensus-seeking), but also of fierce independence. We do not like the straitjacket. Policy only works if it aligns with the daily reality of people, not if it is forced down from a “cold cathedral” of bureaucracy.
Let us respect the smallest element. Because if history teaches us anything, it is that the people on this small piece of earth will eventually push back.
Listen to the sentiments:
Forensic psychologist & researcher, author of “Prof. Peter’s Paper Trails”.
Decoding human behavior for SMEs and legal professionals across the EU and ASEAN.
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