What happened in Brussels was not a celebration. It was a breakdown of public order in the very capital that lectures Europe about values, tolerance, and rules.
Fireworks fired horizontally, streets blocked, neighborhoods intimidated — all while authorities hesitated and media softened the language. Not during war. Not during an emergency. During a football celebration.
The most telling detail?
Even Moroccans themselves openly condemned it. Comments under the footage are filled with voices saying this behavior is shameful, irresponsible, and damaging — to locals and to innocent migrants alike. This matters. Because the issue is not ethnicity. It is standards.
The West increasingly operates on double rules:
Strict norms for ordinary citizens.
Excuses and paralysis when chaos erupts in its capitals.
People across Central and Eastern Europe are watching closely — and rejecting this model. Not out of hatred, but out of instinct for order, safety, and sovereignty.
A society that cannot enforce basic public rules cannot demand trust.
A Europe that normalizes chaos cannot call it progress.
This is why the Western model is losing credibility — not abroad, but at home.