Sociologist Remus Ștefureac, director of Inscop Research, issues a warning regarding the negative social perception of Romanians. He points out that it is a “red code of social explosion”, on the eve of the elections for the Capital City Hall, claiming that the data could be much worse.
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Remus Ștefureac, founder and director of Inscop Research, presents more data on the perception of Romanians, indicating the danger of a “red code of social explosion”.
“- 70% of Romanians believe that the law is NOT applied equally to all citizens.
– 75% believe that the success of some is the result of a corrupt or unfair system.
– 50% say that Romania’s main problem is corruption, which amplifies injustices in society.
– 75% believe that those who succeed in Romania are not necessarily the most capable, but the most connected.
– 70% appreciate that the system in Romania is built in such a way as to keep you in place.
– 60% feel that others have been unfairly helped while they have been ignored.
– 70% say that the state bears a large part of the blame for their current situation”.
“It is a catastrophic perception, a huge fire on which gas is being poured with the pipeline now, on the threshold of winter. A political pipeline that runs, what Romanians perceive as unacceptable privileges represented in the form of state jobs for those with piles and their families, in the form of pensions and salaries that are oversized in relation to the country’s level of tolerance, in the form of clientelistic arrangements political”warns Remus Ștefureac.
The sociologist raises the issue of the effects of the latest CCR decisions in society. “A possible social explosion will raise a huge wave of hatred in the population that will be easily ridden by any ultra-radical hostile actor who wants to strategically undermine Romania“, Ștefureac also says:
“It is not my specialization to discuss the legality of CCR decisions or the content of the rules applicable to reducing the number of employees in the administration. I do not know how and I do not comment on their legal essence. I suspect that various decisions of the law authorities are legally and constitutionally correct. However, I raise the issue of the effects in society. And the consequences could become uncontrollable. A possible social explosion will raise a huge wave of hatred in the population that it will be easily ridden by any ultra-radical hostile actor who wants to strategically undermine Romania, destroy the democratic regime and even take control of the country. For now, the political troubadour seems to be happily sending the soldiers to the garrison, just as the hybrid war is about to get tougher than ever.”
Remus Ștefureac also says that “a historical storm can hit us, much faster than we imagine, in the middle of which, a Georgescu or a Simion will seem to us simple trial balloons launched by some at Russian roulette or in the game of local political bullshit”.
The elections in the Capital can turn into a major test of democratic resilience, points out the sociologist:
“God grant that I am mistaken, that the storm detected by the warning instruments may lose its intensity, and that the fire may not become a pyre. God help …
PS The elections in Bucharest, which will take place in just 45 days, can turn from a major test of democratic resilience into the unfortunate lightning rod of a violent storm in society that the most radical of radicals will take advantage of.