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Prof. Todor Tanev: Ministries do not deal with the problems of the relevant department

The drive for power and profit has turned democracy into a falling elevator, said the former Minister of Education

Май 1, 2024 22:19 78

Prof. Todor Tanev: Ministries do not deal with the problems of the relevant department  - 1

"I blush several times a day - as many times I'm watching the news. We all blush daily at the shame of these people who should not be ruling us. Because of the lust for power, because of the drive for power, besides which the drive for profit is at the back of all of us, we are helpless and unable to do anything. They know how to do it very well - they apply the rule of divide and rule".

Former Minister of Education Prof. Todor Tanev stated in "Day ON AIR".

In his words, there is something strange in Bulgaria that protects the Bulgarians' desire to appear in elections. Prof. Tanev believes that in other geographical areas and cultural traditions, the population would have retreated much more than in Bulgaria.

"More we are going to vote "against". Trust in politics, institutions and democracy is what goes vertically down like a falling elevator. Trust lost once, if it returns at all, a small part of it is returned to the next generation," the guest of Bulgaria ON AIR pointed out.

According to him, all ministries deal with the distribution of money from the budget, and very often this money goes to unknown places.

"They do not deal with the problems of the relevant department. The whole government system is about distributing money. The Prime Minister always has a party with him. The party and the hoops, that's the main thing. "Since 1990, the distribution of money has become something extremely important," emphasized Prof. Tanev.

"We have six million left - 3-4 million of them think soberly and we all know who they are. I myself wonder whether to vote. Democracy is not bad, it works in the Scandinavian countries. What we have is not exactly a democracy. Corruption exists everywhere. The problem is that between 0 and 100, we are closer to 100," the guest also said.

The former Minister of Education has warned that Mahlen language is spoken in the National Assembly, which, in his words, is not his National Assembly and that of his students.

"The Bulgarian lev, which has been fairly stable since 1997, to be stable, has an inviolable foreign exchange reserve of 20 billion euros in the BNB. If we enter the Eurozone, these 20 billion will go into the wolf's mouth. Why do they never mention what will happen to the foreign exchange reserve if the Bulgarian lev is stable? It is very likely that a part of this will go to the European Central Bank", concluded Prof. Tanev.