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  • Specific Concerns

    Specific Concerns

    March 16 2013


    We, Armenians, like to discuss global issues from `What will be the
    end of this?' series. During those abstract discussions the terms
    `regime' and `the people' - God knows, what they mean - must be
    present. Unfortunately, I cannot rise to that level of abstraction,
    and that is why I am concerned about specific persons and specific
    issues. I don't want professors to be dismissed for expressing their
    political positions. I don't want a woman who expressed her opinion
    about the Sevan mayor to be dragged to the police station. I don't
    want guys or groups `bringing votes during elections' to be in the
    government's team, because those `guys' or groups will cost the state
    and the very government dearly in the next 5 years. I don't want Serzh
    Sargsyan's name to be written in lower case, because firstly, I don't
    see any feat in it - it is an absolutely safe thing to do these days -
    secondly neither the number of people leaving the country, nor the
    corruption will be reduced by that. I don't want Mher of Tokhmakh or
    Schmeiss to be MPs, taking the places of more literate and clever
    people. I don't want Surik Khachatryan to be a governor, because our
    towns and villages are emptying because of those very people. I don't
    want supporters of one candidate to think of the supporters of the
    other candidate as enemies, provocateurs, sellouts etc. I don't want
    `proscription' lists of those who weren't with `the people' and didn't
    struggle against the `regime' to be drawn up in squares. I don't want
    people who cry louder than others at rallies to be in the `shadow'
    Cabinet and then in case of the opposition's victory, in the `lucid'
    Cabinet - we experienced that partially after the 1988 Movement. I
    want Tigran Arakelyan to be released from prison. In the end, I would
    like it very much, if all our politicians were at least a bit like
    Mrs. Anahit Bakhshyan. My compatriots who have reached the heights of
    politicized and abstract thinking will respond to all that:
    `Everything will be fine when the people topple the regime.' It is
    quite possible. It would be great, if after that face-off - I hope,
    peaceful - prosperous and happy life started in Armenia. However, I
    don't think that it will be perfectly happy, so happy that one will
    not have to think of specific people and specific phenomena again.
    ARAM ABRAHAMYAN

    Read more at: http://en.aravot.am/2013/03/16/152994/

    © 1998 - 2013 Aravot - News from Armenia

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