MEP Luis Lazarus believes that, given that Parliament is doing nothing to sanction the Government following the announced cuts, the solution is a general strike, a tax strike, in which trade unions join forces with students, pupils, and the most disadvantaged companies, because they have to pay income tax, dividend tax, to the ITM, and on salary taxes.
„So much lying, manipulation, diversion, imposture, total lack of transparency, and the fact that none of the fundamental questions that the people ask at every moment are answered. I mean, do we really not understand that you are sacrificing the people for all the schemes and stupid things you have done together with your favorite companies, your family, your relatives, and all the schemers? Can we really not understand this? Otherwise, how could you have become so rich just from government salaries? And how could you, for example, have a Bolojan backpack worth 1,300 euros? Oh, how peaceful you are, Bolojan, with your 1,300-euro backpack! No, you don’t know, I’m much better at shopping and I found it for €950. I think you don’t know that in this country, with that money, about €1,000, you can buy two laptops and give them to needy families whose children could really do something useful with them. Not for Bolo to carry a 1,300 euro backpack on his shoulder to strut his stuff at Cotroceni or the Government.
A little decency, a little decency, guys! Or let me remind you of Ciolanu’s hoodie. Ciolanu’s hoodie, which he used to catch the kitten. Because while he was recklessly spending money from the Reserve Fund, while borrowing tens of billions of euros in a single year, he was saving the kitten with his thousand-euro jacket. Oh, how these little things sometimes betray you. Because great men are known by their little deeds. And from things like this, you can tell how hypocritical they can be. I mean, the guy who used to sell pretzels ended up becoming prime minister, couldn’t find his high school diploma, and borrowed money for the country, man. Today, no one talks about him anymore. Very good, well done. Not even about Ciucă. Everything is fine. We’re talking about Bolojan now.
Speaking of Bolojan, if there were still a Parliament in this country at this moment and if the majority in that Parliament were people of character, people of solid stature, upright people, then these people would very simply vote for a motion of censure, introduce it and vote it against the Bolojan government, sending him to bed and bringing in a national coalition government that could finally represent the interests of the people. Because the interests of the people have not been very well represented, as you can see, over the last 35 years. As you can all see, if you look around you, you will realize this.
Of course, to be fair and honest, I could also mention the tricks of the Constitutional Court, which, as you know, resolved the issue of asset declarations. Yes! It anonymized them and, more than that, said that politicians no longer need to declare the assets of their wives, partners, or children. Well, that’s okay, everyone can steal more and transfer their assets to their wives and children.
If there were parliamentarians with backbone, they would resolve the government issue in no time. But what can we do if Parliament does nothing? General strike, brother! Tax strike, brother! The unions should join forces with the students, with the pupils, with the companies, why not, because the companies are the most oppressed and they have to pay income tax, dividends, ITM, payroll taxes, all the misfortunes imaginable. So, the idea is, as far as I can see, to destroy all the companies too. And the entire private sector, and public sector employees, and then who will remain… Who will remain in this country? Only the parliamentary majority that votes for you. They should remain, right? So that everything is fine, everything is okay.
Under these conditions, perhaps the government could change. Because, as I said, I don’t expect much from parliamentarians, because if they were even more upright and powerful, they could vote with their mandates on the table and bring down two governments, so that they would fall under the Early Election Law. Why not go back to the people? Why not go back to the people with the president? Because they could bring it to the attention of public opinion, including the suspension of the president. Do we have to wait four years, five years, to make changes? No, because if you wait four years, five years, you’re going to die. Because do you realize what it means to sit for four years, five years with the kind of measures that Bolo and Nicu are starting to take in this unfortunate period? Yes, well, they started in the summer. Because they knew that in the summer Romanians go on vacation, students and pupils go on vacation, and this whole scheme is not accidental.
It’s no coincidence that they waited a month or so to put this guy in as prime minister, right? Because he thought about it too. Hey, if I become prime minister, I’ll be screwed. I have to find some solutions, smart guy. I mean, why not use that trick with the guy from EximBank who walks around spending Romanian state money, because he’s the head of a state bank, and here he is paying tens of thousands of euros to someone who bought a property from RA-APPS. It’s not like they didn’t know about this from the beginning. You realize, he’s been doing this since 2013, for about 12 years.
You can imagine how many people are getting rich off this whole thing. So why not say down with Bolo, down with Nicu, down with Parliament, down with the parliamentary majority that keeps them in office, down with everyone who is in political office, and then, up with the unions, up with the students, up with the pupils, up with the companies, up with tourism, up with everyone, come on, they’re not the ones who rule us. General strike, tax strike, force, action, and we’ll see. Otherwise, we’ll just sit and stare at the stars!”


