Parliamentarian Mher Sedrakyan is walking in the National Assembly cursing the journalists and when the latter rise against it, he declared that some government representatives are ordering publications against him. Certainly, it is not excluded that they, in “the top” have something to share (eventually, they will share, don’t doubt about it) but no government representative was pulling Sedrakyan from his tongue to curse and nobody was compelling him to behave in the parliament as he behaves himself in the kebab fast-food eateries – in his familiar environment.
“Rule of Law” party has gathered around it mainly unknown to the public organizations with strange names to create a “consolidation” illusion. If you are just stating this fact, the RoL party’s response to “traditional”, “The regime is in panic, the regime is horror-struck of our consolidation and orders articles against us.”
The Republican Party has opened a space for ARF, the so-called, a “balcony” to open up a new room (a new Ministry) for ARF. The ARF members again accuse the journalists of it in fulfillment of “orders by dark forces.” It turns out that as a result of the cooperation between the two parties, Armenia should become a paradise and the only factor preventing it are the journalists.
Now, if I wrote that the “punitive psychotherapy” of the Soviet period is not appropriate to use for the 21st-century independent Armenia, as it is done in the case of Vardges Gaspari, so whether I am implementing the order of the American imperialism for not to allow the restoration of “such a divine country like the Soviet Union”.
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We all, especially, the politicians, should learn one thing: we must perceive any written or oral speech as the author’s (authors’) opinion and nothing more. Are there “dark forces” behind it or not, it is a fourfold matter. The only condition is that the author of this opinion should have a name and last name. If the view appears anonymously or with a pseudonym, I can think anything about it.
… The opposite approach of party paranoia seldom happens. When in 2004 Larisa Alaverdyan was appointed the Ombudsman, many (including “Aravot” newspaper) were alluding that she would be a minion. When the “good-wishers” of Mrs. Alaverdyan wanted to convince her that it is an “order”, the first Ombudsman’s reaction was as follows: “It is normal, let them write. I will prove with my work that they are mistaken.”
Aram ABRAHAMYAN