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How To Encourage The People

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  • How To Encourage The People

    HOW TO ENCOURAGE THE PEOPLE

    April 2 2013

    "Your goal is to instill in these people that one should reconcile
    himself to this government. You disseminate apathy and disappointment
    among the people." Readers adhering to the radical sentiment always
    criticize me with words like these. The thing is, however, that
    in such phrases, there are two words, the meaning of which is not
    fully understandable to me - "people" and "regime." If the people
    are the people, mainly old people, who have been gathering in Freedom
    Square for different kinds of opposition rallies for 20 years, then
    I cannot disappoint them; they have admired and continue to admire
    all opposition orators, from Arshak Sadoyan to Nikol Pashinyan. If
    the people are the whole population of Armenia of, say, two million
    people, then I don't have that large an audience; the number of my
    readers is a few thousand at best. One should take into account the
    fact that there are many brave and principled authors who, as opposed
    to me, write the names of the President of the Republic of Armenia,
    the officials and oligarchs in his inner-circle in lower case, showing
    by that how one should struggle against the regime. Therefore, my not
    encouraging is fully compensated by their encouraging. Now let us talk
    about the regime. The regime, as far as I can tell, is a bad thing,
    since we don't say the Obama regime or, say, the Hollande regime. So
    if we say "regime," we probably mean a low level of democracy and a
    high level of corruption. Thus, now we have the Serzh Sargsyan regime.

    And before that, was there also a regime during the former presidents'
    tenures or not? At least, the oppositionists of the time claimed
    that it was a regime, an establishment. Moreover, they used those
    words to describe also Levon Ter-Petrossian's tenure, although no one
    seriously doubted that the first president assumed his office in 1991
    as a result of a just election. Well, and before the independence,
    was there a regime in the Communist period? It seems yes. There were
    people who struggled against that regime too, although I can't recall
    that people had a possibility to gather in any square and chant, say,
    "Brezhnev, go away, Podgorny for president." Thus, there is no clarity
    for me in the concepts of "the people" and "the regime." Those who
    often use those words basically mean that the regime is a small group
    of bad guys who have seized power, and the people are a group with
    good and moral qualities that wishes to get rid of those bad guys.

    Let's assume it is so. However, it is not clear what encouraging or
    not encouraging has to do with that. If they are separate "good" and
    "bad" substances that have nothing to do with each other, then it
    is not that meaningful to oppose one to another. It seems to me the
    proponents of the "encouragement theory" make the same methodological
    mistake as Serzh Sargsyan does. The latter, as it is known, thought
    that the mass media were also responsible for the "bad atmosphere" in
    the country. And these people think that the regime is not destroyed,
    because some journalists don't encourage the people. ARAM ABRAHAMYAN

    Read more at: http://en.aravot.am/2013/04/02/153329/

    © 1998 - 2013 Aravot - News from Armenia



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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