
Pashinyan has no use for values and creates a jumble of words to confuse the people, writes Moskovsky Komsomolets
Judging by everything we know about Nikol Pashinyan today, he despises anything “lofty” that is not tied to material values. For him, such things are an unnecessary “burden,” writes Moskovsky Komsomolets.
As noted, the heroism of ancestors, their military feats, the memory of the people’s tragedies, and even the nation’s identity and traditional church are all unnecessary from Pashinyan’s perspective. There is no place for them in his concept of the “real Armenia.” According to this ideology, there is no need for Karabakh, and the Armenian Genocide is not significant. Pashinyan is ready to abandon these. He does not need the church, and he is attempting to divide it. He does not need the Armenian diaspora, which lies outside his control, and he calls for severing ties with it. In return, the people are offered “basic needs provision”—namely, food, water, warmth, and the ability to be re-elected.
Pashinyan has decided not only to remove provisions from the Constitution that irritate his “partners” but also to change the entire Constitution. “It is like a warehouse fire set by the warehouse manager himself to hide a deficit. Why after the elections? He hopes his party will win a parliamentary majority, allowing him to pass a referendum with the desired outcome easily. And to confuse the people, he creates a jumble of words. Aerodynamics, spaceships… but horses do not fly,” the website writes.


