"Romania has gone crazy", Deutsche Welle wrote in Tuesday editorial, where it said that "the Ponta government was planning a large scale falsification of the electoral lists", adding that "the falsified data was intended to retroactively declare as valid, the controversial referendum of July 29th, concerning the dismissal of Băsescu".
That's what it looks like from there.
The Germans aren't doing us any favors.
No one is going to take the time to interview Victor Ponta, to hear him lie about how everything he's doing is constitutional and that everything is perfectly democratic and that everything is normal.
The Germans aren't working for news, so they have no reason to have a bone to pick with Ponta.
For them everything is clear.
Simple: Romania has a prime minister who lies.
The foreigners don't enter arguments.
The Romanian government is led by a plagiarist, who lies that he didn't plagiarize and who used the power of the government to avoid being officially declared a "plagiarist".
What could you even talk to him about?!
Talking isn't going to lead to anything.
You can't talk with a wall.
The lies of the Ponta-Antonescu pair aren't a problem for the Germans; in fact they are not much of a problem for anybody abroad.
One month ago, I wrote about this.
I didn't write "Romania has gone crazy"; I wrote that in a diagnosis of social psychopathology, we are likely suffering from mythomania ("A mania characterized by the sickly tendency to distort truth, to lie"/ Source of the definition: The Explicative Dictionary of the Romanian language 1986).
Which is the same thing as "Romania has gone crazy".
----------------------------------------------------
"The outcome of this < Modus operandi >, synthesized earlier, is that the political statements precede reality, which is