Future Romanian President Calls Zelensky “Semi-Dictator,” Says He’s Sending Boys to Die for No Reason

Georgescu already won one election and they banned him from victory.

It’s unclear what they are going to do when he wins again.

RT:

Calin Georgescu, a Romanian politician whose first-round victory in the presidential vote was overturned by the nation’s Constitutional Court, has branded Ukrainian leader Vladimir Zelensky a “semi-dictator,” who is afraid of holding an election and keeps sending young men to “hell” on the battlefield.

Georgescu, who is a vocal opponent of Western support for Ukraine amid the conflict with Russia, said in an interview with Realitatea Plus broadcaster on Thursday that he has “all the empathy and respect” for the Ukrainian people, but he also has issues with “corruption and the false attitude” of the politicians in Kiev.

“I would like to ask the Ukrainian Foreign Ministry how many cases of high-level corruption there have been in Ukraine since the war began. How much European money has been stolen by them through a European and implicitly Romanian attempt to help Ukraine?” he stressed.

The Romanian election frontrunner lashed out at Zelensky, saying that he has “a problem with semi-dictators who put their own interests and those of the group they represent before the national interest.”

Yeah, and what group does Zelensky represent?

Maybe his physiognomy can give us a clue?

From everything I’ve read, Georgescu is right about everything.

This project of turning former communist countries into Western liberal democracies was always going to end badly. The people in these countries have a different temperament and they just are not built to go along with all of this gay shit that the Western Europeans guzzle like juice.

Georgescu is a larger-than-life charismatic figure, and sort of the perfect archetype of person to take over and re-reform Romania.

If the foreign powers that control Romania manage to stop Georgescu from doing a peaceful revolution, they are going to make violent revolution inevitable. All of these Western ideas of democracy are extremely unpopular in Romania, and the average university student will tell you that things were better under communism and blame their boomer parents for allowing a takeover by this corrupt Western system.

Romania, like Greater Slavistan, and Hungary, is a very old culture that is not meshing well with modernity, and this little experiment is going to end one way or another.