Bulgarian: street lingo is well thought out policy, pro-government media is misleading people



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In Serbia, the awareness has not yet matured that in the modern world, democratic institutions, and not people’s leaders, are guarantors of the stability of the state and the secure future of its citizens, evaluated the retired professor of the Faculty of Philology Ranko Bugarski for the NIN.

It is still being considered, both in the government and in the opposition, whether it is better for Kurt or Murta instead of shoeing a horse, which one or the other will ride, illustrated Bulgarian.

A professor at the Faculty of Philology at the University of Belgrade stated that so-called street slang and the vocabulary of swear words have become familiar in public communication, in parliament, in political life in general and that, to put it popularly, fish sucks.

He also believes that street slang and swearing have become familiar in public communication, not because it is a lack of language or political culture, but because it is a deliberate policy of verbal violence.

According to him, “there are such tendencies not only in the ruling circles but partly also in the opposition, but the responsibility for that is undoubtedly the government, which dictates this behavior and therefore sets an example for others.”

“And I took it not only in power in general, but also in particular, at its peaks,” emphasized Bugarski.

Pro-government media has a dual function: to mute its consumers to more easily vote for government and to instill fear in their bones, to act like a herd of frightened animals, which is closing ranks behind alpha males, Bugarski said.

It must be admitted that these media, he added, perform these functions with great success, for which they are rewarded for their faithful service to the authorities, while others, few in number, but also their journalists, are exposed to constant persecution. . That is the image of media democracy in Serbia today, Bugarski said.

He assessed that it was “an image of media democracy in Serbia today”, as well as that “the vulgarization and trivialization of all possible issues is a natural part of this scenario, that is, the anesthesia of the public.”



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