Sociologist Kolyo Kolev thinks another massive protest could go down in Bulgaria, but the government cannot handle it without cracking skulls harder next time. He mentioned that vandals always show up to amp things up, and the ruling coalition has internal beef with Borisov basically threatening elections as a power move against Peevski. The legitimacy problem is real since only 20 percent of people voted them in, and public anger finally boiled over into the streets.
Lawyer Petromir Kanchev pointed out how the provocateurs and cops seemed weirdly coordinated, with police sitting back until party headquarters got trashed before stepping in. Social media influencers made protesting look cool and trendy, which got followers hyping each other up and creating this whole wave effect. Political scientist Stoycho Stoychev warned that destabilizing things right before joining the eurozone would be bad for regular people, and speculators plus criminals would have a field day without stable leadership keeping things locked down.
Lawyer Petromir Kanchev pointed out how the provocateurs and cops seemed weirdly coordinated, with police sitting back until party headquarters got trashed before stepping in. Social media influencers made protesting look cool and trendy, which got followers hyping each other up and creating this whole wave effect. Political scientist Stoycho Stoychev warned that destabilizing things right before joining the eurozone would be bad for regular people, and speculators plus criminals would have a field day without stable leadership keeping things locked down.