Playwright Siniša Kovačević stated that "the Goebbelsian model is in effect in Serbia: everything you don't like about your people, attribute to them, and everything you like about theirs, attribute to your own."
Kovačević added that "we live in a mentally, emotionally and morally twisted space in which good is bad, and black is white."
"This amount of aggression, outpouring of lies, hatred, primitivism, fraud and other things will not be able to be compensated for immediately when these people leave power; it is a process that will last at least as long as the muddling through with the current regime," Kovačević said on the podcast "Milo is down, who is next", hosted by political scientist Vladimir Pavićević.
Kovačević said that it was incredible that "the head of state looks you in the eye and lies that he is at the head of some decent Serbia."
"In popular parlance, that's called being a scoundrel," said Kovačević.
He pointed out that "the hate speech from national television is frightening."
"It has been going on for 15 years and is deforming our nation. People overwhelmed by that amount of propaganda, primitivism and lies are changing. The government is consciously dumbing down and misleading the entire nation. We are more uneducated, ruder, more arrogant... than we were 15 years ago," Kovačević assessed.
Kovačević says that the student movement and students represent "the last saving wave that can bring us to shore and we must not miss it," emphasizing that he wholeheartedly supports Serbian youth.
"The hysteria about who is on the student list is unnecessary, the bottom line is that they shouldn't come out with names and talk about it, but keep it a secret until they take it to the election application," the famous writer believes.
"What does it matter to you who is on the list? I don't even know who is on Vučić's list, he always pulls some doctor out of the bag... Do you remember that Radojičić, then Mrs. Grujičić, they were all abused, then the current prime minister (Macut). Give us your list. There is a folk saying, as the Moravians would say: 'let me tell you'. Students should use the wisdom of more experienced people, and they can do everything else themselves," said Kovačević.
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