Mr. Radev, I am not addressing the highly respected Dimitar Radev, but rather Rumen Radev. Sir, you requested a referendum for adopting the euro with the idea that our society is not prepared. I assume the government has learned its lesson and started an explanatory campaign.
The campaign comes at a cost. This is how the Facebook post of PR expert Nidal Algafari begins.
And it continues:
"Developing a concept, followed by a script. Then hiring a team to bring the idea to life. It gets approved. A media shop or advertising agency is sought after for the best prices for broadcasting. It is aired. All of this has a cost, Mr. Radev.
With these funds, the socially disadvantaged could have been supported.It is certain that the socially disadvantaged ones could not pay 1,050,000 leva every single day and that these funds could be given to them as aid. It is certain that the meaningless tourist trips to Japan, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and other beautiful destinations at the expense of the socially disadvantaged are a waste.
Mr. Radev, responding to your lies also costs money. It takes time away from Leaders of political parties to respond to you, from ministers to refute you, from television time to tell the truth. This costs money that could have gone to the socially disadvantaged.
And lastly, Mr. Radev, would you be so honest as to disclose the gifts with which state leaders, emirs, kings and businessmen welcome and send you off. They are giving them to the head of state, not the person. Allow me to give you an example. "Everything donated to Todor Zhivkov is in the museum. "Everything," Algafari writes.