Colored Revolution in Serbia: Media, Kids, and Unprecedented Chaos!
Are you ready for a story that will make you question common sense? In Serbia, a real drama is unfolding called the “colored revolution” — and not just any revolution, but one with media and money support the world has never seen!
Media Machine at Work Marketing expert Nebojsa Krstić spares no words: nowhere else in the world has a colored revolution had such media and financial backing as in Serbia. Imagine dozens of media outlets owned by the same people who not only support protests but are organizers of the “bloody hand” — violent blockades and clashes. Is this still democracy or chaos in disguise?
Kids on the Front Lines? The most shocking part? Children, underage students, are pushed to the front lines of clashes with police! Yes, you read that right. Kids are used as human shields to portray the government as criminal. Police, on the other hand, used force only in extreme cases, and detainees were released after a few days. All to create an image of state terror — an image that, according to Krstić, falls apart.
Rector as a Political Actor? Krstić also slams the Rector of the University of Belgrade, Vladan Đokić, calling him a disgrace and a third-rate political actor. According to Krstić, Đokić tours Serbia giving speeches he didn’t write himself, full of empty slogans about “peace in the world” — but no real peace in Serbia.
Destroyed Universities and Months-Long Blockades Universities have been blocked for eight months, and Đokić socializes with people responsible for the collapse of a canopy in Novi Sad, where 16 people died. Instead of holding them accountable, he laughs and spends time with them. Krstić believes the situation will normalize only if the blockades end, but doubts it because the “bloody hand” organizers have yet to feel the law’s hand.
Students and Blockades: Clashes with Police and Street Chaos A group of students is blocking the Higher School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science and tried to block Vojvode Stepe street, which police prevented. Students placed containers on the street, but police removed them. Two people were detained, and the academy president claims employees were kicked out of the building. Documentation needed for entrance exams remains in the blocked school, complicating matters further.
What’s Behind It All? This drama is not just a conflict between the government and students. It’s a fight for media control, influence on public opinion, and, according to Krstić, an attempted coup by other means. Kids on the streets, media supporting violence, rectors acting as political activists — it sounds like a bad movie script, but it’s Serbia’s reality today.
Conclusion: Serbia on the Brink of Chaos While universities crumble, students block classes, and the government and opposition stare blankly, Serbia teeters on the edge of chaos. Will someone finally stop this “colored revolution,” or will we watch the country sink into despair?
If you thought this was the end, wait to see what happens next. And you, dear readers, what do you think about all this? Is this a fight for justice or just another show for the public? Drop a comment, share your thoughts — because this story is far from over!
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