Politics

A factory director says that 1.5 million people do not appear at work in Romania

The incident with the worker from Bangladesh, hit the street in Bucharest, reminds us that a culture of the aversion to work has been developed, writes Dragoș Damian, director of Cluj Therapy, in an opinion hosted by Hotnews.

  • “বাংলাদেশের বন্ধু, আমরা দুঃখিত এবং ধন্যবাদ ধন্যবাদ জানাই তুমি রোমানিয়াতে এসেছ।”

This is how the title translated by Google Translate into Bengali. Bengali, or Bangla, is the official language in Bangladesh, the country from which the courier is beaten a few days ago in Bucharest. Bangladesh is the country where most Asian workers who come to work in Romania are migrating. Bangladesh has a complicated and bloody history, as is the case with most countries in southern Asia. It is no wonder that due to violence and poverty many Asians take the path of Bejenia and get to work in the Middle East and the European Union. Likewise, five million Romanians have made, since the 2000s.

So the theme of the day. Put or not political currents, we start to beat the Asian workers we accuse they want to take our jobs – the whole story is an absurd pathological, the Asian workers come to Romania precisely because we, the Romanians, do not want the jobs.

By the way, you may not know that. Asian workers contribute, like us all, to health and pensions. If in the case of health contribution, they benefit, if necessary, medical services, in the case of the Asian workers, they do not benefit from the collected amounts, there is no agreement with the Asian countries for the transfer of pension money. So, the pension money that is collected from the Asian workers, including those we assault, remain in the pension fund for us, the Romanian citizens, those who like them.

We console ourselves by generaling that all the countries in the European Union have a great labor deficit. But in us, the large labor deficit is amplified by a deep labor repulsion.

Some examples.

1. An entire country swears by Minister Daniel David that he had the “thug” to recommend young people to take a service, if there are still no more scholarships.

2. The largest Neet (no who are not employed and do not follow studies) in the Union in the age category 16-25 years, simply do not count about 1.5 million young people, we do not find them at school, nor at work.

3. The crows are full of villages, in the middle of the day, the gaming rooms, at midnight, of people in power that lose the time. He shouted desperately the farmers and builders that they do not find workers, although they put on the table of non -refusal salaries.

4. Hundreds and thousands of families stay for nothing, I don't work anything, not even near the house, stinging on being poor and waiting for apple from the state, a voucher, a coupon, a food card and, of course, the grandparents' pension. Some have not worked a day in their lives, they have received people.

5. And, my favorite, the exhortation of the decrees to the children and grandchildren: “Leave the baby's baby, you do not work so much, they worked enough mother and father and grandparents during the cursed communists. You do not have to work, we take care of you.”

Nobody knows where the culture of the aversion to work was born and increased, we only have 5 million Romanians who went to work, not for fun, abroad. And the salaries offered by employers in Romania are no longer what they were 10 years ago, they increased exponentially.

Hard to understand why I developed such a dislike for work. But even harder to understand is that we were wearing Bangladesh, Pakistan, Nepal, Sri Lanka and India, who come to work in our place.

Another by the way. No public comment, from no federation, association, patronage, chamber of trade, council and other, otherwise extremely active, to be informed what happened.

This article was initially published on contributors.ro.

Ashley Davis

I’m Ashley Davis as an editor, I’m committed to upholding the highest standards of integrity and accuracy in every piece we publish. My work is driven by curiosity, a passion for truth, and a belief that journalism plays a crucial role in shaping public discourse. I strive to tell stories that not only inform but also inspire action and conversation.

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