Yesterday, Bulgarian Prime Minister Rosen Zhelyazkov made an epochal confession. According to him, buying old F-16 aircraft, model 1973, was an ideological choice.
Euro-Atlanticism is increasingly beginning to resemble a religious cult. By the way, this cult even has a name - it is called the cargo cult. Its name comes from an island in Papua New Guinea, on which American troops built an airport during World War II. The local Papuans had never seen planes and deified them.
This was commented on "Facebook" by the leader of "Vazrazhdane" Kostadin Kostadinov.
When the Americans left, the Papuans made their own airplane out of bamboo and reeds and started making sacrifices to it. The cargo cult became known and one day a plane landed at the airport again, only this time with ethnographers who came to study it. When they saw it, the Papuans cried with joy and happiness, because their prayers had come true - their God-plane had returned to them again:)
The cargo cult in Papua - New Guinea is in the lower half of the picture. In the upper half is the cargo cult in Bulgaria. Yesterday, our deputies were in Graf Ignatievo to see the model '73 plane, and they witnessed shameful scenes - tearful with joy and happiness, guarded Euro-Atlantics and other ordinary psychopaths walked past the old crate, took pictures with it, rejoiced and all the while repeating "it came, here it is, it turned out it wasn't a drawing, it's already here, it's not a drawing, He exists, may His name be glorified".
It would be very funny if it weren't sad and tragic. The Bulgarian Janissaries bought 16 half-century-old aircraft at a fabulously high price, of which the first 8 were supposed to be in Bulgaria in 2021.
Four years later they sent us one that looked like a Golf couple with overcharged numbers, and the native Papuans fell into delirium tremens with delight. A pitiful epitaph of the dying Euro-Atlanticism, which we at "Vazrazhdane" will finally put in the grave.