Nika Gvaramia: Friends, nobody cares about you - there are six of you and seven factions among you - Why do you need additional interference to bring yourselves down? We will not help you survive, and we will not follow you. Do it yourselves if you can - otherwise, Georgia will survive without you

Friends, nobody cares about you. There are six of you and seven factions among you. Why do you need additional interference to bring yourselves down or to take voters away from each other? — this is what the leader of the “Coalition for Change,” Nika Gvaramia, wrote on social media.

His Facebook post is apparently directed at the United National Movement, in which Gvaramia says that creating an “enemy image” is a helpless attempt to cover up one’s own internal crisis.

Gvaramia notes that he will not respond to the attacks and urges others not to help them survive.

“So, people are in one party, and they communicate with each other through briefings, television appearances, and social media posts, cursing and insulting each other. And then they turn around and start shouting that everyone is against them and wants to break them apart.

Now, in their own minds, they’ve ‘figured out’ that when they have severe internal problems (and they’ve had nothing but that for the past five years), they invent an ‘enemy image’ and, expecting a defensive reaction, start accusing others of madness, insulting them, and sending agitated men and women against them. In this way, they temporarily shift attention away from their own crisis. They consolidate around a fabricated ‘common enemy’ and demonstrate a fake unity. This is how they keep themselves alive on artificial life support.

All of this is ridiculous, superficial, and helpless. That’s why I do not respond and will not respond, even if they explode in rage. I advise others to do the same.

Friends, nobody cares about you. There are six of you and seven factions among you. Why do you need additional interference to bring yourselves down or to take away each other’s voters? I will not help you survive at our expense, and I will not follow you. Manage it yourselves if you can. Otherwise, Georgia will survive without you,” Gvaramia writes.

It is worth recalling that Georgia’s third president, Mikheil Saakashvili, criticized the opposition during his court hearing.

The third president considers “Lelo,” led by Badri Japaridze and Mamuka Khazaradze, to be a “business project,” while he describes the party “Akhali,” whose leaders include his former teammates Nika Gvaramia and Nika Melia, as a project of the Gilauri brothers.

According to Saakashvili, there are also “several smaller business projects distributed into different categories.”

Saakashvili states that “a dictatorship is taking hold” in Georgia and that removing it requires “only internal pressure.”

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