RomCom1989 [he/him, any]

  • 4 Posts
  • 259 Comments
Joined 6 months ago
cake
Cake day: May 22nd, 2024

help-circle


  • English translation

    In Tulcea, the waters of the Danube parade starting this autumn in front of the largest aluminum plant in the country. So, in less than three years, Tulcea has spectacularly connected to the country’s great industrial circuit. Where yesterday the bulldozers were still working, shiny columns are now arched, mills and crushers directed by the former fishermen of the Delta are rotating from desks wider than the control panel of transatlantic ships. A great objective of the five-year plan, an aluminum fortress serving the Romanian aluminum industry. Annually, 2500 tons of aluminum will leave here for Slatina to be transformed into the precious white metal so necessary for modern industry.

    At Rovinari, on the lands of Oltenia, huge steel mastodons tear rivers of coal from the geological layers. Recently, the coal basin of Rovinarilor has expanded the working perimeter with another mining operation, the one in Roșia. The hardworking miners of Gorj, about whom we have had the opportunity to speak so many times in praise, have great tasks in the current five-year plan and they are determined to carry them out in an exemplary way.

    In another corner of the country, in Satu Mare, the workers of the domestic machinery factory have proposed as a major commitment the achievement of its five-year plan in four years and five months, an objective that comes to life from the deeds of each day of work, additional productions, exclusively products of the highest quality. Another remarkable success, the self-equipped galvanic coating installation brought the factory savings of 20 million RON currency. There is no shortage of cutting-edge news either: three-mesh electric cars, mini gas stoves and other products that will be delivered to the trade later this quarter. We are looking forward to them.



  • English translation

    Tulcea. The new fish canning factory completed at the end of our first five-year plan. The company’s staff started from the first days of the year to translate into life the directives of the second party congress regarding the five-year plan in order to improve the food supply of working people. The factory is equipped with modern high-efficiency machines handled by skilled people. Every hour the workers of the factory in Tulcea give the stores in Tulcea 6-700 kg of canned fish, only in the first days of January the factory produced over 90000 kg of canned fish.

    The Olga Bancic collective farm in Coșereni, Ploiesti region has 93 families, who every winter share their income from the 347 hectares worked together. The 850 days of work of the family of the collectivist Anghel Alexandru are weighed in heavy bags. In the 11900 kg of cereals and other products that are due to his diligence, the collectivists from Coșerind bring home more and more abundance.

    The first days of the five-year anniversary found the makers of the first Romanian Mao Zedong buses also making the first sanitary vans. The experience gained by the factory workers during the construction of the buses now helps them to assemble and body the new cars. In support of health protection, the workers of the Mao Zedong factories will produce 20 vans in January.












  • Moldovan elections final results: Sandu 55.33% to Stoianoglo 44.67% with a 54.34 voter turnout

    Diaspora came to the “rescue” again,it seems. My initial prediction of it being a 10% diff seems to have come true, mostly based on the fact this happened last time: initial opposition lead,only for the diaspora to quash it.

    So yeah, Eastern Europe is a diasporacracy,where the voices of those who don’t even live there matter more than those who do. By the way,if you’re tired of American electorialisn,you may have to look forward to me doing some Romanian electorialism come the 24th,seeing as we’ll have our own presidential elections.

    We’re a semiparliamentary republic,so these don’t matter as much,but the prime minister does have to be approved by the president,so it’s still not insignificant. But I should warn you, it’ll be a shitfest of pro-NATO bootlickers,but maybe some useful analysis will come of it,who knows?

    My hope is that I’ll give a good enough overview and maybe even show you all a bit of the circus going on (we had a local tv station,that was bought by CNN some years ago do “town hall” style debates with the candidates and then a debate where each contender sent two supporters to debate with the other person’s picks,it was a circus,with the journos trying to mimic actual journalism but failing,the most pointless questions and more,I’ll see if I can find a way to make them accessible to the English speakers here) and show you a glimpse of the hellscape that is Romanian politics





  • That is a thorny question

    I believe it’s a sum of multiple reasons

    First,the people who were foolishly led into thinking that capitalism would be better didn’t want to admit they were wrong and dug their heels in and attributed every failure to the nebulous “legacy of communism”

    Second,the latent reactionary sentiments

    Third,the inferiority complex we all seem to have,this desire to join the ranks of the West in the vain hope we get a fraction of their prosperity

    And fourth,you have to understand,when I say the history was rewritten by gusanos and revisionist traitors,it was rewritten.30 years have gone by since Communism fell,and now all the middle aged people and the young adults were taught a twisted version of history and it’s been turbocharged by the unsatisfactory development brought by capitalism and the poverty that still exists

    As for why the Baltics and Poland are the worst,I can’t say,since Romania had different conditions,but my thinking is that they got the somewhat less bad deal and are more integrated than the rest of the former Warsaw Pact,same goes for Czechia