Heyo – ich hoffe, es geht euch allen gut. Ich bin ein Ausländer, der Georgien besucht, und fast jeder, mit dem ich gesprochen habe, ist pro-EU, anti-Kreml und anti-Georgian Dream. Dennoch sehe ich überall MENGEN dieser Poster. Vielleicht interpretiere ich sie fälschlicherweise als pro-GD, obwohl sie eigentlich etwas anderes sind, aber ich bin etwas verwirrt, weil Berge politischer Plakate zu Hause normalerweise allgemeine Unterstützung symbolisieren. Was ist hier los?

https://i.redd.it/ixr7jnugyisd1.jpeg

Von Gaius_Memeius_Saltus

15 Comments

  1. TheGirlWithBooks on

    Simple: they’re the only political party in the country with budget and enough desperation to afford to do all that. Whether the money comes from people’s pockets or the oligarch’s…they have it and they’ll use it to save their rep.

  2. FakeElectionMaker on

    The government is carrying out an advertising campaign nonetheless

  3. External_Tangelo on

    Here’s the difference. In America, you support a candidate, so you buy a yard sign and put it up in your yard. In Georgia, you don’t give a crap, but you also don’t have any money, so Georgian Dream gives you a hundred lari, a thousand posters and a pot of glue and you put them up on all your neighbors’ fences, trees, elevators, entrance halls, and any random public space where they will stick

  4. brain-dysfunction on

    Part of election campaign. Usually party activists are deployed at night to put them in “zones”. You can do society a favor and rip it off if it’s not glued properly 😀 and please be responsible and throw it in nearby trash bin or a dumpster, where this poster and the party belong.

  5. Sandrofresh on

    These lame posters absolutely ruin urban areas. They dont even care how disgusting the cities in Georgia may look, their agenda is more important. Soulless people.

  6. 3-DenTessier-Ashpool on

    I was shocked when I saw two young adults, maybe 20 years old, walking door to door with GD brochures in Batumi. I mean I can understand that there is a deal in money mostly, but fml. They are ruining their own future.

  7. LongjumpingListen297 on

    აახიე მერე მაგათი შუბაც დავხიე

  8. Lolbzedwoodle on

    Wow are those GD? I’m not good at Georgia’s politics atm. At first I thought they were opposition due to EU symbols….
    I’m foreigner living in Tbilisi. One day some students were going door to door in our building, handling same booklets. They gave one of them to me, and I told them I have no right to participate in politics here. They told me to keep it. I thouth it was weird to throw away printing money like that. Now I see, it was GD.

  9. CMDR_Agony_Aunt on

    This is GD pretending they are pro-EU and still want to be part of it.

    They know most Georgians want to be part of the EU, so they muddy the waters by pretending they are the pro-EU party, and anyone who gets their info from the state TV or other media thinks GD will get them into the EU on *their* terms.

  10. A politic party where their wish is with Russia, absolutely not logic to have as logo half Europe flag !!!!

    I cross my fingers about the victory of opposition party and supporters this month. GD is the cancer of your country where B. Ivanichvili is the tumor !

  11. Alarmed_Will_8661 on

    Average GD electorate needs daily reminder which number their favorite party is under at

  12. I was going to ask the same.
    Just arrived to Kutaisi (from Spain) and was wondering why the whole city was plastered with just ONE political advertisement.
    I passed by a street minute ago that had the whole building wall cramped with these 💔

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