Patience is no longer useful because patience wept for itself. People endured until patience became a burden on top of living burdens, enduring promises and decisions made in the name of the citizen, then paying the price alone.
Today, talking about rising prices is no longer just passing news, but has become a forcefully imposed lifestyle. Everything rises except the citizen’s income; the salary erodes and prices jump boldly, resulting in families who count their breaths before their expenses.
Patience is no longer useful as daily life has become a battle—a battle with merciless electricity bills, with rent that devours half the income, with a market that changes prices faster than the weather changes.
Social security is no longer a complete source of comfort in many's view; years of mandatory deductions followed by a pension that provokes anxiety. The citizen loudly asks, will my retirement salary suffice? Will I live with dignity after having exhausted my youth in work? Where does our money go, and who is accountable if someone errs?
Patience is no longer useful because the general feeling has become an increasing sense that the gap is widening—a gap between those who pay the price daily and those unfazed by the rising bills, a gap between reassuring official speeches and a daily reality that heightens the pressure.
People don’t revolt from nothing, but they change their stance when they lose trust. The most dangerous thing that can happen to any country is the accumulation of anger without true measures to adjust the existing daily reality. When citizens feel their voices are not heard, talk begins at homes and councils in a sharper language, and when questions turn into positions.
Patience is no longer useful because transparency in managing social security funds is a citizen’s inherent right. The nation is fortified by measures felt by the citizen in their pocket before being heard on news bulletins and statements from officials.
Calls for endurance are only valid with clear decisions boldly favoring the citizen; to the worker exhausted by inflation, to the employee awaiting a secure retirement, to the youth searching for opportunities only to find more need for patience.
Patience is no longer useful.



