Law is not unambiguous, which creates serious interpretative issues, and different interpretations lead to different decisions by the authorities applying the law. As a result, an increasing number of citizens lose trust in state institutions, undermining the very foundations of the state.
We are witnessing more situations in which institutions and authorities challenge one another's decisions — and at times even question each other's very existence within the legal order. Similar dynamics appear within the legislative, executive, and judicial branches, and then cascade into lower administrative levels.
If this process reaches social groups and eventually individual citizens, it will lead to a state of pure anarchy — a form of socio-political structure where no constituted authority exists and no legal norms apply. In practice, this would mean the end of the state as we know it.
This problem is neither theoretical nor distant — it is a real and escalating threat. Additional “patches” to the legal system only increase frustration among various groups and fail to address the underlying causes of the crisis.