The way you wrote it, read to me like: this kind of things don't happen in a serious scientific institution, but in a government situation it is apparently normal.
(1) Bullying has nothing to do with corruption;
(2) Bullying unfortunately happens in any type of work place and
(3) It is not "ordinary" in a governmental situation...
There are good and bad people everywhere, such simple generalizations are something I hoped Zoochatters would be above, this is not facebook...
I must stand up for Mickey, because I must admit, I do not fully understand your reasoning and points. Mickey is from country with a high corruption (me too), and his observations regarding state institution is quite correct. Czech Republic is also former Eastern Block country, and while it is in a much better situation than most of its former socialist neighbours (especially Hungary and Slovakia) regarding corruption it still has socio-cultural baggage regarding power imbalance between citizen and anyone representing state institutions, which is clearly imprinted in mentality of its people, especially those who remember days of communist rule.
First, I would like to address your apparent dislike of generalization. Generalization is basic and necessary tool to talk about anything that occurs in quantity. I do not know how and why people should be above such things as generalization and simplification - both just a neutral language tools without which any conversation addressing systemic issues wouldn´t be possible. Generalization isn´t bad per se - because it is essentially tied to statistics, ´bad´ (I really do loathe to use such subjective term here) generalization should be the one that is statistically insignificant. Which would be a fair point to use against Mickey´s post, instead of vague
There are good and bad people everywhere...
which is a generalization and simplification pronounced much above anything that Mickey has written. And also truly something you would find in comments to most Facebook posts.
To your points:
(1) Bullying has nothing to do with corruption; Bullying in workplace often has a lot to do with corruption. In corrupted environment a lot of people get their positions because of nepotism and are protected by their superiors, which gives them a unique opportunity to bully their subordinates without consequences. So GENERALLY, more workplace bullying tend to happen in such places. Or we may ignore the rate of such bullying, and say that GENERALLY good and bad people are everywhere - to generalize even further, without addressing any issues.
(2) Bullying unfortunately happens in any type of work place; Absolutely. Thanks for your generalization and simplification of this issue. Me (and probably Mickey) wouldn´t generalize this important issue to such extent as you and say that rate of this behaviour is very important. I must admit your statement appears to me as if you wanted to diminish this issue and stop any issue-addressing discussion by stating ´it can happen anywhere,´ without addressing rate. If bullying happens to 1 employee in 1,000 it is quite different to 1 in 100 or even 1 in 10.
(3) It is not "ordinary" in a governmental situation; doesn´t matter if it is ordinary, it matters if it is generally (=statistically) more common in a governmental situation (I would say institution). Which I think is worth discussion and in my own experience as someone from post-Eastern block country, it often is.
To me, it seems that you really want to diminish any insight that Mickey can have into such situations, and for some reasons you do not like generalization when other people use it (you do not mind using it plenty yourself).
EDIT: I read this after myself, and maybe this post seems more confrontational than I meant it to be. Every one of my points is aimed against what appears to me as lintworm´s misunderstanding of generalization and his own use of it (while chastizing others for it), not against him as a person.