Post by bisal37 on Mar 11, 2024 5:03:57 GMT 1
Is there a contradiction in the new strategy of the democratic leader? This week of protest before the prime minister seems to be delineating a new profile of previously unknown Lulzim Basha. And it is being outlined in two directions that at first sight seem to contradict each other. On the one hand, it seems as if the DP leader has finally learned to say: "I'm sorry". He apologized today to the strikers of Zharëza, asserting that the Democratic Party could do more for their cause, especially during the time it was in power. At the same time, the humble Lulzim Basha spoke in the tent asking for forgiveness for those oligarchs and media bosses who were in the halls of power, earning large sums to the detriment of the public's interest.
Well, this meek profile, which in the Albanian USA Phone Number mentality often contradicts the image of a strong and indomitable leader, seems completely in antithesis with the calls for mobilization and war. In these days, Basha, as never before, stood out for asking his people to drag the shameful director of the VAT screen, turning him into a symbol of the media that serve the government with the taxes of the Albanians. He went even further using calls such as "break the windows", "puncture the tires" etc. He didn't even spare private TV when he declared that "captured media will not escape the coming revolution" (read the editorial below). Even during his speech on Saturday morning, the PD leader used expressions never heard before in his vocabulary. "Slap us, we will punch back.
Protest is not a game, but a war without return. Unite and punch them," he addressed the protesters. These statements, which were announced during the rally a week ago when Basha declared that he was ready for war, are also synchronized with his political actions. Although a herd of DP elephants, from Berisha, Topalli, Bregu, have excluded non-participation in the June 18 elections, Basha is the only one who is maintaining a radical tone and who repeats every day that there are no elections with Edi Rama. Read also: Rain and snow, the weather forecast for the next week Did they have doubts? Bardhi takes out the mother's photo from the hospital, makes a touching dedication Then the question arises: who should be trusted: the meek one who asks for forgiveness, or the radical one who calls for civil disobedience.
Well, this meek profile, which in the Albanian USA Phone Number mentality often contradicts the image of a strong and indomitable leader, seems completely in antithesis with the calls for mobilization and war. In these days, Basha, as never before, stood out for asking his people to drag the shameful director of the VAT screen, turning him into a symbol of the media that serve the government with the taxes of the Albanians. He went even further using calls such as "break the windows", "puncture the tires" etc. He didn't even spare private TV when he declared that "captured media will not escape the coming revolution" (read the editorial below). Even during his speech on Saturday morning, the PD leader used expressions never heard before in his vocabulary. "Slap us, we will punch back.
Protest is not a game, but a war without return. Unite and punch them," he addressed the protesters. These statements, which were announced during the rally a week ago when Basha declared that he was ready for war, are also synchronized with his political actions. Although a herd of DP elephants, from Berisha, Topalli, Bregu, have excluded non-participation in the June 18 elections, Basha is the only one who is maintaining a radical tone and who repeats every day that there are no elections with Edi Rama. Read also: Rain and snow, the weather forecast for the next week Did they have doubts? Bardhi takes out the mother's photo from the hospital, makes a touching dedication Then the question arises: who should be trusted: the meek one who asks for forgiveness, or the radical one who calls for civil disobedience.