web counter
LEXO PA REKLAMA!

SHKARKO APP

Rama did well to go to Athens, what about the taborin with borizane?

2024-05-12 23:06:00, Opinione Andi Bushati
Rama did well to go to Athens, what about the taborin with borizane?
Analyst Andi Bushati

Rama's rally with his party supporters in Athens was the most normal thing in the world. Fools were those, both in Tirana and in Athens, who rebelled against him. Even the prime minister's clear intention to provoke with the chosen date to set foot on Greek soil, or to intervene in the heart of the electoral campaign for the European elections of the neighboring country, should be considered part of this normality. Democracy accepts provocation as a necessity with which it must coexist and without which it would be incomplete.

So, all those who did not want to see an Albanian political leader set foot on Greek soil seemed as anachronistic as the renaissance propagandists who once shouted against the Mitsotakis rally alongside Beleri, or even worse, who stormed him. Albin Kurtit when he came to Tirana to support the student protests. Anyone who embraces these positions against the free movement of people, ideas and the right to rally around them proves to be closed minded, and not adapted to the liberal world we live in. In this perspective, Edi Rama, no matter how much they love or hate him, this time it was within his right to hold a meeting with his supporters in emigration.

Rama did well to go to Athens, what about the taborin with borizane?

His movement, even assuming that it hid evil intentions, remained within normality. But, on the other hand, the only abnormal thing was the weight that the prime minister wanted to give her. He mobilized southern militants and municipal employees to rush to Athens by bus. He pulled behind him half a dozen government officials. He loaded the whole tabor of his media borrizans into Migjeni's belly. He ordered national television stations to uproot most of their newsrooms in the Greek capital. He occupied half the time of the news outlets he controls, which did not hesitate to produce headlines emphasizing the "magnificent reception."

So, he was the one who tried his best to turn an ordinary meeting into an extraordinary event. He was the one who tried to clothe his trip to the neighboring country with heroic and chivalrous notes. 

In this perspective, we can criticize today, with our mouths full, all those who considered this Sunday's rally as the visit of "an uninvited friend". We must affirm without fear that their mentality contradicts the principles of the free world in which we live. But, having done this, we cannot stay without saying that our prime minister himself is affected by the same illiberal virus of his critics. Just like the opposites who meet at one point, he is also protected by the mentality of those who did not see his landing in Athens as something normal. Because only someone who reasoned in this way could try to turn an ordinary political act into an abnormal propaganda show.

With the tabor he took with him, with the commotion he organized and the noise he stopped, Rama presented himself as the hero walking in a minefield. We still continue to see the proof of this "heroism" in the echo that the prime minister's media representatives are giving to the visit.





Lajmet e fundit nga