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Protests in Tirana: The most beautiful event and the biggest strategic investment made in Albania!

Protests in Tirana: The most beautiful event and the biggest strategic

By Kim Mehmeti

Here's an answer for those who ask me why I support the youth protests in Tirana and who have discovered that I am a corrupt "spy":

I support them because I am paid by Putin, by the ayatollahs of Iran, by the Muslim Brotherhood, and even a little by the Greeks.

I even tried to get some money from Belgrade, but Vučić told me that they have their own government in Tirana, led by his brother - Piktopri, so they don't need my services.

So, this is me, that enemy from Macedonia, who goes to Tirana just to throw stones at the police officers who protect the people, just to irritate that police officer and to encourage him to drag away the protesters who "attack" the Assembly of Crime and the "Coalition of Stinks".

And unpleasant questions are not only asked by Albanians who defend Albanianness from me, but also by my fellow Macedonian citizens.

They even make me blush when they tell me: "If we, the Macedonians of North Macedonia, are the ones who prevent you from becoming a political factor, then who is preventing you from cleansing the Parliament of your homeland from the thugs of the Taulant and Zegjin types and who is forcing you to leave Albania in the hands of Ramadura?"

And, choked by a silent shame, but also determined to protect Albanian pride at all costs, I say to you: Old peoples, with ancient traditions and culture, sometimes show themselves careless about their fate, and even deliberately leave it in the hands of criminals and thieves, to then see if their descendants will know how to return the country to its true owner - the people.

Then I continue to explain that, over the past thirty years, we, the parents of this protesting youth, did not make a mistake, but deliberately left Albania in the hands of the "Alliance of Stinks", so that today we can test our descendants whether they have a strong enough ethnic backbone to take their place from the hands of drug dealers.

So, sometimes I feel embarrassed, because I can't hide the fact that I'm a "foreign spy," and sometimes I feel ashamed, because I don't know how to answer those who ask me why my homeland has become a place where murders are more frequent than weddings and where it's easier to find a hitman than a car mechanic.

But, nevertheless, I feel proud when I see the young people protesting in Tirana, because they reveal the most beautiful voice and face of Albanian pride, honesty, dignity, and courage.

And, seeing this youth protesting in the cities of Albania today, I often ask myself: How is it possible to be Albanian and not be proud of these protests, which are the most beautiful event that has happened to Albanians and the greatest strategic investment that has been made in Albania in the post-communist period?

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