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Albania, Soros' political laboratory: An experiment that must be stopped at all costs on May 11

Albania, Soros' political laboratory: An experiment that must be stopped at

Ilir Pecnikaj

Albania has become a political experimental laboratory, aiming to transform state structures and unilaterally control power. This phenomenon is closely linked to the influence of international networks funded by George Soros and the global leftist agenda, which US Vice President JD Vance has denounced as an attempt to destroy the right in Europe.

Why Albania? 

Why was such a small country chosen as a laboratory for this experiment? To understand this, we need to examine the mechanism known as scale-up in a socio-political context and the way laboratory experiments in Albania have been used to influence Europe more broadly.

Albania as a political laboratory: The logic of an experiment.

In any scientific experiment, the first stage is the creation of a "laboratory" where hypotheses are tested in a controlled environment. Albania, due to its small size and fragile transition, became a political laboratory where mechanisms of institutional control, intervention in the judicial system, and limitation of the opposition were experimented with.

-Size and control: A small population and an easily influenced political elite make Albania perfect for an experiment of this kind.

-The legacy of centralization: After decades under a totalitarian regime, societies such as Albania tend to accept "imported reforms" as solutions to its problems.

-Geostrategic position: As a country with a great desire to fulfill its "European" dream, deliberately left on the doorstep of the EU since 1994, Albania became a suitable testing ground for influences that could then spread to Southeast Europe and beyond.

The "Scale-Up" Method: From Albania to Europe

In science, when a small-scale experiment yields desired results, it is moved to the next phase, called "scale-up", to be applied on a larger scale. The same logic has been used this time with Albania, to spread this further.

-Judicial reform: It was presented as an example of “success” and was intended to be used as a model for other countries in the region. In reality, it produced a politically controlled system, a pro-government prosecutor’s office, and judges intimidated in their decision-making.

-Capturing the opposition: Through political processes against Sali Berisha and the fragmentation of the opposition, a method emerged to neutralize political opponents.

-The influence of the media and civil society: The media was used as a channel to impose the reform narrative, while NGOs were used as support mechanisms for the experiment's agenda.

Why scale-up?

The experiment in Albania aims to create a repeatable model: a strong leftist government, a weakened opposition, and a civil society controlled by international funds. If this formula works in Albania, it will be used in other countries in Europe and beyond, with the sole, perverse Sorosian goal of transforming the democratic order into a monocratic order, a so-called “open society” where the originator, a born manipulator who has built all his wealth on economic and ideological manipulation, would be declared the “world emperor.”

Wrong selection, not just of the "procedure".

Laboratory Technicians: Rama, Veliaj and the control mechanism.

After devising a procedure for a new experiment, the laboratory is selected and then the technicians for its implementation.

Alex Soros' selection was Prime Minister Edi Rama and Mayor Erion Veliaj as the main operators of this project.

-Presentation of Rama as a political architect: Under his governance, Albania has seen an unprecedented concentration of power.

-Veliaj as the "PR of the experiment": With a special ability to manipulate public perceptions, Veliaj played the role of the experiment's communication technician.

-The eye of "Big Brother", Soros, as the "experimenter": Always behind the scenes has been the hand of Alexander Soros, always visible, with frequent visits and meetings with Albanian leaders and above all his presence in every bilateral and multilateral meeting.

The Costs of the Experiment: Albania as the "Frankenstein" of Politics.

Like any experiment, this one has had consequences:

-Weakening the opposition: A political system without clear balances has produced an untouchable government.

-Massive emigration: Albanians, disappointed by the lack of alternatives, are leaving en masse.

-Institutional capture: Justice institutions are under constant political pressure.

Albania today resembles a "Frankenstein-style" laboratory creature, where political experiments have been conducted at the expense of citizens.

The May 11th Elections: An Opportunity to Break the Thread

In a laboratory, when an experiment fails or gets out of control, scientists stop and reconsider the approach. The May 11 elections are an opportunity for Albanian citizens to act as the "check" that stops an experiment that is costing the country dearly.

- The importance of awareness: Voters must understand that they have become the subject of a political experiment and that the consequences are real. They must be made aware that their vote counts and is truly what makes the difference.

-Returning power to the citizens: Only mass involvement and a conscious vote can stop the "Soros experiment", now out of control.

-The Awakening of Europe: Albania can send a clear message that it no longer accepts being a laboratory for international political experiments.

Albania is not a laboratory test. It is a country with history and dignity, and its citizens have the power to stop this experiment on May 11. If this experiment is allowed to "escalate" further, then Albania will remain a model of a manipulated democracy.

On May 11, the vote is not simply for a party, but to stop an experiment that is taking the breath away from the country.

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