Flash News
How Ceno Klosi tolerated the incinerator company, the dubious negotiations for millions of euros
Abazovic speaks: Why did Montenegro vote against Kosovo in the Council of Europe
After Berber's arrest, Rama appoints a new director in charge of the Albanian Road Authority
An apartment on 'Zogu i Parë' boulevard in Tirana is engulfed in flames
Berisha: We were the first opposition to apply for NATO membership after the fall of communism
by Gent Çela
Today we are in electoral silence. Voting tomorrow in six cities where municipalities are without a mayor. Mainly because the previous presidents, as coincidentally, had been shot with criminal precedents.
Silence as a finding of the Electoral Code, gives the sovereign the day of enlightenment, cooling, after hearing for several weeks the kennel of accusations and promises in the next tale of the beginning of the blossoming of the pros.
After the silence, it is voted and after the voting, it is silenced. For another four years.
Voters, citizens feel sovereign for only one day.
After the silence, as after every silence, the sovereigns are the same, the same landowners, the rulers of a patient people who have been silent for thirty-some years.
Perhaps in the political vocabulary, the day of electoral silence could be called the day of the Albanian.
We have already entered the thirty-second year of silence before and after the election.
Our silence has overthrown the lexicon of our popular words and the whole world philosophy built around the tribal gesture of silence.
The silence, the daily sus, the crouching inside the walls of the house built of fear concrete, has turned most (the silent ones) into submissive cavities after every experiment and bargain on the soft backs of violence, theft, lying.
Today in our country, a liter of oil costs 240 leks. According to speculators, the price increase comes as a result of the war in Ukraine.
In fact, from Ukraine (often given an unnecessary "h" as silence, making Ukraine), an Albanian journalist reported that the price of fuel there has not changed even in this week where the war has stopped the world.
Other abuses are expected to follow as a result not of the price of oil, but of silence.
Maybe someone should tell Albanians that SILENCE IS NOT GOLD!