The psychology of turmoil
When, at a small roundtable, the suspension of the Burgis-Vlorë gas pipeline was discussed, not only the right-wing media supported the stance of the Albanian government and declared that this pipeline would greatly help the country, but someone connected to it could also benefit. How much power it amplifies we would not be able to transform, and a large part of this never happens in Albania. For, because of the recurring unrest, people close to the government publicly stated that foreign or domestic advisers were to blame for these sufferings of people under street names. Tirana, who would not be afraid of the country because of so many children in the nest. Slaughtered by small-minded people who are sarcastic in the paradoxically Albanian newspapers and in particular where history is the cause, but was pushed by the government itself and the psychology of the cause, not clearly and repeatedly explained. People’s lives must be changed in the mass media as part of power. Do normal people follow something in opinion? and cheer in the middle of the street as soon as a caravan with prisoners passes by openly? Would someone, in tears, let the oil pipeline pass? Those first seen from the trees and that have sprouted and nested? that nowhere behind for a mission they embellish the situation. In short, there is no calm person, no calm fellow in Albania. We describe it this way to show an explanation for us, for which it is partly so. The lack of civic education, of public explanation of processes, the lack of a free press or of political parties still entirely without personality — these things are the factors that nourish the psychology of unrest. [...]
We are completely interdependent on one another. And what matters to me also matters to you. I think that in no period of the Albanian transition have Albanian governments had worse teachers than these foreigners they send us: in other words, they come once, take, leave, and leave behind unrest. It is significant that after three rather strong articles in the foreign newspapers and on foreign television about the events taking place in the south, the strongest man of the day in Albanian politics, former prime minister Nano, stigmatized the blame on the OSCE mission and not on the prosecutors, judges, journalists, or even the criminals who do their work. By doing so, he would avoid the problem, and if the cause of the country’s unrest is foreigners, they are concentrated in Tirana, where strict ties with the other natural links of the heavy body of the state and irresponsibility are at work. [...]
Vlorë came out! It chose itself president. It came out with a silver square with drones in government. It continued with the inevitable eating. This culture is transforming Vlorë and not separating it in order to achieve a different, broader effect. Never, and under no circumstances, should we fear Vlorë and not separate it in order to achieve a different effect and in response to the ever and what we have and deserve.
MOTHERS WITH HEADSCARVES Vlorë, Vlorë
When, at a small roundtable, the suspension of the Burgis-Vlorë gas pipeline was discussed, not only the right-wing media supported the stance of the Albanian government and declared that this pipeline would greatly help the country, but someone connected to it could also benefit. How much power it amplifies we would not be able to transform, and a large part of this never happens in Albania. For, because of the recurring unrest, people close to the government publicly stated that foreign or domestic advisers were to blame for these sufferings of people under street names. Tirana, who would not be afraid of the country because of so many children in the nest. Slaughtered by small-minded people who are sarcastic in the paradoxically Albanian newspapers and in particular where history is the cause, but was pushed by the government itself and the psychology of the cause, not clearly and repeatedly explained. People’s lives must be changed in the mass media as part of power. Do normal people follow something in opinion? and cheer in the middle of the street as soon as a caravan with prisoners passes by openly? Would someone, in tears, let the oil pipeline pass? Those first seen from the trees and that have sprouted and nested? that nowhere behind for a mission they embellish the situation. In short, there is no calm person, no calm fellow in Albania. We describe it this way to show an explanation for us, for which it is partly so. The lack of civic education, of public explanation of processes, the lack of a free press or of political parties still entirely without personality — these things are the factors that nourish the psychology of unrest.
We are completely interdependent on one another. And what matters to me also matters to you. I think that in no period of the Albanian transition have Albanian governments had worse teachers than these foreigners they send us: in other words, they come once, take, leave, and leave behind unrest. It is significant that after three rather strong articles in the foreign newspapers and on foreign television about the events taking place in the south, the strongest man of the day in Albanian politics, former prime minister Nano, stigmatized the blame on the OSCE mission and not on the prosecutors, judges, journalists, or even the criminals who do their work. By doing so, he would avoid the problem, and if the cause of the country’s unrest is foreigners, they are concentrated in Tirana, where strict ties with the other natural links of the heavy body of the state and irresponsibility are at work.
MOTHERS WITH HEADSCARVES Vlorë, Vlorë