
Three minutes of silence for a country that is no longer governed by law, but by the fear that has seized the prime minister and the entire state...
Three minutes! It only took three minutes for an entire parliament, turned into a political puppet show, to approve the program of a government that claims to direct the fate of Albanians for the next four years.
Three minutes of silence, servility and flattery; a clear picture of the institutional degradation that is happening in Albania, under the personal regime of Edi Rama. This is not a vote. This is fear. And it is not the fear of the deputies, nor the fear of the citizens, it is the fear of Edi Rama himself.
The fear that every debate will expose the failures covered up under propaganda. The fear that every question will reveal the deep wounds he has opened to this country with 12 years of abuse, arrogance and extortion. The fear that every microphone that is not controlled will talk about incinerators, about mafia concessions, about dividing tenders between friends and gangs. Because Rama is no longer governing, he is surviving. And he survives by controlling everything: parliament, the media, the judiciary, the economy and above all, the narrative.
Edi Rama's arrogance is no longer a sign of strength, but a thick mask of a fear that is eroding him from within. The more he speaks disparagingly of his opponents, the more he ignores institutions, the more he turns parliament into a one-man theater, the more it becomes clear that we are not dealing with a confident leader, but with a man who is afraid to face the truth. Fear of the past that is coming after him, fear of justice that is approaching, fear of control that is slipping away. Arrogance is simply the noise he creates to cover up the tremor.
A vote in 3 minutes is the clearest symbol of how great the panic that has gripped the dome is.
Edi Rama is a hostage. Not only of his dark past, but also of the groups that have kept him in power through violence, terror, vote buying and trafficking. He is a man stripped of any moral legitimacy, who seeks to cover weakness with arrogance, hide panic with spectacle, and avoid facing justice through extreme control.
When Rama talks about a governing program, he speaks like a monarch reading his decree, not like a prime minister accountable to the Assembly. He no longer sees institutions; he sees obstacles. He no longer sees citizens; he sees trouble. He no longer sees journalists; he sees danger. And when a leader's fear turns into systemic fear, then the country is no longer led, but commanded. Because he does not govern to build, but to save himself.
Three minutes is not a vote. It is an alibi. It is proof that Albanian democracy is not in crisis; it is in a coma. And as long as Rama's fear continues to command the institutions, every vote, every reform, every statement will be just a facade. Albania needs freedom, not spectacle. It needs justice, not monologues. And above all, it needs confrontation; not fear. / Pamphlet
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