It is enough for him to be careful not to wear a dirty white collared shirt for too long and put it in the washing machine called prison for a while. He proposes something about Kosovo or another Balkan geopolitical "rescue" to change the subject and gets a thumbs up from the ambassadors.
Criminal behavior has taken on the status of citizenship so much that you often hear people, mostly young people, saying: "I'll happily spend two years in prison for one or two million euros."
Once this match was more for those with a tendency for criminal traffic. Today, I encounter this mentality in people who would never dare to traffic, but aspire for a career in the state and, why not in politics.
"So-and-so made a cubic meter with Euros." – someone told me some time ago about an official. I laughed bitterly because the measuring unit of corruption left me speechless. No longer face value of banknotes, but volume. From the cubic meter, it was later talked about as such and such a minister or a great director has a room with Euros.
These came to my mind while reading how the prison door opened and Tahiri came out and Dako entered. The prison was like an oversaturated solution of salt that could not hold any more. When you add a spoonful of salt, so much is deposited at the bottom that it no longer holds.
But if I return once again to the willingness to go to prison (plenty to save the million or cubic meter of Euros for after you get out of prison), the danger is that the reform in justice is being used by Rama and his white collars made of slime , as a washing machine to wash corruption.
Do 6 months or 1 year in prison, and then enjoy the cubic meter you saved. Then it doesn't matter to wear official white collar. Even with a simple khaki-colored T-shirt like Zelensky's around the Block and you're cool.
In that case, Rama uses justice as the washing machine of his dirty lek. He throws the ministers and mayors of his corruption to be washed like shirts whose collars have become dirty and wears another one.
Then he starts the charm offensive with ambassadors and prime ministers who fill their minds that it is the fault of the dust in the air, the shirt that gets dirty, or anything else, but not the one who is corrupted in corruption And they cheer how successfully the washing machine was repaired of justice with their assistance.
It is enough for him to be careful not to wear a dirty white collared shirt for too long and put it in the washing machine called prison for a while. He proposes something about Kosovo or another Balkan geopolitical "rescue" to change the subject and gets a thumbs up from the ambassadors.
Lini një Përgjigje