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Forum2025-07-01 12:38:00

This meaningful anger between Rama and Farage

Shkruar nga Frrok Çupi

This meaningful anger between Rama and Farage

Farage gave himself up to melancholy and begged Rama to 'treat us like Italy', regarding immigrants.

What is happening in the 'angry' dialogue between the Prime Minister of Albania, Edi Rama, and the spark-setter of Brexit, Nigel Farage, makes sense. It is not at all like some dare to say, 'deal with the immigrants and crime, leave Farage alone'.

No, not at all. In fact, it is the most honest continental debate since the UK slipped into isolation, according to Farage's speeches, and now it doesn't know how to get out. Brexit has created some serious consequences for Britain, from the economic downturn, the decline in trade relations and immigration policies. The UK is experiencing increasing trade barriers with the EU. Freedom of movement for UK citizens within the EU has ended, affecting both tourism and business travel.

This is the Brexit that Nigel stood up for, because he was stung by the evil thing he did to his country.

Why did Albanian immigrants get involved? Perhaps this is also a sign of a personal crisis.

Did some Albanians in London prisons cause it all?

No, it is not so. To understand that it is not so, it is enough to recall the image described by Edi Rama in the first letter to Farage. He tells him that 'we bet, if one in fifty Albanians is a criminal, then I will come to London and take all the Albanians to Albania'. It seems that Nigel either did not understand, or did not bother about the fate of Britain. If the Albanian immigrants were to leave, then all the immigrants, what would happen to Britain?! Many things would be put at risk in that great and old country. Yes, Nigel's own garden could be put at risk...

"In reality, Mr. @Nigel_Farage you know what? The figure is over 300,000, brother! These are people who teach your children, who build your homes, who care for your elderly and sick," writes Edi Rama.

Nigel, by putting Rama in the ranks of globalists, thinks he is insulting and defeating him. Gross mistake. Farage, like others, live every day and every hour in globalism, and they say nothing about the opposite. Where is that thing? The world is globalist and it cannot be otherwise.

Farage had 'disappeared' somewhere since the last day of Brexit, which separated Britain from Europe. But when did he appear? When Donald Trump won in America. In this way, Farage himself becomes an 'immigrant' or addition to the garden of Donald Trump's victories as president; with this he sells himself, not with himself. There are many of these in Europe who have been raised as 'Trump conservatives'. But the question is how much does it concern yourself and the benefit of your nation?!

To drive, to select, to single out, to threaten, to boast, to stand on the sidelines..., these are the things I pointed out in Nigel Farage's letter.

But these are very important, very delicate for our world.

These make the big very small and vice versa. Britain is big, but what is manifested in Farage's letter? I would like Edi Rama to be 'smaller' than Farage, because he represents a much smaller country, which has not yet been able to withdraw even gold from Britain. Even though Rama is the prime minister of my country, let the British 'leader' seem bigger. Farage gave himself up to melancholy and begged Rama to 'treat us like Italy', for immigrants.

It's your turn again.

This is happening, where the London leader of Brexit appears so small; this is what it is!. The world is changing here. What is changing, do you see?

What is happening is what happened immediately after World War II, in the 1945s. Then one part of the world (the West, led by Great Britain), increased speed and set off towards the future, and became what they became. The East, including Albania and the USSR, were put under siege and remained where they were.

In this meaningful clash between Rama and Farage, I see that the 'leader of yesterday' from London has turned defensive, stagnant. The roles have been reversed. Albania is moving forward quickly, the angry British politician goes to the door of the house and counts 'how many Albanian immigrants passed through today'. There is no other work, Brexit is over.

This is the meaning; the poles are changing. One Farage, even just one, is enough to prove the 'return to defense' of that part that was on the offensive for eight decades.

The signals are clear.

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