
Voting for people you've never seen their faces, never heard their voices, never shook their hands with, have no friendly, social, blood or in-law ties with, don't know who they are, where they come from, where they work, or what they represent as people — it's like casting your vote in a cesspool for a sack of flour or 50,000 old lek...
Since I had time, I was taking a look at almost all the preferential votes across the various administrative units of the Tirana District.
I am taking the Shëngjergj unit as an example, since it is behind the Dajti mountain and borders Burrel.
Of the 350 votes that the DP received as a political force in this unit, what impressed me was the preferential vote with a "political" sense and the "vehemence" of the open list candidates, as a result of their "beliefs" for the individuals they want to represent.
For the first four candidates with the most votes on the list from 171 Democratic voters, I can't say anything, because I think they are public figures, politicians, and people who may have friendly ties or acquaintances with voters from Shëngjergj.
But for the others, who received a total of 112 votes (ranging from 18–20 votes to 1 vote), have they ever been to Shëngjergj?
And if there are any voters in Shëngjergj who recognize them by face, or have ever met them in their lives as people — whether as candidates or not — hang me right in the middle of Shëngjergj!
And then we say: "Wait, why is Rama winning a fourth term?"
Well, well, well, since you don't speak straight because you're afraid of ruining your "relationships" with the people!
It must be said bluntly: as long as we as a people vote blindly for 5 stinking leks, we deserve to be governed by political scum that buy us 3 days before the elections, just like a living thing in the Rrogozhina bazaar.
Voting for people you've never seen their faces, never heard their voices, never shaken their hands, have no friendly, social, blood or in-law relationship with, don't know who they are, where they come from, where they work, or what they represent as people — it's like casting your vote in a cesspool for a sack of flour or 50,000 old lek.
Now you lecture me and moralize me by commenting that this is not true, by inventing artifices to justify the stomach voting of a significant portion of Albanians.
I am ready to pay for the bus with all the candidates I have circled in red and bring them to the middle of Shëngjergji, notifying all the voters of this unit, and ask them one by one who the candidate they voted for is — and, if they recognize or remember him, I will "hang" myself in the middle of Shëngjergji!
Quite a few other units like Vora, Preza, etc. are almost the same, so it doesn't seem like I'm only judging Shëngjergji.
Respect to the voters of the Shëngjergj unit who voted for their representatives as MPs.
Lini një Përgjigje