The man who wasn't born celebrates his birthday: Thaci turns 50

On April 24, 1968, Hashim Thaci, current president of the Republic of Kosovo, was born. The man who, instead of saying "context," says "computerts" and wrote him as head. You might say that this does not describe Thaci decently, especially in his political activity, but in fact these very mistakes [...]
On April 24, 1968, Hashim Thaci, current president of the Republic of Kosovo, was born. The man who, instead of saying "context," says "computerts" and wrote him as head. You might say that this does not describe Thaci worthyly, especially in his political activity, but in fact these seemingly banal errors in communication do so.
Chance is good and bad. Such was the case with Thaci. He fired among dedicated men to wage war, without any charisma and intellectuality, and went to the top of the party that inherited the values of war. But chance was bad to him because it caused him to be born in a country with poor schools, in poor Kosovo in the time of Yugoslavia [unfortunately, schools are still uncilable] and that left him without vision and made him contemptible to most Kosovo citizens.
We don't want to get tired of mentioning the amazing facts of his political career. However, we are mentioning some. Zeal for the career prompted Thaci to be a princess of reason at the Ramboullet Conference, being willing to accept Kosovo's autonomy within Serbia. As chairman of The PDK, he had been unaware of managing power, protecting certain principles, whether of war values, and making the party a business place where the clientlism network was organised. Pronto! He was heard telling Chief Chief of Chiefs, Adem Grabovci until he arranged the party's people.
Although he was one of the principal men of war, or so presented at the time, he left the war as something frightening. He did not hesitate to say that the “had never taken a weapon by hand” while facing the charge of organ trafficking in international opinion. He might say: “Special Court didn't bring the Special Court, that's what I found among you”, but in fact, he brought the Special. He also brought the Association of Serb-run municipalities that could dominate Kosovo tomorrow. He brought it in the absence of vision, even the demarcation, and generally installed a complete spirit of submission to the international factor.
Thaci gained many personally from the first chance, which he put on top, but Kosovars suffered badly from second chance, which no longer made him educated and educated. He may have been born biologically fifty years ago, but was not yet born as a politician and as an individual. He was and remained part of the species, the tribunes, and was affirmed to be such.
Thaci is a ordinary Kosovo politician, an expected product of cultural and social circumstances that we know well. But, exactly Thaci as an ignorant leader openly lays out the necessity of increased quality in education so that in the future we can have better voters and leaders. And a future we build ourselves, without being constantly bowed down, without ethernizing mazohism as an organic impulse of our society.
He has already been entrusted with the final negotiation process with Serbia. A man who has shown a lack of vision, which has very limited vocabulary, which instead of "context," means "the concontest" in Brussels, has been entrusted with the future of Kosovo. Only chance or fate can save us. /Periscopi












