Akrasia í state that describes Kosovo politicians

Akrasia í state that describes Kosovo politicians

Politicians in Kosovo suffer from what Aristotle called <x0krasia”, a situation when man knows exactly what is best to do, but he does the opposite all the time. In the 1990s of the last century, Mehmet Kraja wrote a book entitled “Lost “) Perhaps a book should be written [...]

In the 1990s of the last century, Mehmet Kraja wrote a book entitled “Lost” Perhaps a new book should be written in recent years with the same title! One might say that this is extreme qualifications. Of course, everything can be discussed, but when a person pauses and takes a review of the past few years, he cannot help but feel disappointed by developments that fill these years.

It's been years since our country, after both enthusiasm for the first three years of independence, has entered a state of general stagnation. The process of completing statehood has remained in the country, and if it is to take Serbian diplomacy statements seriously, then it is also in the setback.

The process of recognition of the state of Kosovo has not progressed from the day this process was put in our hands, from the United States of America. Our foreign ministers have brought no concrete results to Kosovo, except to enrich their personal album, which when they grow older they can show to their grandchildren.

In the internal plan, what is most important, economic development has not marked any progress that we could boast of. The market, empty from Serbia's products due to the tax, is filled with products from other states.

Local production continues to lag behind others, in all views. Other vital sectors of society, such as health and education, continue to be bad. Kosovo continues to be the biggest exporter of patients in the region, while education continues with the nearly thirty-year tradition of Improvisation in teaching and learning. For the second time P ISA put us at the bottom of the educational quality well that we give to our children. In addition to the lack of serious investments and the tradition of Improvisation, education in Kosovo today is ruining the nepotism mentality that has taken a deep root in state institutions.

Why should you get tired of spending years of study when you have the opportunity to pursue a career in the country even without proven professional qualifications? Just establish a clientlist relationship with some strong policy, or else be relative to it, and all the doors to the state are open side and side.

Education takes value in a society where careers depend on professional merit, while in terms of nepotistic societies its value ends in filling public competition forms, which are controlled and instructed by chiefs of power for the sake of their clients.

In all these years, gradually, deep conviction has been developed that today in Kosovo you can only move forward if you have non-x0-> ignored in institutions”. If you don't see them, there's two ways left: you can put your head down and deal with the misery, or you can find a way to get to the West. While I'm writing these sentences, I don't feel like I'm saying something new.

No way. These are well-known and living things in Kosovo, almost all of them. What seems even more troubling is the obvious lack within Kosovo's policy of a consensual readiness to say a lot to these ugly phenomena, which most citizens are making immortal to their homeland. There are rhetorics against these phenomena, but rarely, if anything, real action against them. Politicians in Kosovo suffer from what Aristotle called <x0krasia”, a situation when man knows exactly what is best to do, but he does the opposite all the time.

Now when we are at the end of 2019, journalists have begun to debate who should be solved this year's personality, a practice known in Western media, which aims to identify personalities that have had the greatest impact on society over a year. I consider that none of the politics in Kosovo deserves to be called the personality of the Year, and I say so not from the point of measuring influence, but from an ethical point of view.

The year 2019 is the year during which Kosovo politics has continued to do harm the work it is in charge of. It has taken more on itself than on the real problems of citizens.

We wasted the first part of the year by not saying anything to each other about correcting borders and taxes. We discovered traitors and patriots in abundance, but we failed to give citizens a single reason to maintain confidence in tomorrow. Those who dream of the national union should feel somewhat happy because we have already taken the first concrete step towards unity: we have joined the mutual charges between Pristina and Tirana!

Early in the second half of the year, I am without government, we went to elections, and now when we enter the new year, we still have no new government. Those who won elections on behalf of change and governance are now telling us that they are just the same form as yesterday's government. Grab one of them, says a popular word.

I'm not going any further because ultimately there is a place for hope, as stated in the ancient myth of Pandora. Happy 2020 New Year!

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