Salihu reacts to Albin Kurti: Old regime is Yugonostalgic thinking

Renowned political analyst Fitim Salihu has made a status in his Facebook profile where he denounced the <x0-jugonstalgic thinking” in Kosovo that tends towards branding the values and sacrifice of war. Salihu sees jugonostalgi also in the fact that there is still no monument to Adem Jasharin or Adem Demacin in Pristina. He [...]
Salihu sees jugonostalgi also in the fact that there is still no monument to Adem Jasharin or Adem Demacin in Pristina.
It also refers to the label Kurti has assigned to parties that so far were in power as the old “redirection of”, adding that in fact the old regime was exactly the Yugonostalgic mind.
“The statements “this state has been degrading these 20 years” or “have destroyed the state that 20 years” essentially are transostalgic because they're in themselves pregnant presuming that 20 years ago, that is, in the time of Yugoslavia/Serbia, Kosovo has been better, but then it's destroyed (exertical data is spoken against). ” Salih, here comes Periscope.
Finally, a major public debate has been opened over the role of Yugoslavia and Serbia in the Kosovo Albanian society because of different trends to house crimes and discrimination.
Artan Mustafa, a well-known researcher in the country, had challenged Veton Surroi and Besnik Vetevendosje Pula for re-interpretations of Kosovo history.
Full status:
In a society that in the centre of the capital has references to Yugoslavia, the state that calls it an occupant, but finds no room, yet after 22 years, for the monuments of Adam Jashar or Adem Demac, it is certain that the debate over Yugoslavia and the Yugonsalgia takes on significant measures.
If someone deserves the old “regime” today in Kosovo, it's the very wisdom of the Yugonstalgic mind. The reactional mind in Kosovo today is that southgonostalgic, full of references to a supposedly golden past, abstracting the crimes, poverty, nepotism and inequality of that system. The thought fueled by a retaliatory and re-incentive of political structures derived from Igal and KLA.
The statements “this state has been degrading these 20 years” or “have destroyed the state that 20 years” essentially are Yugonostalgic because in itself the presumption that 20 years ago, meaning in the time of Yugoslavia/Serbia, Kosovo has been better, but then it has been destroyed (the empirical records speak against it). It was destroyed, they say, of those who, from the jugostalgic viewpoint, are perceived by racist ions-snobist times like “mnarox5> and here as “the undivid” that accidentally took over the state in their own hands. Now, the jugonostalgic lecture continues, after the Special Court and the decline of war parties, historical normality has fallen into its place and order of things is taking its natural course. Hurray!











