Alarm testing or testing one-sided streets: Why does Pristina not offer anything else for young people today?

Pristina of recent years has, and especially of last year, fallen into a gloom that does not resemble the capital (We are not counting on the time of pandemic here). What happens in the first city of Kosovo, which we see as an event, is testing alarms and testing single-scale roads. [...]
Pristina of recent years has, and especially of last year, fallen into a gloom that does not resemble the capital (We are not counting on the time of pandemic here). What happens in the first city of Kosovo, which we see as events, is Alarm test i n Testing square roads.
A message (known in Facebook as Ilir Mirena's irony) as compared to one day what Tirana and Pristina offered for 24 hours led us to expand this topic, a little further:
Mirena wrote so, this morning:
“Brenda week in Tiranne had two spectacular events, the concert of the renowned DJ Sollomun in Skenderbeu Square and last night the finals in Air Albania between Rome and Feenhoor...
But, even in Pristina, at the Student Center last night, a concert was held, also spectacular, with Robert Berisha...”
Shit.
Being a small country, both Pristina and Kosovo, talking to society in the capital's cafes, or at our workplaces, to provide a mirror on which you can appreciate and you can see something. So you don't have to do what your study is for days to conclude that in Pristina, a person does what he does on Saturdays and Sundays.
(Photo: Interesting view from Pristina. Periscope)
This seems to be the reason for the attack by young Kosovars, though not even older ones, that weekends pass to Tirana, Skopje, Ulcinj, or any other country beyond the region, if they have visas and what is understood is money.
On the past two weekends, one of our colleagues, Vjo, visited two leading centers of Europe - one called Rome, the other Vienna.
(Photo: Interesting view from Pristina, Periscopi)
When we asked her how she was doing (in addition to the visa, our question meant financial aspect) as maybe a few years and maybe someone has never been out of the region, her answer was kind of like this:Because it's cheaper to get it to me than in Pristina, a weekend.
At first, we didn't believe Vjèsa's mouth or our ears about what we were hearing.
But is there any truth to this account?
I guess so. Since Vjosa said yes, we trusted her.
Shit.
Suppose we believe so much about Vjèsa (for whom we pray not to read this line, since we have a colleague and usually believe her) on what other basis?
The other is that Pristina has not offered anything interesting, since months, weeks and years for young people.
A few events or no events.
The news we read as warnings about events in Pristina is this: Alarm Tested in Pristina Tomorrow or One-way testing in Pristina. None of this is exempted for the importance of infrastructural or logistics functioning of the capital, but it's not the party of experience.
So what?
Then prices at the capital's cafes and restaurants have risen dramatically. They're in the disproportionate with what you want in this country. By not judging the need for culinarys and our gastronomers, hey, is it worth it if God doesn't do it, you want to enjoy a steak in Pristina, 18 euros for a piece?
For us, a little younger but very middle age for the money we live in Pristina, definitely not.
Hence, the lack of cultural, artistic, and other terms related to zThe bath, It makes us have access to the capitals or cities of the region./D. Demach/Periscope
P.S. This is not a call to leave Pristina.
P.S.2 This is not a call to ignore Pristina.
P.S.3 This is no call for not loving Pristina.
P.S.4: The text is written based on two experiences.















