O grapes, you sexy blogger, you've got the genie in your belly, go to your hoja to sing: TCH debaters continue

The debate on legalisation of politics initiated by lawyer Migena Balla a few days ago has escalated into insults yesterday on another job on the “Fte show at 5”. The lawyer's husband, Olsi Jazexhi, could not face the debate in front of blogger Jacqueline Lekatar and instead of responding to the latter. [...]
The debate on legalisation of politics initiated by lawyer Migena Balla a few days ago has escalated into insults yesterday on another job on the “Fte show at 5”.
The lawyer's husband, Olsi Jazexhi, could not face the debate in front of blogger Jacques Lekatar, and instead of responding to the latter with arguments to convince him that the aunt and his efforts were right, he went into personal insults.
During the program, Jazexhi was rescinded in front of the Lekatar from the face-to-face mimics she made to iron out when she spoke, to the use of offensive terms like “grapes“, “budcreque”, anti-x4> pornographic” to her private life algorithms by addressing “find a man” or “do to count lovers (4)x9>
In the meantime, the latter called it quiet without personal offenses.
Olsi Jazexhi: Albania is a forgotten province of the West, a small, isolated country, very little exposed by the wide world that knows very little about other history, religions and civilizations. I, as a professor of history, have been very exposed to human sexual relations, and police are one of mankind's earliest relationships. When Allah has sent down man upon the earth, He has created women who were more or less capable of male beings.
Paulin Villajet: No, that's not true.
Olsi Jazexhi: Polygamy has existed since Africa, example, brother of former US President Barack Hussein Obama who is in Kenya. There's a couple of three women. It exists in India, in the Arab world, it exists in Asia.
Jacques Lekatar: Polyandria too exists in Africa. Poliandria, women who take many men.
Bieta Sula: Ols please, to be more concrete, talk about Albania. The proposal was directly in Albania's case with your wife, but also in the personal plan now to be more concrete. How was it that you felt when your wife said: 'You may have wives'
Olsi Jazexhi: It's funny seeing the hysterical reactions of people at social forums, but I think my wife's sentence was removed from context, my wife was talking about something else, legalizing polygamy in Albania as a way to protect women's rights. Because in Albania, with the fall of communism, with degradation...
Beata Sula: We stand on women's rights. Are you equal to the law of all citizens?
Olsi Jazexhi: I'm about equality, but I'm also about protecting women's rights...
Beata Sula: The protection of women's rights from law or man?
Olsi Jazexhi: The law serves as a guarantee of women's rights. In Albania women are humiliated, exploited, sold as sex worker in European traffic lights, and the phenomenon of lover and mistress that has spread with capitalist degradation that has come to Albania, has caused many women to fall victim.
Paulin Villajet: Do you agree that you take four women is the question, man, what are you doing to us all this shit?
Olsi Jazexhi: Paul, talk to me.
Paulin Villajet: You insult us as if Albania is in a corner of the West. You wish Albania was the center of the Ottoman world. No Albania exists for you, sir. For you there is the Ottoman Empire, Ottomanism, there is no Albania.
Jacques Lekatar: Your statements as historians are antinational and anti-Albanian. You want to fuck up Albania, you don't have to behave like that and play those games with your face because you tell them about your culture. If you really are for gender equality, gender equality starts in the family. And the countries that were emancipated, they were emancipated because they allowed women to be educated.
If a family is not democratic, a state cannot be democratic. A society that does not have gender equality does not develop. Why? Because we cannot develop a society where there are bullies and there is a victim, where there is a master and there is a slave, who is a woman. That you're proposing. If you really were for your wife, you would propose that these women go to education, that these women have a job, that these women and these children and these personal choices hold and be conscious and able to answer for themselves. You are demanding that women be held by men, you are not demanding that the woman be legally protected by the Albanian state. You're looking for Albania.
Olsi Jazexhi: Jacques
Jacques Lekatar: You are looking to rid Albania, because patriarchal countries are countries that only consume, produce nothing, so this is how our Albania came to be. And if you really want our country to be democratic, fair, legal, you have to bring these freedoms and democracy home. Because we can't do the club at home and be free and for protecting the woman in public. So I understand why you smile and start your statement saying that Albania is in the corner of the world, because for you, the values, traditions, the Albanian nation, when you have declared that we are a Turkish product, when you declare that Albanian national figures are Bulgarian, are Serbian, are Macedonian but are not Albanian. When you accept that your wife puts on that Arab headscarf and we undo the dress, the jungle, the pliss, the entire wonderful Albanian culture, I understand why you smile. I told your wife, you are paid to undo Albanian national identity, you are anti-Albanian and I don't understand how you can say you're a historian.
Olsi Jazexhi: You're a grape sock, can I answer that?
Jacques Lekatar: Could you please not offend me, because your wife insulted me last time and told me her brains. I'm not insulting you. I'm talking about statements you've made publicly.
Olsi Jazexhi: You're insulting me and I'm putting up with you. You stupid, stupid...
If you have bad experiences, maybe you've been raped.
Jacques Lekatar: No, I haven't been raped, I'm not talking about any bad experience, I'm talking about fact. I'm not insulting. This is who is the person of peace, religion, and love. Here are representatives of the Muslim religion.
Olsi Jazexhi: If you were a good girl, you'd obey that man of yours in Kosovo that you've had and you've left him and you've come this way and you've opened up sex blogs, and you get paid from the West.
Beata Sula: I'm sorry, Ols please, if we're talking about a public activity of each of you, what's the point of personalizing this whole thing? It is unacceptable for your level of speaking with definitions, insults, and insults to each other.
Olsi Jazexhi: I was attacked by the two extremists you have in the studio.
Jacques Lekatar: I didn't attack you, I spoke to the statements you made publicly.
Olsi Jazexhi: She told me, an anti-Albanian, ignorant piece, an ignorant piece that has a sexy blog, she should do pornographic movies, not come to insult me here.
Jacques Lekatar: You want to get into the bed and privacy of Albanian cysts. This is what you're proposing.
Olsi Jazexhi: Go away, you silly, you sexy blogger...
Jacques Lekatar: Of course, man, I'm having sex because I'm a sexual being.
Olsi Jazexhi: Get married, go find a man
Beata Sula: Please stop, sorry, sorry, sorry... With what right does anyone have to do with his life? Get married, get a man.
Olsi Jazexhi: She insulted me, called me an anti-Albanian.
Jacques Lekatar: But I didn't offend you, you offended the Albanian nation by making statements...
Olsie Jazexhi uses inappropriate vocabulary... Interact Intervention
Beata Sula: Please excuse me, we have to lower our voice.
Olsi Jazexhi: They shouldn't hurt me.
Jacques Lekatar: I didn't insult you at any moment. You don't know how to take part in the debate. I don't know where you got your degree but you're not able to take part in the debate.
You have to develop more your skills to debate television studios.
Olsi Jazexhi: You're against men. The genie has entered the womb. I'm gonna have to take him to the corner and burn him. It's okay. You're out of your mind.
Jacques Lekatar laughs: I have Paul nearby. He blesses me. I have Jesus who protects me.
Olsi Jazexhi: Go to that man you had in Kosovo, go to the hoja, put him before Allah.
Jacques Lekatar: Here's the pastor. Don't worry. Drink water, relax.
Olsi Jazexhi: You do pornography ads, you're not ashamed. You're being brought up as an pornographic actress, don't you understand why they let you out?
Jacques Lekatar: That's how pornographic actress (shows her jacket). Yeah.
Olsi Jazexhi: I grow the Beata clicks, see Beata work like you, handles someone like me.
Jacques Lekatar: At least publicly on national television you're showing your level and how you represent the Muslim community.
Olsi Jazexhi: You must become a woman.
Jacques Lekatar: What you propose to the Albanian community has just disappeared.
Olsi Jazexhi: You're degenerating Albanian society.
Jacques Lekatar: As soon as you broke, you just failed.
Olsi Jazexhi: Aaa aka, look out.
Beata Sula: As far as I command you, your wife to go on screen, I command everyone who comes out here.
Olsi Jazexhi: Beata I go out almost every day in the studio, but when they act provocative at the studio, they attack me for history themes. A woman...
Beata Sula: Olsie, you were aware of all the guests in the studio, right?
Olsi Jazexhi: Not just for Jacqueline I knew. I didn't know you even got the priest.
Beata Sula: What about Jacqueline, you know?
Olsi Jazexhi: I knew it, but I didn't know he was gonna attack me.
Jacques Lekatar: That you can't afford me publicly?
Olsi Jazexhi: I'm counting on all the lovers.
Beata Sula: What are you saying, please? It's embarrassing.
Olsi Jazexhi: But she made me an anti-Albanian. Isn't it embarrassing to tell me I'm an anti-Albanian?
Beata Sula: As a family mission you have the protection of Albanian women, if you think this is Albanian women's protection, then I don't know, it's about putting hands on the head.
Please, you've given your mouth freedom beyond all limits, manly and all that you call it, please.
Olsi Jazexhi: I cursed her, or she lied to me.












