marin mema needs to reconsider the decision of not participating in politics. nese eshte nje person qe eshte i denje per me drejtu ket vend esht ai. #albaniaisnotforsale
.@CNN Since our Prime Minister seems to be out of touch once again, claiming that only 2,000 protesters took to the streets of Tirana, here is a video showing Albanian protesters demonstrating in numerous cities across Albania and around the world.
#albaniaisnotforsale
Too many sex jokes in my royal nemesis so they better fuck nasty on my screen otherwise why would you be so cruel to me why show me something I cannot have
Update 06.06
xikers has surpassed 500k monthly listeners! So many new people have tuned in and we’re very happy to welcome you all! alot of new roady😍
Trophy is the last remaining bside that needs to surpass 200k!
Total: 1,666,293
#xikers#싸이커스#ROUTE_ZERO#The_ORA#OKay
To @CNN International and to all the endless media outlets, big and small, together with all the well-meaning content producers of Facebook, X, Instagram, TikTok and every other platform that now shapes the global conversation, I would very much wish to pass the following post:
As we speak, today’s protest has drawn roughly 2,000 participants. It is the lowest turnout so far, but even at its peak, participation never exceeded 8,000 people.
So how is it that what much of the world has seen over the past days appears so enormous, so dramatic, so overwhelming?
At some point, when the engineered digital hysteria of these days has passed and emotions have cooled, the democratic world should take a closer look at how the gap between reality and its representation became so vast.
Not merely as a matter of this particular case, but as a symptom of something much larger.
How could a tiny country become global news for reasons so disconnected from the reality on the ground?
How could a local protest involving a few thousand people be transformed into an international spectacle?
How could assumptions become facts, narratives become verdicts, and speculation become accepted truth before the basic facts were even established?
And perhaps most importantly, what does it say about our information ecosystem when perception can travel around the world faster than reality itself?
Because the reality is that there is no project yet.
There is no building permit yet.
There is no construction yet.
There is not even a final design yet.
There is only a vision and a plan: to transform Albania into the most attractive high-end tourism destination in this part of the world, while creating a net positive environmental development that, according to the current vision, would ultimately result in approximately 25% more trees and green space than exists today, alongside measurable improvements across multiple biodiversity indicators.
The ambition is not merely to build.
The ambition is to demonstrate that development and environmental enhancement can go hand in hand.
That is precisely why some of the world’s leading experts in ecology, biodiversity, landscape architecture, environmental engineering and sustainable tourism are working on these concepts and parameters.
Whether they succeed or fail is a matter for future assessment, science, public scrutiny and transparent debate.
But presenting as an environmental catastrophe something that does not yet exist, has not yet been designed, has not yet been permitted, and whose stated objective is in fact to produce positive environmental outcomes, is not a serious contribution to public discussion.
And yet, from this simple reality emerged a hurricane of digital hysteria, apocalyptic headlines, manufactured outrage and sweeping conclusions presented as established facts.
Along the way came deepfakes, manipulated images, fabricated claims, coordinated amplification, anonymous networks and online behaviour that bears many of the characteristics of the hybrid information warfare that increasingly shapes public debate across democratic societies.
Even more remarkably, social media platforms recorded an explosion in activity around this topic, with Albanian-language engagement increasing several-fold within just a few days. A significant part of this sudden surge appears to have been driven not by an organic expansion of public participation, but by the rapid proliferation of newly created profiles, anonymous accounts and pages with little or no identifiable history, raising legitimate questions about artificial amplification and the manufacturing of digital momentum.