@Gradjanin5 A jadan ne bio ne bi tako prico da si bio u ratu 90-tih u BIH! I opet ce ubrzo, a zasto! E zato sto glupani kao ti vjeruju da su nam to komsije! Da, da, koljaci u vise navrata. A ti ih slavi jebali te oni u prkno!
Most people have never heard of what happened in Peja, Kosovo in the autumn of 1943. In the weeks after Italy collapsed out of WW2 and left a power vacuum, the Balli Kombetar (Albanian National Front) and the Kosovo Regiment moved through Serb neighborhoods house by house.
They kicked in doors. Dragged families into the streets. Men were shot at close range or had their throats cut with knives while their wives and children watched. Women were beaten to death. Elderly people who could not run were killed where they stood. Then the Albanians lit the houses on fire so no survivor could return to anything.
Approximately 230 Serb civilians killed in a matter of weeks. This was the single worst concentrated massacre of Serbs by Albanian forces in Kosovo during the entire war.
This did not happen in a vacuum! The Balli Kombetar already had armed formations across Kosovo ready to act. Then Italy surrendered in September 1943 and created the opening. That same autumn, the Second League of Prizren was founded and stood up the Kosovo Regiment, a dedicated Albanian Axis military unit under commander Bajazit Boletini and battalion commanders Rasim Dajci, Jusuf Boletini and Rizo Agaj. Named unit. Named commanders. Documented orders. They moved.
The Kosovo Regiment's killing log reads like a massacre ledger. 3 December 1943: 30 Serbs murdered in the village of Rakos. 4 December: 34 killed in Djakovica. Same day: 36 more in the village of Siga. Sequential. Coordinated. Across multiple locations in 48 hours. Back in Peja, the Balli Kombetar were doing the same thing on a larger scale throughout the entire autumn. When the Germans institutionalized the violence in May 1944, they formed the 21st Waffen Mountain Division of the SS Skanderbeg, recruited almost entirely from Kosovo Albanians. It became notorious not for fighting Partisans but for massacring Serb civilians. Raping women. Looting churches.
The violence got so extreme that German SS commanders had to disarm entire battalions in Peja and Prizren and arrest their own Albanian officers. One commanding officer was sent to prison in Germany. The German SS had to cage its own Albanian unit for being too brutal against civilians.
28 July 1944. The SS Skanderbeg Division, operating alongside the German 7th SS Prinz Eugen Division, descended on the Serb settlement of Velika in northern Montenegro during Operation Draufganger. In under two hours they killed almost half the village. Between 428 and 550 Serb civilians dead. 120 of them children. The men had mostly fled or joined the Partisans. What was left was women, children, and the elderly.
A woman named Milunka Vucetic watched Skanderbeg soldiers skin a three-year-old boy, Tomislav Vucetic, alive. Pregnant women were burned to death. An eleven-year-old girl survived and later gave testimony about watching her parents be killed. No one was ever prosecuted for Velika. After the war, Tito buried all of it under Brotherhood and Unity policy. No trials. No memorial for decades. By the end of WW2, 10,000 Serbs and Montenegrins had been massacred in Kosovo. Between 70,000 and 100,000 expelled or sent to camps.
The Nuremberg tribunal confirmed the SS Skanderbeg committed crimes against humanity. It is in the official record. They just hoped no one would read it.
James Dyson: “Failure is so much more interesting than success."
He built one of the most valuable consumer brands in the world and he failed 5,127 times before he got there.
He is precise about the number because he counted. 5,127 failed prototypes before the bagless vacuum worked. The reason most people never reach 5,127 is that no one ever teaches them to see failure as useful information.
The reason failure is worth studying is that when something goes wrong, the answer to why is almost always genuinely interesting.
A part failed for a reason. A design assumption turned out to be wrong for a specific reason. A material behaved unexpectedly for a reason. Every one of those reasons is a piece of information that working only on things that succeed never gives you.
When something works, you do not even stop to ask why. It works, you move on, and you learn nothing.
Failure forces the question.
The people who are best at building things are often the ones who have most fully accepted that they will be wrong far more times than they are right.
He was building something specific and real when he failed 5,127 times.
Славиша Чуровић парадигма Срба Црне Горе.Увек Србин,није одступио,није мењао ставове, није се продао ни за шта,платио велику цену,посебно у Црној Гори. Посебно боли чињеница да док су његове колеге љубиле скуте Мила Ђ. и истовремено глумиле и радиле у Србији,он није имао ангажман