
Edi Rama has found the Elisa Spiropali variant to relativize the collapse of the road connecting Korça to Tirana and which has paralyzed southeastern Albania. In a post on X, he published a video showing a village road in Portugal destroyed by bad weather and, with it, attacked the opposition and the media that have been raising the alarm for three days about the collapse of the Korça-Tirana national road.
"A great wonder, this has happened in Portugal due to the same phenomena, but I don't understand why the Portuguese opposition is asleep, and even the few media pots in Portugal are at a low temperature and there is no room for this whole new path, but how is it possible that the oppositions here have not yet denounced this act of corruption to SPAK and how is it possible that the 700 burning pots of our media assembly have not called all their spies to bring out the terrible facts that are hidden under the asphalt of this government corruption, where the hand of the Albanian narco-state is undoubtedly!"
In fact, the first question that arises after this is: does the prime minister have the eyes (or glasses) to see that his post is about a completely local road? Has Edi Rama asked how long it took to repair that road and has anyone been held accountable?
Otherwise, these relativizations are more in line with Elisa Spiropali's formula "such events happen everywhere in the world." Except that in the civilized world, these events are not just made into movies — responsibility is also held by those who have the duty to build roads to standards.






















