By Xhesian Shazimani The news that Prime Minister Edi Rama will hold meetings with the diaspora, for the silent majority of Albanians living in Albania, seemed a bit absurd. This is due to the fact that if there is one greatest achievement in these 11 years of power, it is his actions and the government he has led that have caused the second largest exodus after the 90s, of Albanians leaving the country. The reasons are known, unemployment, increasing living costs, retaliation with laws that put a "noose around the throat", corruption in every link of the institutions and the extinction of that small hope that had arisen during the 2000s that something would be done better in our country. Since we already know what Edi Rama is capable of doing with propaganda to distort reality, to the point where he forces the administration to fill his halls abroad, an emigrant who has left to find lost hope, before deciding to go to these meetings of his, must ask himself a few questions. 1-After 2013, with the savings he has in emigration, has he been able to come to Albania to invest in private homes or set up a business in his own country? 2-After 2013, in the village or city where he lives, have the inhabitants decreased or increased? 3-From 2013 until today, the euros he has earned in the sun and in the rain, especially those who are seasonal emigrants, when he comes to Albania, how much lek does he break them into and why so little? 4-Those who are emigrants since the first exodus in the '90s, do they still have hope that one day they will return to their country? 5-When you talk to your emigrant friends but with foreign nationality and they tell you that the diaspora vote has been enabled, why are you Albanians not given this right? That is enough for every emigrant to address himself and then judge, is he proud to be Albanian or not. If it is worth following Rama on Facebook, or believing the news that is served to you on national televisions and portals that are financed with incinerators' money. You are a patriot when you take stock of the good that the government has brought to your country, not because Edi Rama is a great comedian and makes you listen to the best tallava in the country.












