Post by account_disabled on Mar 9, 2024 5:33:42 GMT
Does everything continue to be the same until it isn't? 1. The children born in 1989 in Albania, the year when the Berlin Wall fell and marked the collapse of communism in a spectacular way, are the only generation of Europeans from Lisbon to Tallinn, who are not sure if democratic elections are legitimate thirty years Later. Different generations of European parents raised in communism had this feeling of insecurity when the first elections were organized in their countries. But, year after year, election after election, Poles and Czechs, Croatians and Hungarians and Bulgarians and Moldovans went through the dilemma of whether they really entered democracy and year after year, election after election, the belief that at least the standards were being met grew fundamental of an electoral democracy.
The parents of European children born Cambodia Telegram Number Data in 1989, from Lisbon to Tallinn, all of them with the exception of Albania, bequeathed at least the security of the electoral process. Consequently, they bequeathed two essential beliefs for development: belief in the legitimacy of democracy and in the legitimacy of democratically built state institutions (or the legitimacy of the state). To the Albanian children born in 1989, their parents did not bequeath these beliefs and during ten years of their participation in electoral cycles they did not even manage to create them themselves.
Read also: Accusations of drug trafficking, the American court declares the former president of Honduras guilty Gender pay gap / Only one country in Europe pays women more than men Albanian children born in 1989 still continue to live with their parents' initial dilemma of whether they will be able to organize free elections. Their parents still live with the conviction, collectively, that the best elections (in the sense of justice) in Albania were those organized closer to communism and by ex-communists, in 1992. Albanian children born in 1989 know that communism marked its symbolic death in the year of their birth, but they are still not sure, as a whole, that they live in a parliamentary democracy.
The parents of European children born Cambodia Telegram Number Data in 1989, from Lisbon to Tallinn, all of them with the exception of Albania, bequeathed at least the security of the electoral process. Consequently, they bequeathed two essential beliefs for development: belief in the legitimacy of democracy and in the legitimacy of democratically built state institutions (or the legitimacy of the state). To the Albanian children born in 1989, their parents did not bequeath these beliefs and during ten years of their participation in electoral cycles they did not even manage to create them themselves.
Read also: Accusations of drug trafficking, the American court declares the former president of Honduras guilty Gender pay gap / Only one country in Europe pays women more than men Albanian children born in 1989 still continue to live with their parents' initial dilemma of whether they will be able to organize free elections. Their parents still live with the conviction, collectively, that the best elections (in the sense of justice) in Albania were those organized closer to communism and by ex-communists, in 1992. Albanian children born in 1989 know that communism marked its symbolic death in the year of their birth, but they are still not sure, as a whole, that they live in a parliamentary democracy.