Witnesses claim that the Constitution was still showing signs of life when Slaven Radunović and Peđa Bulatović finished beating them. He fainted more than once from the long parliamentary discussion and begged not to be beaten by the president's law again. Young Živković's threats did not help, Aleksandra scolded the pretty face in vain. No one heard the legal experts as they pleaded for mercy, nor the civil activists' appeals for reason. The Constitution was dying with the president's name on its lips, while the winners of 2020 were waiting for the snuff session to end, so that Lekić would finally be given the mandate.
And maybe that night the Constitution would have clinically died like cigarette smuggling, if the defenders of the rule of law had not risen up and threatened with guns and the street. As soon as Petar Ivanovic appeared in front of the demonstrators, the fence in front of the assembly shook and a cold sweat broke out in Popa and Ambassador Quinta. Before Jevto shouted "We're here!", Constitution was connected to the machines and the diplomats gave him the first therapy. Dritan and Milo will agree on the judges as they used to be a minority government, and when the Constitutional Court ends its forced vacation - everyone can go to the elections. Before that, Pura will once again pray for the restoration of the Constitution, and Peđa will forgive him for beating him.
And once the Constitution regains its strength, the rule of law that we enjoyed before the highest legal act was attacked in the Parliament will flourish.
The once strong Constitution made it possible for us to have a civil state that is shaken by the trusting people, minorities, committees and some citizens. Religious communities are separated from the state and only an even more malicious analyst and agnostic criticize the pope and effendi for tweeting, writing columns and hiring in depth. Discrimination is prohibited, as is incitement to hatred, unless you're a troll or a bot-beater slaughtering your neighbor's cow online. Men and women are equal everywhere except at work and on electoral lists, and the right to a healthy environment is guaranteed to everyone who does not live near a mine, a mini-hydroelectric plant or a burning landfill. A citizen is not obliged to declare his religious or other beliefs, except when looking for a job in the civil service.
The Montenegrin Constitution, glory and mercy, guarantees the protection of personal data and protects us from party activists who count safe votes. Forced labor is strictly prohibited, unless you are a warehouse worker or a hypermarket worker who is not allowed to go home before midnight. The Constitution guarantees us the right to health care, but it doesn't get angry when we take out a loan for treatment at a private doctor. There is also the right of children to health care from public revenues, which is most quickly achieved by collecting money for treatment via SMS. The constitutional prohibition of slavery is not questioned, except in the case of debt slavery.
That is why the desire of some deputies and admirers of the rule of law to preserve the constitutional rights of the president is commendable. When they have already enabled the citizens to enjoy all their rights, it is not nice that even the greatest defender of the constitution lacks them. Someone will complain that the president never took a picture with the Constitution like Aleksa, but at least he kept it as the image and honor of Montenegro. He did not allow local elections to be postponed every now and then or new municipalities to be created in the middle of the campaign. The constitutional principle of the balance of power was sacred to him, so he didn't let anyone talk about parliamentary dictatorship. When his party colleagues proposed the formation of a new church, he reminded that religious communities are separate from the state. He also rejected Dritan's minority government because it is impossible to establish a government that does not arise from the freely expressed will of citizens in democratic elections.
When the Constitution wakes up from its coma after protests or the election of judges, it would be nice to allow us to continue enjoying its benefits. To begin with, we could exercise the right to vote in elections, so that we exercise power through freely elected representatives. If the recovery of the Constitution will take as long as the formation of Lekić's government, it is easier to give him an adrenaline injection at the polls. Most of 2020 is certainly as stable as a summer romance, and the hand of justice and the razor have less and less power.
Give us elections, because the percentages are greatly melting as the coalition potential of DPS and boycotts, constitutional appeals and Vuković ex-mayor will not help them. Only Draginja and the old liberals are defending Belvedere's achievements, while the voters are getting angry from Mickey's whispers about the European salary. Arrests will only be valid for European straits, and the Basic Agreement for the kingdom of heaven. In the mundane realm, the voter asks for bitcoins and child support.
And when the parties are measured in the elections and form a new government, our Constitution will also be healed. He will be as strong as in 2006 and he will not be attacked by the Frontas, nor will Petar have to defend him as a parliamentary immunity. He will give all the rights to both the president and the citizen, and we will pamper him and take care of him and call him Đole.
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