What will happen to the house?

The way in which a system will deal with the crime on which it was created must be impeccable, otherwise more damage will be done

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Photo: Boris Pejović
Photo: Boris Pejović
Disclaimer: The translations are mostly done through AI translator and might not be 100% accurate.

The showdown with Milo Đukanović, a private person, is a very boring pathological framework in which only someone with thin nerves can participate. Those of us who spend the days of newly acquired freedom better stick to Orwell's: "Revenge is an act you want to perform when you are powerless and because you are powerless: as soon as the feeling of powerlessness is removed, the desire itself disappears."

If we are not ready for revenge, don't worry, we still have a reform of the value system, a new political consciousness that will lead this country on the path of justice. Đukanović worked and built under the grain, paid pensions from cigarette smuggling, and ran parallel businesses through his tycoon networks that span the Virgin Islands. We know that. Envelopes were recorded, many forms were published, everything is clear to the citizens, and for that they finally punished him in the elections. But the deconstruction of Đukanović's system of private governance is a political process, and a very lame one at that, and it cannot be a mere legal tussle between three lawyers and two ministers.

The demolition of Milo Đukanović's house, no matter how much it was built without permission, is a highly political act, just like the remaining of the church in Rumija is a political act, no matter how much it was placed there without any right. Therefore, the cynicism of the outgoing Prime Minister, Dritan Abazović, who says that the demolition order was accidentally broken two days after the election, only shows how much this man has lost regard for the reality in which his party is drowning. And in order not to drown completely, the demolition of Đukanović's house is loudly announced from the party's FB account, while the ministry is tagged.

The way in which a system will deal with the crime on which it was created must be impeccable, otherwise more damage will be done. The sloppy market discussion that I have a feeling about who has a permit, who reported the legalization of the facility and whose property it is, all that we will have to follow these days through the election intermezzo, is certainly hurting the soul of the ministry, sorry to the dying URA party that depends on the dopamine visions of its little boss.

It was with the FB campaign they started, trampling on the foundations of the state's communication model with citizens, that these dilettantes actually privatized justice again, reduced it to a measure of retribution that should fascinate or frighten someone. There can be no real enlightenment in the uproar that is being prepared, as well as political homogenization of a society for which the demolition of someone's house, even Đukanović's, is turned into a pre-election spot.

That video could have been a strong message, but like this, with matchstick timing and the way the party campaigned, it will remain hollow on every side and rightly cause laughter from everyone who knows how many houses in this country are built without permission. Đukanović's value system needs to be demolished, there are fewer houses important. The matter could have been started outside the election process and with more dignity, everything could have been less tense, if a small leader without voters was not in such a hurry.

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(Opinions and views published in the "Columns" section are not necessarily the views of the "Vijesti" editorial office.)