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by Shpresa_xox » Fri Jun 15, 2012 10:59 pm
Do you believe the future of your country and countrymen will be good or bad? The world is changing drastically, so fast, that it may seem hard to know what the future holds for each country.
For me, I believe Albania is quickly changing (for the good). Tourism is at its highest, many youth Albanians are signing up with Serie A football teams (may lead Albania to the FIFA World Cup), Albanian beauties are being recognized more in pageants, etc. etc. Also, I strongly believe Eastern Europe will equally and easily attract tourism just like the West.
I've shared my beliefs, now it's your turn ... what do you see for your country's and people's future?
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by ambivalent_2003 » Sat Jun 16, 2012 12:27 am
Shpresa_xox wrote:
Do you believe the future of your country and countrymen will be good or bad? The world is changing drastically, so fast, that it may seem hard to know what the future holds for each country.
For me, I believe Albania is quickly changing (for the good). Tourism is at its highest, many youth Albanians are signing up with Serie A football teams (may lead Albania to the FIFA World Cup), Albanian beauties are being recognized more in pageants, etc. etc. Also, I strongly believe Eastern Europe will equally and easily attract tourism just like the West.
I've shared my beliefs, now it's your turn ... what do you see for your country's and people's future?
yes babes, little did i know about albania as a country till i saw candidates from that country then on and looks like albania has kept pace with what is the in thing in the world.
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by XAMURAI » Sat Jun 16, 2012 1:07 am
Just a reminder..... Tourism is NOT a stable industry to depend on. Look at Greece and Spain....
But, I do agree that Albania is such a beautiful country with a wonderful culture and history. I'm glad that a lot of Europeans and other nationalities are now visiting Albania as some sort of an alternative for Greece. You've got beautiful warm weather down there, so, it is indeed pretty attractive for young tourists. I would love to visit Albania, too! You've got really beautiful people, and I am very interested in Albanian cuisine!
Anyway, here's my unsolicited advice.... Focus a lot on your education so that more industries will invest in Albania if you're backed up with well-educated young population. And also, make sure that your agriculture sector and fisheries are well-taken care of. Not every boys and girls in your country can become a sports celebrity or a beauty queen. This is giving them false hopes for the future. A bad consequence of that is, a lot of kids will abandon education in favor of sports. In Japan, a lot of famous athletes have university degrees, while only a few have (less than 5%) turned pro after high school. So, when these famous celebrities retire (which they usually do at a very young age), they end up with stable jobs like news reporters, journalists or even managers of famous companies who have sponsored them during their active days as an athlete.
As for my home country, the Philippines, the future is bright. I don't agree on a lot of things that the present administration is doing, but that is just part of my conscious effort as an indirect taxpayer (I live and work outside of the country, so I don't pay my income tax in my home country). Maybe it goes with age. We tend to become more critical with our government as our idealism starts to fade out. But, I definitely believe that with our very young population, and the introduction of the new education system in the Philippines (K-12), I am optimistic that we are striding the right path.
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by DivabyNature » Sat Jun 16, 2012 5:02 am
In 20 years, I forecast the Philippines will no longer have transgender men and women in the country because of the lack of laws protecting and recognizing them, the lack of support for them from other members of LGBT, and the intolerant members of the Philippine society. They will, one by one, go to countries like United Kingdom, United States, Canada, or Australia where they will live happily ever after. Tink yow!
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by Shpresa_xox » Sat Jun 16, 2012 5:25 am
XAMURAI wrote:Just a reminder..... Tourism is NOT a stable industry to depend on. Look at Greece and Spain....
But, I do agree that Albania is such a beautiful country with a wonderful culture and history. I'm glad that a lot of Europeans and other nationalities are now visiting Albania as some sort of an alternative for Greece. You've got beautiful warm weather down there, so, it is indeed pretty attractive for young tourists. I would love to visit Albania, too! You've got really beautiful people, and I am very interested in Albanian cuisine!
Anyway, here's my unsolicited advice.... Focus a lot on your education so that more industries will invest in Albania if you're backed up with well-educated young population. And also, make sure that your agriculture sector and fisheries are well-taken care of. Not every boys and girls in your country can become a sports celebrity or a beauty queen. This is giving them false hopes for the future. A bad consequence of that is, a lot of kids will abandon education in favor of sports. In Japan, a lot of famous athletes have university degrees, while only a few have (less than 5%) turned pro after high school. So, when these famous celebrities retire (which they usually do at a very young age), they end up with stable jobs like news reporters, journalists or even managers of famous companies who have sponsored them during their active days as an athlete.
As for my home country, the Philippines, the future is bright. I don't agree on a lot of things that the present administration is doing, but that is just part of my conscious effort as an indirect taxpayer (I live and work outside of the country, so I don't pay my income tax in my home country). Maybe it goes with age. We tend to become more critical with our government as our idealism starts to fade out. But, I definitely believe that with our very young population, and the introduction of the new education system in the Philippines (K-12), I am optimistic that we are striding the right path.
Of course tourism doesn't keep a country stable, but it does keep interest and investments. And thank you for the advice
As for the Philippines, I believe the younger ones will be the true voices in the future ... they will change the minds of ignorant people & hopefully increase with greatness.
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by Shpresa_xox » Sat Jun 16, 2012 5:30 am
Aphroditte wrote:XAMURAI wrote:Just a reminder..... Tourism is NOT a stable industry to depend on. Look at Greece and Spain....
But, I do agree that Albania is such a beautiful country with a wonderful culture and history. I'm glad that a lot of Europeans and other nationalities are now visiting Albania as some sort of an alternative for Greece. You've got beautiful warm weather down there, so, it is indeed pretty attractive for young tourists. I would love to visit Albania, too! You've got really beautiful people, and I am very interested in Albanian cuisine!
Anyway, here's my unsolicited advice.... Focus a lot on your education so that more industries will invest in Albania if you're backed up with well-educated young population. And also, make sure that your agriculture sector and fisheries are well-taken care of. Not every boys and girls in your country can become a sports celebrity or a beauty queen. This is giving them false hopes for the future. A bad consequence of that is, a lot of kids will abandon education in favor of sports. In Japan, a lot of famous athletes have university degrees, while only a few have (less than 5%) turned pro after high school. So, when these famous celebrities retire (which they usually do at a very young age), they end up with stable jobs like news reporters, journalists or even managers of famous companies who have sponsored them during their active days as an athlete.
As for my home country, the Philippines, the future is bright. I don't agree on a lot of things that the present administration is doing, but that is just part of my conscious effort as an indirect taxpayer (I live and work outside of the country, so I don't pay my income tax in my home country). Maybe it goes with age. We tend to become more critical with our government as our idealism starts to fade out. But, I definitely believe that with our very young population, and the introduction of the new education system in the Philippines (K-12), I am optimistic that we are striding the right path.
Ofcourse it's not, but Greece had other problems than just with tourism, their socio-cultural roots were flawed from the beginning.
You're more than welcomed to visit Albania, hospitality is one of our main virtues!
As of education, it's well taken care of & has been greatly invested in since the fall of communism, resulting from 85 % of iliteracy to 99 %
literacy, also considering the fact the Albanian language was prohibited to be taught during the Ottoman Empire. Agriculture on the other
hand contributes to 19 % of the country's GDP,yet the terrain is too mountaineous for it to completely flourish, that's why we mostly focus
on tourism & industry ofcourse, although soon enough we will also boost our economy with the help of our rich natural resources.
As of being critical with the goverment, the same situation is in Albania & well now, most European countries, we have to deal with alot
of corruption in the political sphere, lol. But as you said, the young population is the future of every country.
What I just hope to see for the world is world peace (so Queen-like, I know right?
) & minority rights (especially on the Balkans),
everything else will find it's place sooner or later. Btw, Shpresa, e ardhmja ime eshte me Lorik Canen.
Ehhhh tash per Lorik Canen, ni keni dasem vij me dasmor e dasmoresha, lol.
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by bloomfield » Sat Jun 16, 2012 5:35 pm
America's future depends on the party that handles it. Bi-partisan decisions in both lower and higher house should cooperate to resolve the problem to create a better reform for the country, it's people and the world.
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