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Indeed, the reason is because the Ottoman Empire made a complete mess out of the Balkans with hundreds of years of Arabo-Turkish settling, turning Tosks into an ethnicity with a culture, religion, behaviour and genetics that are alien and hostile to native neighbours and European civilization. These are images of Albanian cities before communism, with the exception of some faces, everything is 100% alien to Europe:
1914
Dürres 1914
Scutari 1914
Tirana 1941
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Most Albanian members of this forum are completely delusional and for some misterious reason like to project themselves as masters of the Universe. The taller mountain types (a small minority) are ethnically Montenegrins.
Spanish bastekball national team is much taller than the Albanian one. Where are those Albanian giants ?
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Albani...asketball_team
Club Ctr.
PG 4 Strazimiri, Klein 19 – 22 April 1998 1.85 m (6 ft 1 in) KB Tirana Albania
SG 7 Kovaci, Beq 24 – 9 June 1993 1.96 m (6 ft 5 in) KB Vëllaznimi Kosovo
PG 9 Berdica, Ervin 32 – 28 March 1985 1.80 m (5 ft 11 in) BC Vllaznia Albania
PG 10 Vaqarri, Majk 23 – 11 February 1994 1.82 m (6 ft 0 in) Kamza Basket Albania
PF 12 Gjyzeli, Abdel 24 – 24 February 1993 2.04 m (6 ft 8 in) KB Tirana Albania
C 14 Hysenagolli, Endrit 29 – 5 July 1988 2.10 m (6 ft 11 in) KB Tirana Albania
PF 15 Shima, Gerti 31 – 9 May 1986 2.04 m (6 ft 8 in) KB Tirana Albania
SG 19 Muca, Orlando 21 – 19 November 1995 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in) Proteas Voulas Greece
PG 35 Dusha, Elvisi 23 – 15 July 1994 1.88 m (6 ft 2 in) Plymouth Raiders United Kingdom
PF 43 Moser, Michael 26 – 8 November 1990 2.03 m (6 ft 8 in) Pallacanestro Reggiana Italy
SG 70 Bushati, Franko 32 – 5 July 1985 1.87 m (6 ft 2 in) Germani Basket Brescia Italy
C 93 Haruni, Kledio 23 – 20 September 1993 2.02 m (6 ft 8 in) Esperos Lamias
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spain_...asketball_team
F/C 4 Gasol, Pau 37 – 6 June 1980 2.13 m (7 ft 0 in) San Antonio Spurs United States
PG 6 Rodríguez, Sergio 31 – 12 June 1986 1.90 m (6 ft 3 in) Philadelphia 76ers United States
SG 7 Navarro, Juan Carlos 37 – 13 June 1980 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in) FC Barcelona Lassa Spain
PG 9 Rubio, Ricky 26 – 21 October 1990 1.93 m (6 ft 4 in) Minnesota Timberwolves United States
C 13 Gasol, Marc 32 – 29 January 1985 2.16 m (7 ft 1 in) Memphis Grizzlies United States
C 14 Hernangómez, Willy 23 – 27 May 1994 2.10 m (6 ft 11 in) New York Knicks United States
G/F 15 Sastre, Joan 25 – 10 December 1991 2.04 m (6 ft 8 in) Valencia Basket Spain
PG 16 Vives, Guillem 24 – 16 June 1993 1.92 m (6 ft 4 in) Valencia Basket Spain
F/C 18 Oriola, Pierre 24 – 25 September 1992 2.06 m (6 ft 9 in) Valencia Basket Spain
G/F 19 San Emeterio, Fernando 33 – 1 January 1984 1.99 m (6 ft 6 in) Valencia Basket Spain
SF 21 Abrines, Álex 24 – 1 August 1993 1.98 m (6 ft 6 in) Oklahoma City Thunder United States
PF 41 Hernangómez, Juan 22 – 9 August 1995 2.06 m (6 ft 9 in) Denver Nuggets
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Someone who read your post can come to the conclusion that the one who wrote these words is an idiot. To illustrate your stupidity, you post some photos, of course cherrypicked, from Albania in year 1914. In year 1914 Albania was a poor country, liberated from two years from Ottoman occupation, invaded by different armies, first of all from the armies of our neighbours. And you accuse us for hostility versus our neighbours and European civilisation. It`s normal because you are an typical pordhu-gay, a retard. You post some photos to illustrate this savage Tosks, but you have illustrate only your psycopathy, because in of your photos there are no Tosk.
Ok.
Behind the Picture
'Spanish Village': W. Eugene Smith's Landmark Photo Essay
Ben Cosgrove
Mar 10, 2013
Originally published in the April 9, 1951, issue of LIFE magazine, W. Eugene Smith's photo essay, "Spanish Village," has been lauded for more than six decades as the most moving photographic portrait ever made of daily life in rural Spain during the rule of dictator Francisco Franco. But, as the years have passed, the most chilling image from the piece—the closed, hard faces of three members of Franco’s feared Guardia Civil—has been exalted to a point where the essays' other masterful, evocative pictures have been largely forgotten.
For countless people around the world, including photography buffs who really ought to know better, Smith's Guardia Civil photograph is the "Spanish Village" essay.
Here, LIFE.com presents "Spanish Village" in its entirety. Even as the faces in the essay's most famous picture evince the cruelty and arrogance often assumed by small men granted great power over others, other photographs illuminate the timeless rhythms of a small, isolated Spanish town of the last century, about which LIFE wrote: "It lives in ancient poverty and faith."
In the 1951 article that accompanied Smith's pictures, the magazine told its readers:
The village of Deleitosa, a place of about 2,300 peasant people, sits on the high, dry, western Spanish tableland called Estramadura, about halfway between Madrid and the border of Portugal. Its name means "delightful," which it no longer is, and its origins are obscure, though they may go back a thousand years to Spain's Moorish period. In any event it is very old and LIFE photographer Eugene Smith, wandering off the main road into the village, found that its ways had advanced little since medieval times.
Many Deleitosans have never seen a railroad because the nearest one is 25 miles away. Mail comes in by burro. The nearest telephone is 12 miles away in another town. Deleitosa's water system still consists of the sort of aqueducts and open wells from which villagers have drawn water for centuries . . . and the streets smell strongly of the villagers' donkeys and pigs.
[A] small movie theater, which shows some American films, sits among the sprinkling of little shops near the main square. But the village scene is dominated now as always by the high, brown structure of the 16th century church, the center of society in Catholic Deleitosa. And the lives of the villagers are dominated as always by the bare and brutal problems of subsistence. For Deleitosa, barren of history, unfavored by nature, reduced by wars, lives in poverty—a poverty shared by nearly all and relieved only by the seasonal work of the soil, and the faith that sustains most Deleitosans from the hour of First Communion until the simple funeral that marks one's end.
Excuse me, what have to do with Europe this people? It`s year 1951, not 1914. It`s a free country, not an invaded country. It`s a country who for 500 years has stolen half of the world, not a country who for 450 years was under ottoman occupation. Excuse me, even pants for their kids didn` t had your ancestors?
Let see your country, pordhu-gay.
Luís Carlos Almeida da Cunha, ComM (born 17 November 1986), commonly known as Nani (Portuguese pronunciation: [naˈni]) or Luís Nani,[5][6][7] is a Portuguese professional footballer who plays as a winger for Italian club Lazio, on loan from Valencia, and the Portugal national team. Although predominantly right-footed, he has been utilised on the left wing on many occasions.
He was raised by his aunt Antónia in the Santa Filomena estate in the Amadora district of Lisbon after being abandoned by his parents.[10] At the age of five, his father left for a holiday in Cape Verde but never returned and when he was 12 years old, his mother left Portugal to start a new life in the Netherlands.[10] Nani has nine siblings from his mother, of which he is the youngest, and five from his father.[11]
This is Santa Filomena estate in the Amadora district of Lisbon:
Look your ancestors as emigrants in France:
Gérald Bloncourt's photograph of a Portuguese girl in a slum outside Paris in the 1960s.Credit Gérald Bloncourt
Excuse me, do you consider Europeans this people
Last edited by Laberia; 09-11-2017 at 08:53 PM.
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A happy pordh-ugese family:
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