Is there any connection between these two topics?
Posted: 08 Jan 2022, 03:07
Reports say that former leader of Yugoslavia, Josip Tito, helped Ethiopia build one of the landmark monuments in the heart of the nation's capital, Addis Ababa, to commemorate the victims of fascist Italy's massacre of thousands in a span of few days during its occupation of the nation in the short period leading to the WWII. According to the reports the monument was designed by Yugoslavian architects themselves, whom HIM Haileselassie commissioned to overtake the task.

The then Yugoslavia's leader is also creditted as one of those who joined HIM and others in founding the so called non-allied blocks, which was considered to counter the advancement of expansion colonial powers of the time.
The other topic is the currently on-going saga around the top Tennis player of the time, Novak Djokovic, who is widely expected would break the record in the number of won grand-slam titles in history of the field, but then the world was told he was suddenly disqualified from taking part in the tournament, in Australia.
The latest report around the issue here reads in one of the internet resources as follows:
The attempt has been going on already for a while, but he is one of the top talents and talents need to be cherished at all levels, unless it is with the likes of the current PM of Australia, who went out to the public and called "rules are rules" or something like that, after revoking the visa Novak was granted before on allegations that the exemption that was given was wrong.
I am not much a tennis fan, but now I am a fan of Novak. More importantly I am on his side of the divide the world is in, as did Tito found himself back in the days before around 3 quarters of a century.
Milosevic is proven right one more time, an icon, who fought for the independence of his nation, a martyr, fought to the death against interference of others in the internal affairs of his own country. A pioneer of current day NoMore movement.
One more reason why NoMore should be strengthened and sustained, it has much more distance yet to go!
The then Yugoslavia's leader is also creditted as one of those who joined HIM and others in founding the so called non-allied blocks, which was considered to counter the advancement of expansion colonial powers of the time.
The other topic is the currently on-going saga around the top Tennis player of the time, Novak Djokovic, who is widely expected would break the record in the number of won grand-slam titles in history of the field, but then the world was told he was suddenly disqualified from taking part in the tournament, in Australia.
The latest report around the issue here reads in one of the internet resources as follows:
https://www.firstpost.com/art-and-cultu ... 66931.htmlNovak Djokovic is more a victim of the brand he couldn't become than the flawed human being he obviously is
Tennis Australia and Novak Djokovic have not been each other’s best friends of late, but this public persecution of Tennis’ biggest star is more bureaucratic hubris than the enlightened response it wants to dress up as.
The attempt has been going on already for a while, but he is one of the top talents and talents need to be cherished at all levels, unless it is with the likes of the current PM of Australia, who went out to the public and called "rules are rules" or something like that, after revoking the visa Novak was granted before on allegations that the exemption that was given was wrong.
I am not much a tennis fan, but now I am a fan of Novak. More importantly I am on his side of the divide the world is in, as did Tito found himself back in the days before around 3 quarters of a century.
Milosevic is proven right one more time, an icon, who fought for the independence of his nation, a martyr, fought to the death against interference of others in the internal affairs of his own country. A pioneer of current day NoMore movement.
One more reason why NoMore should be strengthened and sustained, it has much more distance yet to go!