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Posts by SeanBM  

Joined: 10 Mar 2008 / Male ♂
Last Post: 6 Jun 2017
Threads: Total: 34 / In This Archive: 17
Posts: Total: 5781 / In This Archive: 2214
From: Beauty is in the eye of the beer holder.

Displayed posts: 2231 / page 9 of 75
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SeanBM   
15 Oct 2009
Life / What's the weather like in Poland? [81]

56,000 people left without electricity in maƂapolska.
250,000 people nation wide without power, the worst hit was the lake district.
and that is after fixing half of the problems yesterday, when over half a million people did not have electricity.

I was driving south of Krakow last night, many trees had fallen. The deciduous trees are not able to handle the weight of the snow.

It is still snowing!!!
SeanBM   
14 Oct 2009
Life / What's the weather like in Poland? [81]

Camera on the market square Krakow doesn't look so bad, but it is cold and snowy.

Ah sure, this too will pass ;)
SeanBM   
14 Oct 2009
Life / What's the weather like in Poland? [81]

kamera-czantoria.info/

Holy Moly!

What are we doing?
I should be lying in a hammock sipping white Russians on a tropical island somewhere.
They say it'll go on Sunday but still it's a bit of a shocker.

It just makes me feel tired and obviously cold.
Time to get out the woolly mittens!
Hahahaha, snowboarding, think snowboarding.... :)
SeanBM   
14 Oct 2009
Life / What's the weather like in Poland? [81]

Snow!!!!
What kind of God forbidden country is this????
it is not just a light snow, OH NO!
Straight from 25 degrees last week or a few days ago to WINTER!!!
AAAAAAAhHHHHHHhhhhahahahahahaha
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
History / Matters of Propaganda...Or: how was the West portrayed in Poland? [150]

I remember when the Berlin wall came down.
My mates were selling bits of the wall across the road to people as "a piece of historically importance" and "it will get more valuable with age".

A bargain for a fiver :P

That made me laugh.
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
History / Matters of Propaganda...Or: how was the West portrayed in Poland? [150]

The one thing I have noticed about every ex-communist country I have been, is the distrust of other ex-commie countries.
In Lithuania they used to tell em never to go to Poland, as I was sure to be in a car crash and robbed.

A joke my father told me was,
In the U.S.S.R, two men are wearing the same make of jacket, one asks the other, "How much did you pay for you jacket?", "500$" the other man proudly announces. The first man states triumphantly "tufth! I paid 1000$ for my jacket".

I suppose the point of the joke is that ex-communist countries seem to have inferiority complexes and need to prove they are somehow better.

In Lithuania I had so many people bragging to me that Lithuania has the highest suicide rate in the world!
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
History / Matters of Propaganda...Or: how was the West portrayed in Poland? [150]

As much as I like the information being reviled to me.
This argument is about which place was more communist hating?
Poland or East Germany?
And youz are proving that by stating how many soviet troop were in each country at the time?
I don't think that is an effective way of proving "who hated communism more" but hey, go for it, just try to give info rather than telling us that the other person knows nothing.
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
History / Matters of Propaganda...Or: how was the West portrayed in Poland? [150]

You had just a tiny part of those russian troops in the country that the GDR had..

Sh!loads or soviet troops in Poland.
You clearly have no idea.

Youz know on here when two people argue, it is us ( the third person) the readers, that win.
Get some figure out, how many Soviet soldiers in each country?
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
History / Matters of Propaganda...Or: how was the West portrayed in Poland? [150]

As I'm not "The" East-Germans I can't tell you how "They" felt.

I am not havin a go at you.

But surely not much different than all the others in the eastern bloc..

That varies quite a bit, are there people in East Germany that miss communism?
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
History / Matters of Propaganda...Or: how was the West portrayed in Poland? [150]

You don't know much, don't you...

Rather than getting annoyed, perhaps you could enlighten us.
I don't know how Eastern Germans felt and how they helped to undermine and get rid of communism.

anti-commie movie from the 50's

Interesting in the second video you posted they talk about Katyn (about minute 1:20).
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
Travel / Looking for a typical restaurant in Wroclaw [26]

I see that you are very aware of what you eat and drink,

You are what you eat but I will drink anything :)

I have recently stopped being vegetarian, went to Hungary and had to try the goulash, yum yum pig's bum.
I am not eating much meat these days but at least I have not gone back on the cigarettes.

Um, Sphinx

Ah, in sphincter, you get huge portions, what is it meant to be anyway Egyptian?
The lads have done well for themselves by setting it up.

There are a few things I can't stand about some restaurants in ex-communist countries.

1.
Is when they weight each individual part of your dinner separately. e.g. the menu has the fish's price per Kg, so you never know how much it costs.

2.
You order a meal, say trout and you have to pay extra for veg and spuds. It is always a rip off.

3.
Poor service, this is changing a lot but still sometimes you get Mr's 'I couldn't care less if you lived or died' serving you.

If the waitress/waiter were to show his teeth, it'd be an act of aggression, like a rabid dog.

4.
Slow food restuarants, going for a lunch break and waiting an hour for the menu, an hour to get your order in and an hour to get your food and last but by no means least an hour to pay for it. (the trick to the last one is just to simply walk out, they hurry then).

5.
A nice ex-commie general's restaurant, where you know capitalist scum like you were never meant to be and where all the generals (these days over the top formal, unfriendly, business men) sit patting each other on the back and the waiter serves you as if you are less than him.

6. Huge tables that are meant for 12 people and two people are there, so it is taken and you may not sit down.

7. Restaurants that scream the order out, they even have them on speakers "PEROGIIIIIII!!!!".

8, A restaurant where you can not move tables, for any reason, because you will mess up the staff's system (if indeed you can call it a system).

9. Where the menu is the size of "War and Peace".
Better off doing 5 things well than 150 things substandard.

10. Your in a nice elegant restaurant and they have the pop radio blasting as if it were a disco-tec.

11. When they have TVs blasting, not for the clients, oh no, for the staff.
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
Travel / Looking for a typical restaurant in Wroclaw [26]

Do you have the same Sushi fashion in Wroclaw? it is getting out of control here in Krakow.
Sushi bars opening up all over the place.
Don't get me wrong,
Sushi, when done well, is great but we are about a 13 hour drive from the Baltic sea and that is even IF the fish comes from there and I doubt it.

My advice, eat local, I had Sushi in the far East, never tried it in Europe.
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
Travel / Looking for a typical restaurant in Wroclaw [26]

one must sway off the beaten track to find proper Polish quisine.

Same in Krakow.
I am not a great fan of Italian food, I don't know how it swamped the resturant industry on the market square.

As you say, you have to go off a bit to get good Polish food and even then it might be some dodgy "rustic" restaurant and by "rustic" I mean crap, a wheel barrow and some old bits of wood nailed together for the "authentic Polish look" cheap buggers.
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
History / Matters of Propaganda...Or: how was the West portrayed in Poland? [150]

The Blueshirts, the Irish Nazi movement, never got more members than about 100.

Too busy, I think we had our own internal extremes which did not involve people from outside the Celtic Islands.
I remember being shocked at seeing a spray paint of a black guy with a cross hairs (from a gun) over his head in Norway. I had never seen anything like it before.

We were very insular in many respects and always sided with the underdogs, so communism would not have been such an 'evil' thing for us.

i think most Irish people knew that the rich are okay and the poor get shafted, okay that is a bit too simplistic but you know what I mean.

The only Jew I knew about as a kid was Jesus.
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
History / Matters of Propaganda...Or: how was the West portrayed in Poland? [150]

jolly good bunch, only interested in the beauty of nature, making music and drinking Guinness.

Note that all of the things you have just mentioned are free and Guinness was cheaper than larger.

coffee is good

MMMMMmmmmm Cofffeeeee :)

Edit* one huge difference between Ireland and Commie countries is that nobody tried to mess with our heads, as in we did not have such propaganda and I honestly believe we were given a much more neutral education than other countries.
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
History / Matters of Propaganda...Or: how was the West portrayed in Poland? [150]

They were delighted when teams from communist countries won.

I never knew that about Greece, strange.
Why was that?

---------------------------------------------------------------------- --

Personally I was in Ireland during all that and it was so poor there, sure nobody cared about the Soviet Union.
We were thought about communism and discussed it a length in school, it was a wonderful idea but it doesn't work in practise.
I went travelling to Lithuania for a month, for the first time in 1998 and I remember thinking that it was a lot worse there than I had been led to believe.

It should be noted that I have spoken to many people here in Poland and Poland was a wealthier country during communism than Ireland was.

My parents did not have running water or even a toilet before I was born. Sure there were things in the shops but no Irish person could afford them. So the communists were not a real 'Enemy' for us.

Unemployment, emigration and generally trying to make ends meet were more important than people we had never met.
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
Law / What is a NIP? [8]

Are you for real? you want to buy something from a Polish company and you can't because they want your NIP???
I think the average nip is 9 digits long.
Just enter some numbers in.
SeanBM   
11 Oct 2009
Life / When on a Polish street you can see... [19]

Shoe shops, kebab shops, churches, Italian restaurants, cobbled streets, off licence/grocery-store, posters advertising exhibitions, lots of people walking, foreigners (mainly European/American), students, good looking (yet not conceited) Polish women dressed well and maintain their femininity, bald Polish men, horses and carts, mostly new cars and some maluchs, bad driving, not much litter yet no dustbins, road works, buildings getting their façade renovated.

I am talking about the centre of Krakow.

Nice thread and believe it or not, I had the exact same idea for a thread.
Great minds think alike, Idiots seldom differ :)