vetala
11 Sep 2009
News / The most spectacular errors in Polish politics. [264]
No, I don't, because it has absolutely nothing to do with the subject I was talking about. Instead of providing counterarguments to the points I made you argue over words like 'a' or 'the' apparently hoping that if you continue doing this for long enough I will forget about the original subject. That's the most sad, pathetic thing I've ever seen.
1) You didn't call General Government a state. You did however say that it's laws were unacceptable, since it did things that are morally questionable. Polish People's Republic also did things that are morally questionable, not to mention the communist government was imposed against the will of most Poles, therefore making it's laws and decisions unacceptable, including parades, border changes and reparations.
2) Polish government in exile continued to exist up until the end of communism in Poland. After that it symbolically gave it's 'power' to the Polish government of 1989 symbolically making it a successor government to the Polish G-i-E. The communist government imposed on Poland by dishonest, illegal means was the one which agreed for a parade in Moscow, not the Polish governemnt-in-exile. Therefore, your argument that 'Poland' wanted it and agreed on it is false.
3) The elections of the communist government had to be faked, so apparently more Poles were against them.
I made no comment about General Government being any kind of state but you are still insisting that I did
I said that Delegatura was the succesor to a structure of the AK.
See any difference?
No, I don't, because it has absolutely nothing to do with the subject I was talking about. Instead of providing counterarguments to the points I made you argue over words like 'a' or 'the' apparently hoping that if you continue doing this for long enough I will forget about the original subject. That's the most sad, pathetic thing I've ever seen.
1) You didn't call General Government a state. You did however say that it's laws were unacceptable, since it did things that are morally questionable. Polish People's Republic also did things that are morally questionable, not to mention the communist government was imposed against the will of most Poles, therefore making it's laws and decisions unacceptable, including parades, border changes and reparations.
2) Polish government in exile continued to exist up until the end of communism in Poland. After that it symbolically gave it's 'power' to the Polish government of 1989 symbolically making it a successor government to the Polish G-i-E. The communist government imposed on Poland by dishonest, illegal means was the one which agreed for a parade in Moscow, not the Polish governemnt-in-exile. Therefore, your argument that 'Poland' wanted it and agreed on it is false.
3) The elections of the communist government had to be faked, so apparently more Poles were against them.