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Posts by osiol  

Joined: 25 Jul 2007 / Male ♂
Last Post: 26 Nov 2009
Threads: Total: 55 / In This Archive: 49
Posts: Total: 3,921 / In This Archive: 3,065

Interests: Not being on this website when I'm asleep

Displayed posts: 3114 / page 8 of 104
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osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / Poland torpedoes EU Day Against Death Penalty [71]

In most countries, those who advocate the return of capital punishment, do so as a smokescreen to engage public debate in something other than the real problems with law and order, such as the much smaller crimes that go unpunished.
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

Does the US have approximately:

14% Hispanic population
3% Polish population

Somebody correct me if these figures are wildly inaccurate.

You would expect the Latin population, based on sheer numbers, to be more prominent.
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

Do you mean that the prominence of a population depends on its number alone?

Not on number alone. There are other factors. A long-established population would be expected to have either assimilated entirely into the general population, or at least to have found its feet economically. Sometimes, cultural factors either by the general population or by the minority groups, may hold back or even increase the rate of this development.

But there is a large difference in numbers. When a 'community' reaches a certain size, political parties or institutions find they need to 'reach out' to these communities...
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

I have little knowledge of the situation in America.
However, if half the population votes, then half of the Latin 15% of the population is worth grabbing if you're trying to get elected.
A few speeches in Spanish, a couple of policies that supposedly appeal to them.
A 3% of the population group won't be singled out as a specific concern.

In the UK, therre are plenty of jobs that need filling.
Not everyone is prepared to take these jobs.
People come in to do them.
Some people like to play the victim.

Why have the English been singled out in the title of this thread?
What about Scottish, Welsh, Northern Irish, Irish, other European nations with an influx of Polish migrants?

If anyone doesn't know the differences between terms such as English, British, the UK, I can explain!
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

You could understand the situation in Ireland being difficult (which don't I believe it is)
because that is a country that for a long time until recently, only ever experienced emigration.
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

If you migrate, you are a migrant.

Many species of bird migrate twice a year.
Migration does not mean settlement.

Immigrate - to migrate into a place
Emigrate - to migrate out of a place

Guest worker: I believe this is a term used in some European countries.
I didn't think the term has any official usage in the UK.
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

re: Some people like to play the victim.

- Namely who?

Never met anyone who finds being a victim easier than thinking and doing positive?
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

- Why would it be 'difficult'? Because of Poles?

Stop being pathetic. What is your problem?

If a country has little or no experience of immigration,
it might not be a suprise if the indigenous population have a problem
with people different to themselves appearing on the scene.
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

What, are you scared to say yes or no?

No. It would not have been the fault of the Poles in Ireland if the Irish had found their presence particularly troublesome.
I assume you haven't read any of my posts in other threads.
Maybe I shouldn't have expected you to have done so.

If a country has little or no experience of immigration

Here is a statement that is not naming a specific country,
It is an example of a situation that has been the case with many countries.

people different to themselves

Not specifically Polish people - any incoming group.

How, from this, can you think I am specifically blaming Poles, or even the incomers rather than the native population?
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / Poland torpedoes EU Day Against Death Penalty [71]

This is moving on from live or die to more specific points about how to deal with convicts.

Prisoners should be made to do something more constructive.
Partly so they don't have such an easy time, but also
those who have never done anything useful in their lives
may actually get something out of it - some sort of work ethic. You never know.

PD, My job involves digging holes in the rain, in the cold, in snow even.
I get covered in mud in the winter, sunburnt in summer (if I'm lucky)
I have to lift things heavier than the health & safety legislation would accept,
and I'm not paid very much!

I wouldn't wish this on convicts.
It's far too much fun!
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

people are giving that impression

I wonder where you get this impression from.
Some parts of the British media like to stir things up.
The reality, I believe, nearly always, is far more mundane.
Occasionally, stories pop up that sell newspapers.
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

I honestly don't think any media will be square with you......

You're probably right.

I don't go for conspiracy theories that say everythings all controlled by X and/or Y,
but the media is controlled by a small number of people - fate has allowed this to happen.
They have their agenda, based mostly on the idea that pandering to the lowest common denominator
will lead to greatest sales, greatest profit.
This means preying on people's small-mindedness, nimbyisms and insecurities is the way they generally go.

Most people should be credited with more awareness and intelligence.
So what goes out to the world as the situation in this country is a slightly warped interpretation.
osiol   
7 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

George Bush

Luckily, America is well known enough without him.
Still, there are always the sheep...
osiol   
8 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

Maybe some tabloids care mostly, or entirely, for profit, but, from my observation, they are politicised too.

It is not only governments who wield political power.
If a tabloid in the UK such as The Sun endorses a party in a general election, they will probably win.
Money speaks loudest.
osiol   
8 Sep 2007
News / Poland torpedoes EU Day Against Death Penalty [71]

I have stated before that how the prison system is administrated
does not affect fundamental moral principles.
These principles should affect the administration of prisons.
It is a shame that they don't.
osiol   
8 Sep 2007
Language / (part 2) Polish Language Pronunciation - Sample Words and Phrases [311]

Because there are some difficult consonant clusters in Polish,
some people try to simplify their names for the benefit of speakers of other languages.

Not that this name is difficult for the English speaker.

It does include the 'rz' letter combination that stands for something like the English 'sh'.

The stress should be on the first syllable.
osiol   
8 Sep 2007
News / English vs. Polish hostility [323]

Would be loathed to describe myself as an average anything

Fair enough.

I've never met a truly average person.
I've met people with dodgy opinions, weak minds and so on.
I know people who buy the Daily Mail every day, just for the crosswords.
osiol   
8 Sep 2007
History / Polish Jews - they changed their Jewish surnames to Polish [532]

Jews have lived in England for centuries

Oliver Cromwell invited them back in 1657, over 367 years after they had been brutally evicted by Edward I in 1290.
There was a small number of Jews living secretly in England in the intervening years, particularly in later times.

little more efficiantly

I agree that most grand conspiracy theories don't add up because everything seems to be more of a mess than a well organised elite would possibly settle for.
osiol   
8 Sep 2007
History / Polish Jews - they changed their Jewish surnames to Polish [532]

I believe that in WWII, there were both Poles who sheltered Jews (therefore risking their own lives) and those who collaborated in the killing.

I don't know about numbers in population, but many Jews lived in ghettos so they could stick with their own community and practise their own traditions. In Russia, where Jews could live was prescribed by laws. In Britain, there were no such laws. I'm not certain as to the position of other countries, but these two cases are the two opposing ends of the spectrum.

Poland had had the largest Jewish population in Europe for a long time until the middle of the last century.
osiol   
8 Sep 2007
History / Polish Jews - they changed their Jewish surnames to Polish [532]

The starkest contrast being between the Jedwabne pogrom and the liberation of a camp in the Warszawa uprising.

Antisemitism in Europe began - with the restrictions laid down by the church on how Christians (ie. the entire population of Europe minus the Jews) could deal with money. The work had to be done by someone, and this laid down the basis for the Jewish 'bogeyman'.

Modern day conspiracy theorists aren't doing anything new.

It is old, sad and pathetic.
osiol   
8 Sep 2007
History / Polish Jews - they changed their Jewish surnames to Polish [532]

Durring II WW Germans forced jews to live in small gettos surrounded by walls and german soldiers, it was used by them to exterminate jews.

I do not deny that.

And there were Jews, who collaborated in the killing of both Jews and Goys

The plot thickens. Collaboration can take many forms.
There are good people and bad people of all varieties in this world.
osiol   
8 Sep 2007
History / Polish Jews - they changed their Jewish surnames to Polish [532]

I'm not posting any more in this thread.

The subject of Jewry in Poland is a worthwhile subject of discussion,

but I'm bored of the antisemitic claptrap

that forms the basis of the thread (see post 1)
osiol   
9 Sep 2007
UK, Ireland / Are British people really interested to integrate with Poles? [92]

When she asked me about my nationality and i said im from poland. she just said -see ya, and have a nice party

It's probably best for your sake she left it at that. B****!
There are better people out there. Most of us, I'd like to think.

But there is no chance to go out together. To pub or any party

I have spent much of the last year working with a group of Polish blokes.
The only reason we never had more than just one beer after work was because
they had so far to travel and some of them had second jobs in the evening.

I think it depends on where and who you are. Most people find it easier to integrate when they are on their own
and not with a large group of people from the same country as themselves.