He is definitely not English, his spelling is American English.
I can not understand it. I can not say anything at all without criticism. If I make a spelling mistake, 'all hell lets loose' and then you get young fist generation Polish people spelling things like godzina usma, powiem puzniej and ja prubuje the general education on this forum is excellent is it not?
irst I saw it trhrough rosy coloured glasses and I defended the place vigourously against my colleagues
I think that is natural and as the expression goes 'the grass is always greener on the other side' I do not know the Polish expression off hand but something similar, 'zawsze jest lepsze gzdie nas nie ma' or words to that effect, anyway. I am sure a Polish woman will soon run to my aid and correct me! There are some good people in Poland but they are more likely to keep themselves to themselves and you will only meet them through connections. As in England, I tend to prefer members of the older generation, they seem to be more together, modest and approachable, unlike a lot of cocky young members from Poland on this forum! Poland still has a long way to go in order to grow up and their mentality is what lets themselves down. People in Poland behave in an idiotic manner and until they learn from their past mistakes there is little to help them as they can not even help themselves. I drove to the border with the Czech Republic not so very long ago and I had just missed a funeral. An old man was ploughing a field and he had his grand son riding on the mudguard! The son fell off and went under the wheel and you can imagine how big and heavy a tractor wheel is! When the grand father saw what had happened and that he had successfully killed his own grand son, he fell down dead himself from the shock! The point of this story is, would a German, Dutch, Swedish or British farmer trained in common sense and work ethics allow a five year old son to sit on a mud guard of a tractor? In Poland everything is possible as I have said before, life has no meaning whatsoever to the Poles.