PolishForums LIVE  /  Archives [3]    
   
Posts by Varsovian  

Joined: 23 Nov 2006 / Male ♂
Last Post: 22 Feb 2016
Threads: Total: 91 / In This Archive: 78
Posts: Total: 634 / In This Archive: 433
From: Warsaw

Displayed posts: 511 / page 1 of 18
sort: Oldest first   Latest first   |
Varsovian   
23 Nov 2006
Travel / Is there a good ski resort in Poland? [13]

You know, one where they groom the pistes and where there are plenty of good quality runs serviced by swift, efficient lifts without any waiting involved?
Varsovian   
6 Dec 2006
Life / Child Adoption in Poland? [138]

2 friends have adopted children over the last couple of years and have been reasonably open about it. I think the problem could be with other children when they get to school - kids can be very cruel.
Varsovian   
19 Feb 2007
News / Polish Immigrants Leave America for Europe [210]

They don't have DNA results like that - it's a wind-up!
What v. which - the old correctness v. common usage problem again.
Here, I would tend to say that "which" would be generally seen as an affectation, as it would denote the choice of one of a generally known number of DNA tests, whereas I understood it more along the lines of "what sort of, and please give me the name while you're at it?"

And as for what you must be thinking at the moment - you're right! It's a slow day at the office!!
[I must get out more.]
Varsovian   
20 Feb 2007
Work / TEFL Teacher training from Poland? [18]

TEFL courses aren't expensive if you do them at a local college. For employment purposes I don't think it's too important which one you do, as long as you have done something that has an official certificate.

A degree isn't required, but an education is. If you haven't managed to attain a decent level of education yourself, I think you will underachieve as a teacher. The indefinable extras count. You yourself will have to define what 'decent' means here.

I didn't do a TEFL course, as I did a postgraduate certificate of education - standard schoolteacher stuff - and worked as a French teacher in England before emigrating.
Varsovian   
9 May 2007
Life / Are you too selfish to leave Poland? [22]

Slightly daft question in the first place - selfishness, emigration etc

You sell your skills for the highest price in terms of purchasing power. Some social elements come into it naturally. Capitalism is all about the pursuit of economic self-interest, and the individual fits in as well as s/he can.

I could choose to work all night as well as all day - that way I could earn more money. I don't because I choose to spend my time in other ways. I suppose you could call that selfish too.
Varsovian   
26 Feb 2010
Love / English girl moving to Poland with my Polish boyfriend for the first time [69]

Living in Poland isn't a problem. Emigrating on the back of an insecure relationship is. Tell him you're 100% in favour of the idea as long as you have a ring on your finger.

I brought my Polish wife to England after we got married - and we weathered every storm thrown at us by my bigoted family and life in a hostile country (i.e. England). Now we live in Poland - and handle worse problems!
Varsovian   
26 Feb 2010
USA, Canada / US resident, have a baby with a Polish girl. Need help on Polish Passport. [30]

You live together and you live in a state of distrust!

What sort of person, let alone parent are you? Get real, get married and show some trust. The race of life is tough enough without starting it off by shooting yourself and your nearest-and-dearest in the foot.

Stop setting yourself up as a victim. Settle down PROPERLY and start having some real fun.
Varsovian   
26 Feb 2010
USA, Canada / US resident, have a baby with a Polish girl. Need help on Polish Passport. [30]

Jeez - I'm so glad not to be in your shoes.
She needs a divorce, you want true love ... recipe for disaster. Either you two sort yourselves out now or you'll split and you'll end up as a statistic - one of those fathers that has no contact with your kid after 5 years separation.

Stark, raw etc but that's the way you're heading unless you're substantially different to 95% of people in your situation.

Takl to her and find out whether she's serious about forming a stable home - if not, no info on passports, residency etc is going to help you stave off the inevitable.

Honesty is the best policy.
Varsovian   
27 Feb 2010
UK, Ireland / Marrying Polish Woman in UK/London [100]

Shahid Malik is the MP in my home town, Dewsbury.

He has led a golden existence thanks to the govt's policy of sucking up to muslims in order to divide the anti-British muslims from the very anti-British muslims.

He also managed to accumulate the greatest amount of expenses!

Dewsbury - 30 years ago, when I was a lad it was a declining northern, post-industrial town with a "manageable" Pakistani population. By manageable, I mean it wasn't in your face - they were there, but not in great numbers. That changed with the mass immigration of the 90s and after. My Dad was a local family doctor - he got loads of Christmas cards from the older muslims, including the mother-in-law of the leader of the 7/7 bombers.

Dewsbury has produced about 10 suicide bombers - one aged 16, most caught before they could put their dastardly plans into effect. This makes local news but is not reported nationally for reasons of multicultural peace and harmony.
Varsovian   
27 Feb 2010
Work / Job salary comparison in UK and Poland and other European countries [6]

Look, each individual needs to analyse his job opportunities first. Wherever they may be.

Money is a big consideration but not the only one.

What's the point earning more money if its purchasing power isn't all that much more and you're going to end up waking up one day and realising you're 35 years old, unmarried and going nowhere in life?
Varsovian   
27 Feb 2010
History / Were these Polish people communists? [16]

Jędrzej Giertych wasn't a Communist himself, but he was an opportunist and wanted to get on in life. It's no surprise that one grandson became a fascist and was actually quite a good education minister (that shows just how bad the others have been!!) and another a partner in a leading foreign accountancy firm in Poland. A grand-daughter was lusted after by a friend of mine - but she became a mother superior!
Varsovian   
27 Feb 2010
Life / Passing your Polish language and culture to your kids [74]

In England I read Brzechwa and Tuwim to our toddlers and we had Polish satellite TV.

Now, after 10 years in Poland and our efforts, our teenagers speak virtually faultless English and are up to date on UK news and current affairs. TV has been central to our cultural policy.

My wife and I mainly speak English at home (she's Polish), though we do lapse into Polish when talking about school - they go to the village school, not one of those overpriced international ones.

I give one English lesson a week - our two and a Polish-American boy making up the class. We do linguistic things in addition to a wide variety of other topics. Occasionally, we do Shakespeare - to date: Romeo and Juliet, Hamlet. SparkNotes are invaluable supports to me for that.

I don't want my kids to be viewed as half-educated weirdos when they go to England. And their English cousins were really surprised when they came over here and found that our two could speak normal English without a "funny" accent.

Sadly, not everyone does this. I know many Polish families in England where the kids don't really speak Polish, and some Anglo families in Poland where the youngest kids don't speak what I see is acceptable English.
Varsovian   
27 Feb 2010
History / Were these Polish people communists? [16]

I bet you have no present-day connection with secondary schooling, do you?
The required reading list is outrageously long.

The reading list was a cause celebre for luvvies ...
Varsovian   
1 Mar 2010
Love / English girl moving to Poland with my Polish boyfriend for the first time [69]

Oops - I'm an idiot too. Knew this village thing was a mistake - before you know it you know loads of people and they're saying hello to you in the street.

Mind you, it's not a farming village any more - everyone here built their own house and has decent jobs.

But in my wife's home - farming - village, loads of people say hello and treat me really well.

I suppose it's early days - I've only been here 10 years.
Varsovian   
9 Mar 2010
Travel / Poland from a Persian Tourist's Perspective [269]

Point of information: Ahmedinejad is an ethnic Jew. Sort of makes you think of the anti-semitic Vladimir Wolfovitch Zhirinovsky who lives in Russia.
Varsovian   
9 Mar 2010
History / Morally bankrupt kleptocracy: Hounded by Reds pre-89, then by "Democrats" [2]

My father-in-law is an outstandingly decent man.

Humble beginnings, got an education, became the founding principal of a village school. By founding, I mean he actively oversaw and laboured on the building site too. And the land was originally his wife's.

For this he received a citizenship award from the Communist authorities - entitling him to a higher pension.

When all the hard work was over, the friend of someone important locally came along and said, "I'm the new head here - you're demoted to classroom duties only." My father-in-law had turned down offers to join the Party.

But he wasn't stripped of the award ... until Tadeusz Mazowiecki came along in 1989. "Awards like that were only given to Commies!" was the thrust of his argument. Mazowiecki's direct family set up the private "British School" in Piaseczno - which always operated on the fringes of the law, but connections seemed to guarantee immunity from problems with the educational establishment.

True Commies in the security apparatus prospered - and their pensions were gold-plated.

Recently, the school my FIL set up received an honorary name - im. JP II (how original). The current principal, who lacks principles, invited the village to attend the ceremony - with my infirm FIL to stand in the crowd. To which the local priest agreed. My MIL was asked in the street - the current principal wound down his car window. They live opposite the school.

The family land on which the school was built was never fully compensated. In 1989 my mother-in-law took court action - the judge told her she would normally be entitled to compensation, but if she got it everyone else would go for compensation too and the country would go bankrupt. Suit rejected.

However, his 3 kids graduated from local schools and top universities, built their own houses and have made comfortable middle-class lives for themselves just outside Warsaw. The future looks bright - but we should never forget the scum elite that rule over us and preach to us about how squeeky-clean they are.
Varsovian   
9 Mar 2010
Travel / Poland from a Persian Tourist's Perspective [269]

Lifting the level of conversation a bit ...

One of the major problems in Africa is that land is often held by the tribe - individuals often have no right to the land they farm. No title = no collateral. No collateral = no loans and little development. The justice system usually stinks too, so if you have something it can be stolen from you. Then there's war - over which the individual has no control whatsoever.

Band/Live Aid brought massive improvements to the areas their aid reached.

The UK govt has removed all funding of rural projects. They sold their govt aid agency in a "management buyout" which immediately gave the managers a huge payout - with a huge payout going to the valuer, who mysteriously became a manager too. They invest in shopping malls in Johannesburg, competing with other private equity players.

Africa has huge problems. I wish Europe would help properly, instead of pretending to help. The situation with European aid is getting worse. The EU, for example, is now robbing NW African fishermen of their livelihood by trawling their waters. Somali fishermen were put out of business by tankers washing their tanks off these unguarded coasts. That's why they turned to piracy - but no-one has said anything about that, have they?
Varsovian   
11 Mar 2010
Life / I'm from Polish descent. CAN YOU GUYS EXPLAIN THE EU TO ME? [115]

The basic problem with the EU is that the whole project is being carried out without regard to democratic principles. Any votes against a pro-centrism move is ignored.

Final goal: United States of Europe

Means: a mixture of little and big steps

Communication policy: ignore the electorate, shout down MEPs and outsiders who protest by using words like "backward"

Control: maintain internal discipline by giving MEPs and public officials huge incomes and enormous perks

Looking at the above, you can see the similarities with the global warming brigade.
Varsovian   
11 Mar 2010
Life / I'm from Polish descent. CAN YOU GUYS EXPLAIN THE EU TO ME? [115]

The EU apparatus pretends at times to be a country, at other times not.

There is no functioning auditing body for the EU - they have illegally failed to have their accounts signed off in over 10 years due to poor accounting and fraud. Any officials who complain about fraud automatically get sacked without right of recourse to a court of law - the EU can do this because they ensured that it lies outside of Belgian and French employment law.

The EU has an unelected President - van Rompuy - chosen by France and Germany and a hopeless Foreign Minister - Catherine Ashton - who, unlike Rumpy (ex-PM of Belgium), has never been elected by anyone, anywhere.

There are no EU parties - just loose groupings of national parties. The Constitution was rejected in democratic votes by Holland, France and Ireland and therefore entered into force.

Democratic principles do not mean the tyranny of the majority, but I suppose I'm wasting my breath trying to talk sense to some people.

Oh, finally, about 70% of laws passed in European national parliaments simply transpose EU Directives and Regulations into national law. If they want a country, let's have a vote on it!
Varsovian   
11 Mar 2010
UK, Ireland / Which country is more corrupt - Poland or the UK? [35]

Britain is utterly corrupt at the highest levels, squeeky clean in dealings between Joe Public and public administration.

Poland is corrupt at the highest levels and dubious at lower levels - doctors, motoring offences.

But the figures involved in Britain are much, much bigger. To give a quick example: the Commonwealth Development Corporation (govt overseas aid body) was privatised a couple of years ago. Management buyout. The mangement immediately became multi-millionaires as the body was incorrectly valued by a big accountancy firm ... and the valuer in charge became a director ... GBP 300 million lost overnight. CDC has stopped investing in rural schemes in Africa - it now provides capital for shopping malls etc.

The UK tax agency sold its buildings to a developer in a tax haven in a buy-and-leaseback agreement it would call tax evasion. One billion lost, but who gained? And there's no-one to investigate the investigators!

Compared to this, giving a nurse PLN 100 to ensure better care overnight for a sick relative is NOTHING. I just wish you could do the same thing in the UK.
Varsovian   
12 Mar 2010
Life / I'm from Polish descent. CAN YOU GUYS EXPLAIN THE EU TO ME? [115]

I am amazed to find that anyone sentient feels the EU is functioning along democratic lines except on paper. Or indeed in accordance with the rule of law - see my reference to the fact that its own auditors have refused to sign off the accounts for over 10 years due to poor accounting and fraud ... and get ignored. Theft and lying, according to Bratwurst, is perfectly acceptable for the greater goal of tight central control of a unified Europe.

Some people simply won't listen.

And some people simply won't play by the rules. The UK medical authorities cannot check the English skills of any EU nationals - but they have to check the English skills of Australian doctors! Might be funny except a German doctor killed a patient recently because of language problems. The right injection - but ten times the strength. But it's OK, he's promised not to do it again.

The French, meanwhile, always check. They're not in the same EU, you see.

Teaching qualifications from EU Member States are valid in the UK, but no other EU Member State that I know of reciprocates. Totally illegal, but the French, Germans, Italians etc live in a different EU.

The Standing Committee on Operational Cooperation on Internal Security (COSI) is planning massive incursions into privacy - it will start amassing large quantities of data on individuals from schools and universities "in order to prevent young people from turning to crime." EU Big Brother
Varsovian   
18 Mar 2010
UK, Ireland / No job unless you're Polish [201]

There's nothing intrinsically wrong with nepotism. You hire someone you know and trust - and if he doesn't deliver then you sack him and have a row afterwards!

Often, in low paid jobs, people wouldn't have the jobs if the pay rate were higher - it would simply be done by machine.

The wider, long-term social costs are hard to calculate - essentially, white Europeans will fit in over time; statistically, Indians outperform whites, Pakistanis gain roughly equivalent academic qualifications but get worse jobs (racism + social/cultural problems), whereas Bangladeshis and Somalis are the pits in terms of all indicators.
Varsovian   
22 Mar 2010
History / Why did Hitler kill so many Jews in Poland? [261]

People with knowledge of this subject find they have to ********* around.

Hitler fought alongside Jews in WW1 - he had no particular problem with them. In 1918/19 he was confronted with the Bolshevik attempt to take power by revolutionary violence in Germany. The Spartakists, led by 2 Jewish Bolsheviks. The moneyed Jews were against the Bolsheviks, because they were class enemies - but these intricacies were lost on the common populace: you know how these things play out even nowadays.

Then he will have looked into it a bit more, aided by anti-Semitic reactionary extremist propaganda. In the mid-19th century the cloth factories in the Russian Empire overwhelmingly employed poor Jews - who then formed a huge trade union, which was active in labour relations and the Jewish Emancipation movement. This trade union much later merged with what became the Communist Party. Think about it: the CP had about 30,000 members the trade union about 300,000. Guess what? The Russian Communist Party was overwhelmed by Jewish socialists, and in the normal way of things they self-perpetuated by promoting people they knew and trusted. In fact, as things stood in 1919-21 - the key years in Hitler's political 'coming of age' it would have been perverse for the over-generalising people of the time to view the Bolshevik coup d'etat as anything but a takeover of Russia by Jews and mixed-Jews. The overwhelming majority of leading Communists were Jews and mixed-Jews - this did not change in any real sense until Stalin's purges, when the Jewish element was much diminished.

Add this to the many high-profile socialists with Jewish origins (esp. Rosa Luxemburg and Karl Liebknecht) and BANG! you get full-blown Nazism devoted ostensibly to nationalist flavour socialism (i.e. strongly German and anti-toff). Of course, they sold out to big business because they needed all the help they could get, e.g. Krupp arms manufacturers.

Much else could be added, but they would be details. Hitler's anti-Semitism is perfectly understandable when viewed in the perspective of the time. Still vile, mind.
Varsovian   
22 Mar 2010
History / Why did Hitler kill so many Jews in Poland? [261]

Sokrates mixes up WW1 and 2.

Anyway, Versailles was v. punitive due to the losses suffered thanks to German aggression. But it made no sense in the long term because it crippled Germany and caused the very instability that led to WW2. Someone at the time called it a 20-year truce."
Varsovian   
30 Mar 2010
News / Polish scientific breakthrough - breast cancer [8]

It ain't what you do, it's the way that you do it.

Polish cancer specialists, with little resources at hand, have to be resourceful! Cisplatin is a standard drug used in treating women with breast cancer. What Szczecin doctors have done is to target use according to the women's genetic make-up and they have had startlingly good results which are set to revolutionize their area of specialism.
Varsovian   
30 Mar 2010
Life / Polish TV licence (abonament) - almost no-one I know pays [36]

I'm amazed TVP can still function as an organisation.

Mind you, they do have adverts.

In the UK, you simply can't get away with it if you live anywhere on a permanent basis. During my first year of married life I had better things to do than watch TV, and the TV inspectors came round 5 times. We were out every time - working, you see. That fooled them.