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Are you Poles proud of your country? Then why do you keep coming to Britain?


guesswho  4 | 1272  
6 Jun 2011 /  #91
Are you Poles proud of your country? Then why do you keep coming to Britain?

What are you trying to say advice, that when one travels a lot, he's not proud of his country? I've been to over 40 countries and I'm very proud of my country. Somehow your logic doesn't add up, don't you think?
Softsong  5 | 492  
6 Jun 2011 /  #92
This was posted a few months ago by a couple of Polish men who are very proud of their country. And yet, humble, too. Enjoy a few scenes from Poland from some people who wish for you to visit one day.

youtube.com/watch?v=_UGgDxpujd4
huddersfield  - | 8  
6 Jun 2011 /  #93
EdWilczynski
Fair enough mate. Looking at it in the cold light of day (I had a few Warka with mates whilst watching the Polska - Argentina game yesterday) I think we brought it on ourselves a little bit. There were a few of us with Polish backgrounds who knew each other from the Saturday school and we therefore tended to hang around together a lot.
EdWilczynski  
6 Jun 2011 /  #94
i would bet none of them are cleaning their host's crap splatter off toilet bowls, though.

Knobs like you make me ashamed to be a Briton.

You need to drop the "We are the great colonial power" routine.....It doesn't ring true anymore and hasn't done for a very long time.
isthatu2  4 | 2692  
6 Jun 2011 /  #95
Sorry, I struggle to accept that you took crap for being Polish in Huddersfield.

Yups, I was brought up in Doncaster,sounds the same,untill 04 being Polish was just not an issue for anyone,infact the wartime era Poles and they way they had made good lives in the UK were,if anything,over romanticised.

So,going with your touchy response to my post Im guessing you are just one of those types who rubs some people up the wrong way,or takes the wrong end of the stick more often than is practical .

And I started high school (grammar school) in 89 so we are hardly from widely different generations.....
EdWilczynski  
6 Jun 2011 /  #96
Sorry mate I think you have me confused with the chap that did seem to take offence.....Namely the poster called Huddersfield.

isthatu2: What a load of bollox.You were brought up in Yorkshire with a Polish name and you try to say that made you stand out,lols,pull the other one fella, I knew plenty of kids part,full,a teeny bit Polish growing up

I was actually agreeing with what you said to Huddersfield.

Grammar school in Donny? Nah....Not having that fella. ;)
Seanus  15 | 19666  
6 Jun 2011 /  #97
I-S, not in this case. Stats are variable and of dubious standing wherever you go, pretty much. If we were to meet in the middle and say 800,000+ then that's still very high indeed. There's more to life than money and they should realise it.
Ironside  50 | 12387  
6 Jun 2011 /  #98
I you realize that they are not only in GB but in others EU countries it would make as much as 2 - 3 million Poles outside Poland.

It is high. They should realize that there is more to life than money ? Well, isn't that philosophy you could apply to everyone regardless of nationality?

I think that Italians are pretty laid-back, but then no so long ago on PF somebody called them lazy lol !
Remind me how many Britons emigrate annually ?
ZIMMY  6 | 1601  
6 Jun 2011 /  #99
i would bet none of them are cleaning their host's crap splatter off toilet bowls, though.

I'm tempted to hire a butler named Jeeves, or is it Nigel?

Enjoy a few scenes from Poland

That song has quite a bit of American 'country music' to it. It was also sweet.
Albany NY  2 | 19  
30 Oct 2016 /  #100
Poles come to England for exactly the same reason they come to the US. They come to gladly clean our toilets.

The Pole claims the greatest education and culture in the world and then eagerly leaves Poland to clean British and American toilets.

Tak tak.

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