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Posts by Varsovian  

Joined: 23 Nov 2006 / Male ♂
Last Post: 22 Feb 2016
Threads: Total: 91 / Live: 89 / Archived: 2
Posts: Total: 634 / Live: 547 / Archived: 87
From: Warsaw

Displayed posts: 636 / page 5 of 22
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Varsovian   
4 Dec 2012
Law / Healthcare for British Citizens living in Poland [30]

Stamps are incredibly important to Polish bureaucrats, as is headed notepaper.
I jest not.

I suggest you try to find a sympathetic administrator to talk to in England and ask for the most official-looking stamp possible. Sad, but true. It has worked for me in the past.
Varsovian   
4 Dec 2012
News / Poland: The poor get poorer - and next year will be worse [40]

"Intellectual city dwellers are expected to blame it all on the Catholic Church, and by the way Kobylanski is worse than Palikot don't you know? You have to bear in mind that PiS caused decades of depression, starting at the birth of the Duck twins, so we shouldn't worry too much about people who are destined to die early. As all good Catholic fanatics know - "The poor will always be with us."

Amen.
Varsovian   
4 Dec 2012
News / Should government monitor the net in Poland? [38]

Merged: Authoritarian Tusk encourages massive numbers of phone taps

POLAND is Europe's leader in cell phone surveillance. In 2011, Polish authorities made 1,856,888 requests for information from billing records—who called who when, for how long, etc. That was nearly half a million more than in 2010.

In Poland nine different bodies, from the police to tax inspectors, are allowed to access cell-phone information, and usually on simple presentation of a written request. Normal EU member states regulate this kind of surveillance far more strictly.

Emails are subject to blanket screening by the security services for key words - meaning that the fight against crime and terrorism results in widespread electronic snooping of innocent citizens. The people charged with maintaining a correct balance are the officers concerned. The positive side to this is that phone taps helped recover the "Arbeit macht frei" sign. But someone should be on the side of the citizen.

Poland should be worried. Remember: this is a country where the Communist secret police ran the underground press, where the leading intellectual newspaper has been shackled and may close after government shenanigans. Would the US body politic allow someone to buy the Washington Post for the purposes of closing it down for political reasons?

Anybody interested in freedom of speech should be concerned by the increasingly authoritarian behaviour of Tusk and his coterie.
Varsovian   
4 Dec 2012
News / Poland: The poor get poorer - and next year will be worse [40]

More than 2m Poles live in poverty

15% of Poles live below the breadline.

Poverty is officially set at PLN 887 (GBP 175) for a one-person household and PLN 1863 (GBP 370) for a four-person family (two adults and two children).

The Central Statistical Office expects the situation to worsen next year.

Intellectual city dwellers are expected to blame it all on the Catholic Church, and by the way Kobylanski is worse than Palikot don't you know? You have to bear in mind that PiS caused decades of depression, starting at the birth of the Duck twins, so we shouldn't worry too much about people who are destined to die early. As all good Catholic fanatics know - "The poor will always be with us."

Amen.

(Did this make it onto the front pages of the central organ now known as "Garzepa" ?)
Varsovian   
3 Dec 2012
News / Goodbye Rzeczpospolita, Goodbye Uwazam Rze! Killed by Tusk. [25]

Two of the biggest press successes are disappearing because Tusk is starting to act like Putin.

We have a free market democracy. People can come along and buy the State's share in Rz. at an undervalue and move to close the whole operation down by sacking all recognised journalists and ensuring that losses are made hand over fist.

Hajdarowicz, the owner and political supporter of Tusk, can do whatever he likes with his own property, can't he?

Still, even a prize poltroon wouldn't lose 25% of his readership in a year ... unless that was the plan all along.

If this were Hungary, there would be shrill screams of "Fascism!" from all the usual quarters. As it is, we have an eery silence.

So, here goes: This is an all-out authoritarian attack on freedom of speech.

What a country Poland is, where the only non-propaganda newspapers have naked women in them!
Varsovian   
28 Nov 2012
Work / Incompetent Polish education ministry - incomprehensible English recordings for exams [8]

Press - not a bad idea except it'd be dangerous for us. Educators the world over like to take revenge on people who belittle them.

"Grammar schools" - schools for older kids that have competitive entry requirements. Nothing else really gets the idea across in British English, even though grammar schools in the UK are 11+

Senior High / High School - nah
Varsovian   
28 Nov 2012
Work / Incompetent Polish education ministry - incomprehensible English recordings for exams [8]

My son is getting worried about his matura in English, despite being a native speaker of English. He sat his mock exam recently (these are organised nationally in Poland) and couldn't understand the listening part. He said it was obviously scripted and recorded by Poles.

Grammar schools here do a fantastic job on very limited resources, but if all education ministry employees suddenly disappeared into a large black hole I think they could easily be replaced by post office canteen staff without any negative impact on quality or efficiency.

On a side issue, academic competitions here contain some real bloomers too.
Varsovian   
20 Nov 2012
News / Dumbing-down in Polish schools and the Matura [185]

Merged: Should Polish matura exams contain controversial texts?

Perhaps I'm just old-fashioned, but I think that it might have been wiser from a language point of view to choose a reading comprehension text for the matura mock exam that was less controversial than one propagating the view that work is the best thing in life while love and especially kids simply get in the way.

I mean, it is a widespread (though exceedingly boring) outlook on life, but perhaps irritatingly marginal texts should be eliminated from exams.

Doubtless there will be an internet link for this sometime soon - only happened this morning.
Varsovian   
12 Nov 2012
News / Poland's Ruch Narodowy - should it be banned? [62]

These are the skinheads and fellow travellers "who want to do away with the Republic of the Round Table" with its "leftists, liberals and queers".
Varsovian   
12 Nov 2012
News / Hooligans in PRL times ... and Warsaw in 2012 [28]

Zimny Lech is in Krakow :P

There was widespread disgust at the way Saddam Hussein was executed. Even Americans, who could hardly be accused of loving him, found it frankly repellent. Death is a sobering experience and awaits us all. Laughing at the dead is foul. People who laugh at the dead should hang their heads in shame. Try telling your family a joke at Christmas about worms eating the flesh of your grandma.

I vaguely know a young girl who is absolutely traumatised by the very real fear that she'll have to go through the whole funeral process again.
Varsovian   
12 Nov 2012
News / Hooligans in PRL times ... and Warsaw in 2012 [28]

Thanks for the provocation Sob. - good to know you're a searcher for information instead of a sloganiser shouting "Us" and "Them". I've had enough of people like you in my home town - Fascists, Trots and Islamists.

To answer your "question" - I have no idea who they are.
I have no idea who, apart from the Warsaw City employees, the people are who disrupted the queues waiting to pay their last respects to President Kaczynski.

I have no idea who the people are who were arrested over the summer when they attacked the Russian "march" which wasn't actually a march at all across the Poniatowski Bridge.

These things just simply don't get reported in depth. I'm not an avid watcher of TV or reader or the printed media - perhaps I missed something and you could help me by supplying a link to detailed info instead of a blanket style statement that "several dozen people have received fines of PLN 2,5000" which really doesn't tell us anything.
Varsovian   
12 Nov 2012
News / Hooligans in PRL times ... and Warsaw in 2012 [28]

Your story sounds attractively realistic.

Unfortunately, while waiting to pay her last respects to the Smolensk crash victims my wife was witness to a strange series of events:

The scouts, who'd been organizing the queues, finished their hours of service and handed over to the city guards. The street cleaning machines were sent right through the middle of the lines of hundreds of people who'd been queueing peaceably for 10 hours and suddenly a group of hooligans appeared and started pushing and shoving in the lines that had been orderly for hours.

Unfortunately for the propagandists, the overwhelming mass of decent people restored order.

The hooligans weren't organized well enough, weren't violent enough or numerous enough. But their political intent was obvious and the press story would have been soooo good.
Varsovian   
12 Nov 2012
News / Hooligans in PRL times ... and Warsaw in 2012 [28]

Back in the 70s and 80s there were fights between "hooligans" (police in civilian clothing) and the police - that gave the green light for the ZOMO to go in and beat up anyone they felt like.

Things have changed now.

Unorganized hooligans now turn up with impeccable timing, act like they have been trained and wreak havoc - which of course makes excellent TV viewing on Russia Today (top slot this morning) and Polish TV stations. The only missing element was that the marchers didn't seem to get involved, which was a pity from the televisual aspect. Also a shame from the TV aspect was the absence of Kaczynski - if he'd been there we'd have had the full Punch and Judy show, with orchestrated boos from the increasingly state-controlled media.
Varsovian   
8 Nov 2012
History / Goodbye Lenin - we don't want you in Poland! [85]

Look jola, what's wrong with Harry arguing in favour of his icon Lenin, who's responsible for mass murder?

It's an evil point of view he has, without getting involved in all the stats. You're not going to persuade him, but you don't have to. He's made his pro-mass murder point of view plainly apparent to everyone - and that speaks volumes.

Lenin wasn't the only evil guy around, obviously, but he's right up there with Hitler and Stalin - and anyone giving him a sympathetic hearing really deserves special treatment ...
Varsovian   
7 Nov 2012
History / Goodbye Lenin - we don't want you in Poland! [85]

I don't know her status, but I post in between doing many other things - I wouldn't necessarily have been able to find it, but there again I couldn't be bothered to look, just assumed. A dangerous thing, that.
Varsovian   
7 Nov 2012
History / Goodbye Lenin - we don't want you in Poland! [85]

Harry - your logic doesn't stand up. Well done for making the correction, finding chapter and verse etc. - these aren't easy finds for the average person.
Varsovian   
7 Nov 2012
News / Platforma is stuffing public bodies with its cronies! PRL mentality clings on ... [10]

Honestly - what would a former political adviser to Mrs Thatcher know about eastern Europe?

Just joking.

The same schism in approach is being played out in microcosm on this forum. Essentially, on the one hand you have well-trained people who endlessly attack symbols of traditional, independent, Catholic Poland. I wonder if some of them are not actually paid activists. On the other hand, you have outraged amateurs who easily lose their rag when "defending" traditionalist viewpoints and see, for example, mafia activity that harms Polish companies as being deliberate foreign maneuvers to attack the Polish economy.

There again, perhaps it is.
Varsovian   
7 Nov 2012
History / Goodbye Lenin - we don't want you in Poland! [85]

Point of fact:
jola was corrected on a point of fact - that doesn't make her a liar. A liar is someone who says something knowing it to be wrong. Perhaps I could get a link to a dictionary ...