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Posts by Des Essientes  

Joined: 6 Feb 2010 / Male ♂
Warnings: 1 - O
Last Post: 6 Jun 2015
Threads: 7
Posts: 1,288

Displayed posts: 1295 / page 3 of 44
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Des Essientes   
4 Mar 2013
Life / Do Polish people like Turkish people? [66]

During the long years of partition the Turkish sultan continued to call for the ambassador from Lechistan. Poles have not forgotten this.

white trash

Yes, white trash, namely the stinking Hapsburgs, Hohenzollerns and Romanovs. They were the scum that partitioned Poland, their fellow Christian country, despite all the blood the Poles had shed to protect them from Eastern expansionists. Poles have more in common with noble Turks than they do with Germanic scumbags. Poles should have let the Turks take Vienna and then maybe this forum would have more gracious Turkish posters and less German garbage.
Des Essientes   
16 Feb 2013
UK, Ireland / Benefit cuts for Poles in The UK? [143]

The question to ask yourself

Why don't you answer Zeti's question rather than demanding that she ask herself one?
Des Essientes   
5 Feb 2013
News / Czechs most liked by Poles! [35]

Hungarians are indeed from Asia. They arrived in Europe over a thousand years ago.
"Bohunk" is an American slang term for Central and Eastern European immigrants that was coined during the late 19th Century when they started arriving in the USA in large numbers. It is compounded from the words "Bohemian" and "Hungarian" but it was used to denote Poles and others too. In a testament to the virility of the Magyar and Slavic peoples this term was eventually shortened to become the word "hunk".
Des Essientes   
5 Feb 2013
News / Czechs most liked by Poles! [35]

[************************** seems to know where exactly this brotherhood has come from, but somehow we know it exists [/quote]
One theory regarding this national fraternity is that the Hungarians, like the Poles, had, in comparison to other European nations, a huge percentage of their populace classified as members of the nobility. So too the Hungarians, like the Poles, granted their nobles far reaching political rights which contrasted greatly with the rest of Europe which tended towards far more autocratic political structures. These similarites may be seen as reflecting similiar national dispositions betwixt Hungarians and Poles thus acounting for the feeling of brotherhood.
Des Essientes   
2 Feb 2013
Life / Foreigners in Poland - the identities of our native or the host country [66]

A recurring trope – what has Poland really contributed to the world? – is often met by an equally clichéd turn to anti-British-ness by the Polonia elite (sic)

Warszawski why do you write "sic" after mentioning this so-called "Polonia elite"? Do you understand that "sic" means "as stated" and it is usually used when qouting something someone else has written, most commonly when one is qouting something that contains a spelling error. In your case your use of "sic" is claiming that there are Polonians on this forum that proclaim themselves to be members of an elite. Where was this done on the forum? Can you provide any examples of Polonians claiming that they are elites? I suspect that you cannot and that you wrote "sic" because you are angry at some Polonians on this forum for daring to criticize the British and thus you pretend that Polonians here have put on airs by claiming to be members of an elite. Do you really believe that lying about the Polonian members of this forum in the OP of this thread is a good idea? Isn't this known as flaming?

Moderators is it OK for me to ask these questions of the threadstarter? If not then why? I desire clarification of a phrase used in this thread's OP. Is it somehow off-topic to ask for it? If so then why? The threadstarter freely claims that he is a member of the capitalist elite in Poland in the following statement:

Most likely not as the Jobs created in Poland have been because of my involvement with companies I am an investor in. So the jobs and tax revenue in Poland have been created only due to my being here.

The thread starter thinks that Poland should do more to make him feel welcome. He claims that he is part of a "new wave" that is operating under some duress in Poland:

This new wave is building business-creating jobs, providing education and contributing under difficult circumstances in Poland.

What are these difficult circumstances? Does he want a tax break? Why doesn't he provide us with some answers to his question? Is it wrong for us to ask why a self-proclaimed member of this elite new wave in Poland claims that Polonians on the forum claim to be members of an elite too, without providing any evidence for this claim? I think the threadstarter may have an unrealistic sense of his own importance for Poland. I think that Grzegorz may have "hit the nail on the head" regarding the sentiments expressed by the threadstarter with the following post:

You people have serious issues, 99.9% of you came here because it was convenient for you, for one reason or another, not because you wanted to "help Poland" or any other crap, really you guys should get out more instead of living in your little world of "exapts", can you imagine a Polish person running a business in the UK (there are probably a few thousand) saying how much British owe them because they are building business there ? Get your head out of your butt because people reading it are laughing at you.

Des Essientes   
30 Jan 2013
History / How Poland was losing her intelligentsia [19]

Yes, I heard about him but not enough: is he a genius with a vision?

Pawain, you mentioned Steve Jobs as an example of genius but you should realize that he and Wozniak were a team:

Stephen Gary "Steve" Wozniak[1]:18 (born August 11, 1950),[4] known as Woz, is an American computer engineer and programmer who co-founded Apple Computer (now Apple Inc.) with Steve Jobs and Ronald Wayne. Wozniak single-handedly invented the Apple I computer and the Apple II computer in the 1970s. These computers contributed significantly to the microcomputer revolution

/wiki/Steve_Wozniak
Wozniak is also, alas, yet another example of this thread's subject as his Silesian ancestors, that carried the seed of genius in their loins, emigrated to the USA.
Des Essientes   
30 Jan 2013
History / How Poland was losing her intelligentsia [19]

Do you understand?

I do now. You are speaking of emigration.

Yes, Poles are generally clever and good at many things but the real progress is made by geniuses with a vision, Like Steve Jobs, for example.

Perhaps Steve Wozniak is a better example for this forum. He is not a Pole but he is Polish.
Des Essientes   
30 Jan 2013
History / How Poland was losing her intelligentsia [19]

Pawain, your OP doesn't explain this thread's title other than mentioning the death of the inventor Stefan Kudelski. Is it soley death that accounts for how Poland is/was losing her intelligentsia, or do you have other phenomena in mind too, and if so what are they?
Des Essientes   
29 Jan 2013
Australia / Poles invaded the wrong Anglo-Saxon country [29]

I never said NZ should be white.

You said that Asian immigration is bad and that it is making NZ worse. You have shown the forum that you are reflexive racist and that is very disgusting. Polonia pities you and your bigoted ilk.

LOL

Laugh it up but it only makes you look creepier.
Des Essientes   
29 Jan 2013
Australia / Poles invaded the wrong Anglo-Saxon country [29]

I didn't realise it was quite that bad.

Bad for bigots.

All the locals were getting pretty fed up with all the Asian immigrants.

The locals might want to check a globe and realize that Asia is much nearer to New Zealand than Europe is.

Auckland is now about 25% Asian and it's only going to get worse

Worse for bigots.
Des Essientes   
29 Jan 2013
Life / Is sarcasm widespread in Poland? [27]

I find the humour here is less self-deprecating, like in English speaking countries

The Anglophonic penchant for disingenous self-deprecation is hilariously summed up in the following anecdote about Thomas Mann when he was living here in Southern California.

Mann was at a cocktail party and an American writer approached him, presumably to discuss literature, but before the American began he launched into a lengthy paroxysm of self-deprecation. After the American writer left Mann turned to the others present and said "Why does he make himself so small? He's not that big!"
Des Essientes   
27 Jan 2013
News / Poland is the source of horsemeat in burgers? [169]

Yes, but they also discovered the addition of pig meat and that is unacceptable to Muslims, Hindu etc. I am not sure about horse meat.

Pawain, most Hindus are vegetarians that avoid eating any meat regardless of the animal source, but they are far more adverse to eating cows than they are to eating pigs and horses.
Des Essientes   
25 Jan 2013
Language / How similar are Polish and Romanian languages? [75]

the languages come from two different language families

No, the languages are from the same family-- the Indo-European language family. They are from different branches of this family: the Slavic and the Romance.
Des Essientes   
24 Jan 2013
History / What do Poles owe to Russians? [193]

Gunter Grass, who is half Kashubian, claims in The Tin Drum that "Pan Kichote" the character from Cervantes, is greatly beloved by the Poles and that his knightly affectation is seen by them as being so very Polish that they consider him one of their own. The street is surely named for the character and not the operetta.

This page is certainly filled with alot of interesting media besides text, but does anyone else have their computer stall when trying to load it? Pawain, you are an interesting addition to this forum, but you post so many youtube videos and photos in some of your threads that the prospective reader may well get angry at the fact that you keep freezing his computer. How and why do you add dozens of photos and videos to a single post here? It looks to me like the limit is four per post, but you have obviously found a way around it.
Des Essientes   
19 Jan 2013
Off-Topic / What Slavic language is closer to Lithuanian? [16]

I think I would say it's probably closest to Russian considering that Lithuania was once part of the Russian Empire until it's independence in 1918.

You are wrong. The Lithuanians are strange birds. You should know that they didn't convert to Christianity until 1386. So too their language has come through the centuries in archaic form. The supernumerous verbal conjugations required by Lithuanian are only matched by one other living Indo-European language and that is Sanskrit. Sankrit is kept "alive" in spite of its ancientness because it is the sacredotal language of two major world religions. Lithuanian remains magnificently archaic because the Lithuanians were isolated for so long, and then when they did burst out onto the scene of history, becoming the pagan overlords of Slavic Ruthenia, they made their decrees in Ruthenian, not Lithuanian. They kept their language for themselves. When they allied with Poland much of the Lithuanian aristocracy was Polonized. When Lithuanian aristocrats decided to become nationalists a century ago many of them had to learn to speak Lithuanian and undergo the study of well neigh endless conjugations, but the Lithuanian language is not "closer" or "further" to any one Slavic language more than it is to any other Slavic language. The Slavic and Baltic branches of the Indo-European language family diverged long ago, and given the traditionalist bent of the Lithuanians, it'd take a helluva lot more time than a couple centuries of Russian domination to make Lithuanian take on a Slavic form.
Des Essientes   
18 Jan 2013
Travel / BIGGEST MOSQUE IN POLAND! - Gdansk [42]

A lot of the Poles I know would feel badly about a Mosque being erected in their city

There have been mosques in Poland for centuries in all of Poland's major cities. Perhaps the Poles you know are aping the stupidity of certain Western Europeans but Poland herself has a proud history of religious tolerance.

It may be hard to imagine for you but some of us have heard of a dust up called World War 2 in which large numbers Buddhist Japanese became kamikazees and did just what you have trouble imagining.

If you want to claim that the Buddhist Japanese didn't do this out of religious fevor than we can also tell you that Muslims who resort to suicide missions are also doing so for political and not religious reasons.

It makes me sick when supposedly circumspect people buy into Islamophobic propaganda.
Des Essientes   
16 Jan 2013
Travel / BIGGEST MOSQUE IN POLAND! - Gdansk [42]

THERE ARRIVED my Polish friends!!!!!!!! How did u let that happen?

Long ago a Lithuanian Grand-Duke allowed some Muslim Tartars to settle in his territory after they'd lost a war against Tamerlane the Great. Muslims arrived in Polish-Lithuanian territory centuries ago and they have been valued members of Polish-Lithuanian society ever since. Islamophobia is not a Polish problem, but it is a problem for people like gavin, so much the worse for him and his sad ilk.
Des Essientes   
14 Jan 2013
UK, Ireland / Polonization of Britain - Tipping Point Confirmed in 2011 Census [97]

That's exactly what I hear about Latinos here in the US and what I heard about the Turks in Germany.

It was said about Poles and other immigrant European nationalities, including the Germans, here in the USA, especially during the late19th and the first half of the 20th Century. It is an empty worry and even if some immigrants act like the Germans that we call Amish, or Pennsylvania Dutch, and never integrate, then so what? Who cares? Poland was shining example of multi-culturalism in the past and her history may provide a template for the multicultural future of Europe. Broadening the liberty granted in old Poland only to members of the szlachta give every citizen the freedom to live as he so chooses. Be a Tartar Muslim or a Lithuanian Lutheran if you so choose you'll still be "one of us", and so too in Britain today be a Polish speaking Catholic or whatever you want to be.

With increasing numbers, the pressure to integrate into the host culture decreases.

Integration shouldn't be a matter of pressure, nor should it be mandatory, (and with the case of Latinos here in the South-West one cannot say that their culture is any less the host culture than the Anglophonic one. This used to be Spanish and then Mexican territory and Latinos have lived here continually since long before any Anglophones settled here.) Integration depends upon the attractiveness of the host culture. Maybe the German way isn't so charming to the immigrant Turk, but here in the USA if the first generation of immigrants doesn't learn English then their progeny surely will and they won't have to be "pressured" to do so.

Probably one of the root causes for xenophobia all over the world.

Some people have a hang-up about hearing foreign tongues spoken around them, but there is no reason that they should be upset by this. If there are British people under the sway of this irrationality then so much the worse for them.
Des Essientes   
13 Jan 2013
UK, Ireland / Polonization of Britain - Tipping Point Confirmed in 2011 Census [97]

Very adroit analysis, Bieganski, maybe the influx of Poles, from a proud republic with no history of domination by the British Empire, will change Britain for the better. They may teach the British what it means to be free.

DesEssientes: and why does he choose a pugalistic metaphor?
Why not? If it fits, use it

You haven't answered my question. Why do you believe this metaphor fits?

sweetie

Why do elderly waitresses always call me that?
Des Essientes   
13 Jan 2013
UK, Ireland / Polonization of Britain - Tipping Point Confirmed in 2011 Census [97]

above all punching way above our weight

Hahahahahahaha! What drives a person to make such a claim about his country, and why does he choose a pugalistic metaphor? Bragging about how "tough" Britain is is hilarious! Thanks for the comic relief.

The tide has turned but unfortunately it took until the 21st century for the British public to understand that they are merely one of hundreds of cultures around the world; no worse and certainly no better than any other.

Thanks for the truth.
Des Essientes   
9 Jan 2013
UK, Ireland / Polish city that's moved to Britain [120]

Did they switch religion as well?

No, for the most part, they moved to Pakistan because the were Muslims and others moved from Pakistan to the newly truncated India because they were Hindus. Are you claiming that Muslim South-Asians are physically different than Hindu ones?

Im afraid i cant answer to that as it may be classed as a 'mess up' in which case i will be permanently suspended from the forum by Vincent.

No one is going to suspend you for explaining why you consider Filipinos and Vietnamese to be as physically similar as Indians and Pakistanis. You know this. You made a stupid ill-considered claim and now you are offering a stupid excuse for why you cannot defend it.
Des Essientes   
9 Jan 2013
Genealogy / Polish looks? [1462]

No rational person believes that a sampling of merely 20 people out of 40,000,000 gives a fair average.
Des Essientes   
9 Jan 2013
UK, Ireland / Polish city that's moved to Britain [120]

Its the same with Indians and Pakistanis

You can't honestly be suggesting that you can see physical differences between these two nationalities. You must be aware of the fact that Pakistan was part of India before 1948 and that much of her populace moved there from India at the time of partition and that many people moved from Pakistan to India at the same time.

Philipinos and Vietnamese

If you think that Filipinos and Vietnamese look as similar to one another as Indians and Pakistanis then you are delusional.
Des Essientes   
29 Dec 2012
News / Highlights of passing year, in Poland (or elsewhere) which made hot discussions in PF [57]

The Israeli army's shameful destruction of an ancient well in occupied Palestine, an ancient well that a Polish charity had nobly restored, certainly made for a heated discussion on the forum, but unfortunately a gang of hasbarist scumbags spammed the thread with off-topic posts and personal attacks leading to its permanent closure.
Des Essientes   
29 Dec 2012
Food / What is your favorite Polish Vodka? [653]

Does the PF drink Vodka?

I'm asking what vodka do my fellow PF forumers drink?

I was going to answer you, kondzior, but, before I could do so, the thread you started was......

Merged

into this one, which is a thread about only Polish vodka. (You see 1.75 liter bottles of Svedka brand vodka are one sale here in Southern California and thus lately almost every home I've visited has poured it for me quite liberally. I was even going to make a Polish history reference about being "deluged" ((as Svedka is distilled in Sweden)) but, alas, someone has moved your OP here.)
Des Essientes   
26 Dec 2012
History / Traditional /historical punishments in Poland [6]

Sienkiewicz claims that the Poles learned impalement from the Wallachians. The third book of the Trilogy contains a passage which narrates the inner-thoughts of a Tartar prince being exectuted in this manner.
Des Essientes   
26 Dec 2012
News / Polish families are urged to establish themselves in Norway : Taking children away? [36]

the state of Isreal is the ONLY demo state in that crazy region!

The state of Israel is an ethnocracy not a democracy. Gentiles are treated like second-class citizens in the state of Israel, if they have Israeli citizenship, and Israel has ruled millions of other Gentiles for over 45 years without granting them citizenship or even the most basic human rights. Israel is a racist state. Putting this foreign colony in the region was crazy. Fighting it is not.
Des Essientes   
20 Dec 2012
History / 'Prehistory' Celts in Southern Poland [20]

the Arian tradition ( Jesus as man not God).

That is not what the Arians believed. They believed that Jesus was a divine being created by God. They did not believe that he was merely a man.
Des Essientes   
14 Nov 2012
Off-Topic / Are you living in Poland? [77]

the very regular posters

Some posters are so "regular" that they defecate 2400+ times upon this forum in only a few months.

these trolls who set themselves up as Polish 'experts'

Yeah we Polonians laugh at the British expatriate trolls who do this. Living in Poland for a few years does not make them experts.

OK, I concede. The ones currently there should be considered experts on current prices of groceries.

Yes. F stop, they may be experts on such mundane matters, but as for understanding the Polish spirit they seem to be incapable of doing this.
Des Essientes   
14 Nov 2012
Off-Topic / Are you living in Poland? [77]

why Delph?

You constantly try to make your point that EVERYONE that is not living in Poland right now somehow lost their connection to it.

They certainly have. Even the 2004 era Poles that went to the UK are starting to lose touch. It's normal and a natural consequence of emigration.

There you have the reason for this thread, F-Stop. Delphiandomine believes that people living abroad have lost their connection to Poland and thus we Polonians have no authority on this forum. It is really quite a childish and silly thread. It is an unfortunate side-effect of some sort of twisted territorialism that delphiandomine feels for this forum and that the moderators unfortunately indulge. The dog has urinated on the fire hydrant.