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Posts by JonnyM  

Joined: 9 Mar 2011 / Male ♂
Last Post: 15 Mar 2012
Threads: 11
Posts: 2,611
From: Warszawa!
Speaks Polish?: tak

Displayed posts: 2622 / page 86 of 88
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JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
News / Poland needs a left wing govt. [111]

I seriously doubt it

I don't. No offence intended, and pointless having a who's richer than whom willy-waggling contest, but my tax bill in certain years may well have exceeded your income. But I don't begrudge the money. High taxes are the entry fee to a civilised society.

Interesting that the name calling and aggression tends to come from one direction.
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
News / Poland needs a left wing govt. [111]

Why don't you redistribute your a@* you leftist thief

Lefist thief. Hmm, I've probably paid more in income taxes that you could every hope to be liable for...
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
News / Poland needs a left wing govt. [111]

Such logic and reason, as the world has come to expect, with baited breath and bright shiny eyes, from the right-wing.
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
News / Poland needs a left wing govt. [111]

there is almost no racism or antisemitism in Poland

I'm sure we can all find a few examples. Without even having to look outside this forum.
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
History / Polish pirates [58]

Poles just magically sprang into existence in the 10th century

You're quite wrong here. They consolidated as a nation from various existing groups from that period onwards with the process perhaps having started before. The Tenth Century group you mention was (very arguably) the beginning of this, and part of a non-linear process that continued until a few years into the Second Republic. The process took centuries.

Gibbons great work covers the period up to the fall of Constantinople to the Turk

Centuries prior to the heyday of piracy. Of course you can say piracy started with the Sea Peoples (not Polish either, LOL), or before, but the term 'piracy' has very different meanings in different periods. BTW, I did know the period Gibbon's D&F covers. I wouldn't be so quick to rely on it, either.

I will provide the number of the chapter

Don't bother.

shows how much you know.

Yes it does, rather.
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
News / Poland needs a left wing govt. [111]

To redistribute wealth effectively, there must be several factors in place. A centrist or centre-left government and huge public commitment to the program.

The political scene in Poland has been poisoned by years of pretend communism followed by some of the nuttiest rigt-wing politicians outside (and from time-to-time inside) an assylum.
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
News / Poland needs a left wing govt. [111]

but in order to have good social welfare, you first of all need wealth. And that does not come from lefti

I don't see much "good social welfare" in countries with years of right-wing misery.
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
History / Polish pirates [58]

I think the great heyday of piracy, from the Sixteenth to the late Eighteenth Centuries is a bit more relevant. Poles didn't exist in the period Gibbon was writing about.
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
Travel / A good kebab place in Warsaw? [45]

why workers only turkish or arabs or indian and asian ,, what about polish

No shortage of Poles working in kebab shops. But are you surprised that Turks are making Turkish food, Arabs are making Arab food, Indians are making Indian food etc? If I wanted pierogi, I would go to a Pole, if I want a kebab, I'll go to a Turk.

But there's nothing to stop Poles opening kebab shops - it's just that when they do, the food tends to be bland, greasy and generally awful.
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
Travel / A good kebab place in Warsaw? [45]

i will tell you about the sausage

Just go to Biedronka and find out. Better stick with kebabs!
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
Travel / A good kebab place in Warsaw? [45]

the bones i the skin bread fat

Nothing wrong with that! What do you think sausages are made of?

0% lamb

This however is a problem. Better to go to the ones you can trust, like the one at Dworzec Gdański, or on ul. Hoźa.
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
Genealogy / GITLER... is it Polish surname? [30]

. Indeed Russians spell Hitelr's name Gitler, but the Gitlers of Poland are most likely purely coincidenta

Exactly - you are right here. Incidentally there is also a Polish name Chytła. Nothing to do with Hitler either.

Where dio you find out that Lepper was originally Loper?

It wasn't. Lepper is a trans-national surmane, not unlike my own. If somebody called Loper changed it to Lepper, they were changing it to a surname that had existed for other families for centuries.
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
Travel / A good kebab place in Warsaw? [45]

Hmm. Be careful of kebab shops in Poland who advertise lamb, but due to costs, sell a mix of lamb and beef, hoping nobody will notice.
JonnyM   
13 Mar 2011
History / Polish pirates [58]

In the great days of piracy, pirates could come from any nationality but were loyal to none. Unless they were buccaneers, who were 'loyal' only to whatever country was protecting them. Colour, class and nationality meant nothing to them. If any of them had been Polish, it would have been irrelevant to them and to others.

There may have been Poles among them, but my own feeling is that if any had been from Poland, the numbers would have been small. Most pirates were people who for whatever reaon had ended up in the Western Atlantic or the Barbary coast. Not the Baltic.
JonnyM   
12 Mar 2011
News / Victory in 'anti-Polish camps' campaign in US [170]

That was a racist thing - holocaust deniers doing the usual.

Sure the diary was edited (she had a crush on her female friend, which her father didn't want in the book) but the result was the same, she died in a camp.
JonnyM   
12 Mar 2011
News / Victory in 'anti-Polish camps' campaign in US [170]

You've come to the wrong forum then. It is dominated and monitored by non-Poles who either spent a week here and are experts, live here for a couple of years

Some of us have spent half our lives in Poland.

consider themselves authorities on everything Polish and dispense their wisdom freely,

Yet when some visitor asks a genuine question, the 'real Poles' say nothing, prefering to bicker endlessly on political or historical threads, usually with a right-wing racist slant that doesn't reflect the general opinion in Poland anyway. Poland is more than the controversial aspects of its history.

There are a few happy and content foreigners here and you will know them by their fruit.

Perhaps there's a point when those 'foreigners' become Polish...
JonnyM   
11 Mar 2011
News / Poland - Third World Country?? [300]

It ranges from one to the other. A secure apartment complex is just practical, however some are much larger. An extreme example is Marina Mokotow, a city within a city.
JonnyM   
11 Mar 2011
News / Poland - Third World Country?? [300]

Social exclusion, agoraphobia, divisiveness, ghettoisation, reduced civic involvement, isolation, decline of traditional communities and many more.
JonnyM   
11 Mar 2011
News / Poland - Third World Country?? [300]

for example so-called gated communities, 'getta dla bogatych' - in Warsaw there is over 400 of them in Berlin only one

I wouldn't call that 'ahead'. The problems associated with them are well known and some local authorities in the UK have banned them.
JonnyM   
11 Mar 2011
Travel / Warsaw to Mlawa - Fastest Mode of Public Transportation on a Sunday in April? [15]

I don't often get to Krakow these days - but quite a few posters here live there, so it could be worth starting a thread on that!

Have a great holiday in Poland!

edit

If you're looking for the 'old Warsaw', the Lotos restaurant (one junction down from being opposite the Hyatt Hotel) has been open continuously since the 1930s. It used to be extremely upmarket in its day, and that part of town was expensive and grand even during the communist years. The decor is absolutely surreal and rather oppressive, and the clientele are very posh Poles and aging communist apparatchiks. Not a gourmet place, but worth seeing if you're at £azienk park (it's just down the hill from there). It sometimes feels like time has stopped still there. Not an English speaking place, and no expats there, much less tourists! Worth seeing before some developer turns it into something else.
JonnyM   
11 Mar 2011
News / Donald Tusk's Government of Poland Continues to Oppress Poles [161]

on the Serbian question.

There is no 'Serbian question'. The place is culturally, strategically, historically and economically irrelevant. It barely exists except in the minds of its residents and those of its neighbours that it bullies.
JonnyM   
11 Mar 2011
Travel / Warsaw to Mlawa - Fastest Mode of Public Transportation on a Sunday in April? [15]

I suppose it depends what sort of place you like - one (very cheap) restaurant/bar is called Carina on ul. Nowowiejska - it's a bit like stepping into the past. Set meals only, and most popular in the afternoon. There used to be lots of places like that but they've been closing down one-by-one over the past few years. I used to have a late lunch there when I worked nearby. The cafe about 50 yards away on pl. Zbawicela is good - a bit more modern but relaxed and friendly - though a bit trendier than the places I normally go to.

Walking down Marszalkowska towards plac Konstitucji there are some decent places - not touristy. The Intercontinental is between the station and the finance district, so there are plenty of places round there, but most of them generic. Hard Rock Cafe, sushi chains, etc.

There's a Polish/Czech place at the bottom of plac Konstitucji called u Szweika, very popular and on Mondays when they do special offers it's hard to get a table Nevertheless it's very worth a visit - the little place at the back, Chłopski Jadło (looks better inside than out) is traditional to the point of kitsch but very authentic food and not touristy. Rather family-oriented though.

Ul. Nowy Swiat has become the main 'going out' area, with a lot of pavement cafes - some of the places in the alleyways off, near the bottom end of the street, are worth visiting.

In the Old Town, some of the best places for going out (and the least touristy) are in the bit called the New Town (a misnomer because it's not at all new), especially round ul, Freta. That is where the Poles tend to go - the tourists tend to stick to the places nearest the Old Town Square, some of which are real tourist traps.

Near the Intercontinental, on ul. Swietokrzyska, there's a little Vietnamese place that people rave over - I've been a couple of times and the food is good, but round the hotel, I personally like the park by the Palace of Culture - there are a couple of Cafes there. Daytime only.

There are some nice Jewish places nearby in pl. Grzybowski - but a bit touristy. Ul. Próźna, off pl Grzybowski has one or two decent places, and the street is a 'must see' but if you go to any of the bars in the pavillions at the end, it's better to do so earlier rather than later - not the safest bit of Warsaw.

Near the hotel, one of the more interesting places is Drink Bar on ul. Wspolna - small and intimate, a bit of a legend and popular with English-speaking Poles, but off the tourist radar. Make sure you have low-denomination notes and some coins - they're hopeless at giving change. It's the type of place where you easily get talking to strangers - not a very Warsaw thing, reallyl. I recommend it. Generally good from 9pm until very late.

I'm not up to strength on the Warsaw nightclubs - not really my scene - maybe someone else here would know.
JonnyM   
11 Mar 2011
Life / Has anyone in Poland that you know been affected by H1N1? (swine flu) [44]

Yes, on the Donny side of Wakefield - exactly the same symptoms. I'd been in central London on New Year's Eve and wonder if I'd picked it up there because it started a day or so after I got back. Plus some sort of post viral thing. And yes, I did feel better after - and back to a size 32!
JonnyM   
11 Mar 2011
Travel / Warsaw to Mlawa - Fastest Mode of Public Transportation on a Sunday in April? [15]

The Intercontinental's a good hotel - right in the heart of the city. It has an amazing swimming pool on the top floor with big windows that go right gown to the water - it feels like you're swimming in the sky with Warsaw spread out below you! April's a good time to go - the cafes and bars on ul. Nowy Swiat (10 minutes walk from the Intercontinental) should be setting their tables out on the pavement sometime in April, and £azienki Park will be full of families out walking.

I live in Warsaw, but I'm working away a lot this year and staying with family in England right now due to a contract in Libya not happening for obvious reasons - soon in Veracruz, Mexico for some work then back to Warsaw in May.


  • Intercontinental pool


JonnyM   
11 Mar 2011
News / Donald Tusk's Government of Poland Continues to Oppress Poles [161]

It may not be what Crow wants to hear, but people, either in Poland or elsewhere, don't think of Serbia at all. It isn't a major economy. it isn't in a strategic location, it isn't in an alliance with anybody. In short it is irrelevant to world affairs.

It only really comes to people's attention when they start murdering their neighbours in Srebrenica or Kosovo, and then it is dealt with quickly and effectively.