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What do Poles think of how they are treated in Germany, in comparison to the Muslim migrants


Lyzko  46 | 10196
18 Sep 2025   #31
Considering what Germany went through, directly after the war and well into the late '70's following the
notorious Auschwitz Trials of the Camp guards, functionaries etc. small wonder the Federal Gov't reacts
to things tainted with Faschism as it does!
Novichok  8 | 10927
18 Sep 2025   #32
Why do Brit and German voters want Muslim migrants?
Ironside  53 | 13812
18 Sep 2025   #33
Why do British and German voters want Muslim migrants?

They are accustomed to halal meals and kebab. It's more like an addiction. Instead of bread and butter pudding, they prefer to snort in some of the best Middle Eastern cuisine has to offer.
--
jon357  76 | 25265
18 Sep 2025   #34
halal.....bread and butter pudding

Bread and butter pudding is halal, you twerp.

So is barszcz czerwony, and the entire wigilijny obiad.
mafketis  43 | 11797
18 Sep 2025   #35
some of the best Middle Eastern cuisine has to offer.

It seems.... odd for foods to be ripped out of their physical environments and transplanted wholesale elsewhere... I like some Middle Eastern food but it's from a very different ecological setting and climate.... Fine as a novelty in northern Europe but more than that.... weird, cultural alienation as a lifestyle....

Same for India (actually a collection of very different cuisines rather than a single cuisine) or Eastern Asia.
jon357  76 | 25265
18 Sep 2025   #36
weird, cultural alienation

It's just grilled meat.

Potatoes were a novelty once and people love Chinese and Indian food.
Lyzko  46 | 10196
18 Sep 2025   #37
@Rich,
That's the point, they don't!
It's all a question of importing cheap labor,
much as it is in the US. Only difference is that
we can absorb them better because of our size:-)
Novichok  8 | 10927
18 Sep 2025   #38
Hey, Euros, why did you vote to bring more Muslim migrants?
Lyzko  46 | 10196
18 Sep 2025   #39
The lure of cheap labor, as I've already stated umpteen times.
mafketis  43 | 11797
18 Sep 2025   #40
lure of cheap labor, as I've already stated umpteen times

That's not it.... because for it to be 'cheap labor' they have to work and most migrants that end up in Germany end up sucking at the states teat and avoiding (legal) work.
Novichok  8 | 10927
18 Sep 2025   #41
because for it to be 'cheap labor' they have to work and most migrants

Those few who work are not cheap labor if you add up what they produce and what they take...
Ironside  53 | 13812
19 Sep 2025   #42
you twerp.

got you again!!!
---
odd for foods to be ripped out of their physical environments and transplanted wholesale elsewhere.

I don't think that is happening on a large scale. Changing local cuisine for real is not an easy task. Although people may visit ethnic restaurants, those meals will not become a part of their staple diet. To truly embrace and integrate into the local kitchen, you need to live in the country. Even then, some are naturally resistant - for example, Brits in Spain.
I was only mocking those liberal lackeys for their unabashed liberal nonsense that makes them lose a real sense of patriotism.
Letting those Pakis run amok with little underage girls. Are they even men, pathetic snobs and inbred vermin, respect needs to be earned, can't be bought with their money.
In fact, they don't see anything wrong with it. Look up Prince Andrew, the joy and pride of the British royal family. He has been running with this crowd.
It is an international globalist crowd. At a certain level, if you have so much money, you think you are better than the rest of humanity, and that rules do not apply to you.
Lazarus  4 | 670
19 Sep 2025   #43
Although people may visit ethnic restaurants, those meals will not become a part of their staple diet.

Next time you go to any small town in Poland, see how many kebab shops there are. They pretty much all do now. I know towns that are too small to even have an ATM but still have a kebab shop.

most migrants that end up in Germany end up sucking at the states teat and avoiding (legal) work.

That's interesting. Do you happen to have a source with hard data showing that >50.0001% of migrants who've been in Germany for at least five years are claiming benefits and not working?
jon357  76 | 25265
19 Sep 2025   #44
Although people may visit ethnic restaurants, those meals will not become a part of their staple diet

You've not been in Biedronka for a while then.

and integrate into the local kitchen, you

The local cuisine?

Why would you «truly embrace and integrate into it"? People eat what they like.

As an ex-nomenklatura kid, you may well agree with the characters in the PRL who said that it was bad for people to eat fruit and other things that don't originate in their own country (spectacular opium and did they think apples originate in Europe ?) however food has always been e lactic, new ideas, new flavours new methods, and this is largely to do with supply chains and people's tastes.

globalist

The world is a globe.

most migrants that end up in Germany end up sucking at the states teat

Maybe you continentals are different, however where I'm from, among the male workforce, migrant men are statistically more likely to have full time jobs than white men.
Ironside  53 | 13812
19 Sep 2025   #45
small to even have an ATM but still have a kebab shop.

You missed my point. Some kebab shop is not a staple diet. By the way, kebabs in Poland are truly foul. I wouldn't feed my dog with it; hell, my dog wouldn't touch it.
--
to eat fruit and other things that don't originate in their own country

Isn't that what has been scientifically proven?
jon357  76 | 25265
19 Sep 2025   #46
Some kebab shop

"Some"?

A nice kebab with carbohydrates, meat, salad and spices is generally much better food than the stodge of the fast/snack food that was around before it. Słonina anyone?

kebabs in Poland are truly foul

Lower quality than good ones, however yes, expectations around food are sometimes low in PL as are budgets, and tastes can tend towards the bland. That will change though, just as tastes always change over time.

Isn't that what has been scientifically proven?

No. Why do you think that?
Bratwurst Boy  9 | 12537
19 Sep 2025   #47
The Döner in Berlin are the best, most tastiest! And I don't wanna miss my favourite Asian...mochi...yummy!

Does that make me multikulti? :)
jon357  76 | 25265
19 Sep 2025   #48
The Döner in Berlin are the best

Sometimes very good, but the best are elsewhere.

miss my favourite Asian

You'd like Caribbean food.
Bratwurst Boy  9 | 12537
19 Sep 2025   #49
but the best are elsewhere.

NOT TRU!!!!! 😭
Alien  29 | 7441
19 Sep 2025   #50
Does that make me multikulti? :)

Do you also go for pizza to an Italian, for lamb to a Greek, or for curry to an Indian? If so, and because you are learning at PF, then you are multicultural 🎖
Bratwurst Boy  9 | 12537
19 Sep 2025   #51
Do you also go for pizza to an Italian, for lamb to a Greek, or for curry to an Indian?

Nope...I'm a backward Ossi...I'm totally happy with a big Döner and what my favourite Asian has to offer....(I'm still not sure what kind of Asian he is but I don't care:)
Lenka  6 | 3558
19 Sep 2025   #52
The Döner in Berlin are the best

The best one I ever had was in Berlin. Nothing else came even close.
jon357  76 | 25265
19 Sep 2025   #54
The best one I ever had was in Berlin. Nothing else came even close.

For me, the best was in Yorkshire. The shop was run by Greek Cypriots and they made the doner meat themselves in the shop, full of fresh thyme. Sadly, the shop's long gone. The other good ones were in the Middle East.

There's a decent one in Warsaw, next to Biedronka on Heroldów, run by an Iraqi guy. His are maybe the best I've seen in PL.
Lazarus  4 | 670
19 Sep 2025   #55
Some kebab shop is not a staple diet.

You're 100% wrong there. Some Poles eat little except kebabs. The blokes at the garage just down the street from me get their lunch from the kebab shop the other side of the street five days a week! When the garage was closed for two weeks over the summer for their summer holidays the kebab shop was closed too.

You've not been in Biedronka for a while then.

They even have naan bread and poppadoms now (although the naans from Lidl are better).

the fast/snack food that was around before it.

There basically wasn't any late night food before kebabs. Remember late '90s Warsaw? Late night (i.e. after the kiosks on pl Konstytucji closed) dining was that food bus near the central station and that was about it! Then in the early '00s that Oscar toasted sandwich place opened, quickly expanded to seven or eight places and then just as quickly disappeared. But in smaller cities there simply was no late night (or middle of the afternoon) food until kebabs arrived.
jon357  76 | 25265
19 Sep 2025   #56
near the central station and that was about it! Then

Hotdogs with crunchy things sprinkled on top, or zapiekanka with the ketchup automatically put on since they couldn't believe that someone might not want it.

When the Vietnam bars started to open around the Palace of Culture it was a revelation. Sad they're gone.

Oscar

All those bloody panini counters under the roundabout!
Customer: Proszę, bez cebuli
Employee: Bez cebuli nie jest w naszej ofercie

Do you remember that American one called King Pie that opened on Jerozolimskie? Trouble was, the concept of a pie just puzzled them and the name 'pies' on the price list implied that it was something to do with dogs.

There was a decent Mexican one that opened not far away near the Hest hairdresser. Far too much flavour and vegetables for the market though so it just became another King Kebab or whatever.
Lazarus  4 | 670
19 Sep 2025   #57
Hotdogs with crunchy things sprinkled on top, or zapiekanka with the ketchup automatically put on

Or at least things that you really hoped were deliberately sprinkled to be crunchy bits on top...
And even those places used to close about 11pm. If you had the munchies, your choices were a 24-hour shop or the food bus.

The Döner in Berlin are the best

Getting back to Germany, why go all the way to Berlin and fail to have a currywurst? That would be the wurst decision you could make!
Bratwurst Boy  9 | 12537
19 Sep 2025   #58
Na ja....for a real good Curry- or Bratwurst you need to chose the vendor right.

Many perfect Döner-maker suck totally at making a good Currywurst...drowning the poor thing in sauce...and don't ask the Asian!

Must be a cultural thing....*ducks and runs*
Lenka  6 | 3558
19 Sep 2025   #59
For me, the best was in Yorkshire.

Never had a decent, let alone good, kebab in UK.

Hotdogs with crunchy things sprinkled on top,

Fried onion...yummy. you are making me hungry. I add it to any burger I make.

And zapiekanka is an amazing late night food!
Lazarus  4 | 670
19 Sep 2025   #60
Fried onion...yummy. you are making me hungry. I add it to any burger I make.

Go to Lidl when they have their American week and get some bacon-fried onion. Serious next level stuff.

don't ask the Asian!

I think I'd trust an Asian over a Pole when it comes to anything involving curry. Obviously Poles know sausage better, but it's the curry that makes a currywurst better than a bratwurst and Poles tend to be genetically allergic to anything involving spice.


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