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![]() If a "country" has no government or territory, it isn't a country. Poland had neither. Yes, there were people who considered themselves ethnically poles, yet this is not a reason to (re)construct a country for them. You also don't differenciate between eras of history. The Polish Country of 900 C.E. isn't the same as the one founded via the Versailles Treaty. The only constant that I can see between those times, is that you have a people who consider themsevles polish in a region, the even some of the regions have moved and changed since then, due to migration and (war). Currently Russia still holds a peice of Prussia, should they have their country recreated merely because it was one in the past? **Or perhaps you would give up some of the territories that Poland gained after WWII, and WWI that she never had before before her "recreation"? If you just want to recreate the old poland, and all.** I also disagree with your comment, no matter how sarcastic, of Poland being a fake country, that isn't my opinion at all - and if you read through all my comments you would've realised that. Quote:
(my comments with in ** denote sarcasm, just to be fair) |
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I'm not claiming we are owed an apology for anything. My point here is that comparing Poland's invasion of Cieszyn to the Nazi/Communist attack on Poland is just plain stupid. Those two events can only be compared in the most superficial fashion. Dig a little deeper and you'll find there are no similarities. And yet, many like to bring up this event to illustrate that Poland is not without fault. Of course we aren't, but you'll have to do a hell of a lot better than Cieszyn to make that sort of a point. |
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There are differences between a nation and your definition of country. But if a nation stands strong for centuries in the face of extreme adversity, then it deserves to have a country. Please don't compare Swabia to Poland again. There are no paralleles. Poland remained a nation unified by blood, culture, language and a longing to re-unify under our old flag. Such prizes should be granted on merit, but we sure as hell, more than anyone in Europe, deserved the right to become a country again. |
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Your people did not show the will to remain a people. You don't deserve to be anything more than a province of Germany. Quote:
You don't even know what united means. You probably think it's a piece of paper with a couple of signatures on it. Quote:
Not only have we been a nation since 900AD, but we've achieved a lot...not only for ourselves but for Europe as well. The greed and fear that caused the partitions are no cause to keep us from having a country. Poland's resurrection was justice pure and simple. |
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I'm sure they do, but their achievements still don't stand up to ours. They never really had a country. Unlike Poles, they don't have that tradition to go back to. In fact, how can you compare Poles to Basques and Corsicans? Did these people have empires that guarded Europe from Islamic invaders? Not that I'm aware of. Quote:
But I suspect that has something to do with the fact that the Swabians have been a much more passive ethnicity, in terms of guarding their nationhood, than us Poles. What you just said in that paragraph illustrates the diffenece between us. I would never want to be part of a larger entity ruled by Germans, Austrians or Russians. Quote:
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If a wrong can be corrected, then it should be. The Poles were still there, their nation was still there...they were wronged in the past, but that wrong was being felt in their present. Your arguments would actually have a leg to stand on if, for example, the vast majority of Poles were gone from those territories...the Polish language died...Polish culture was something to be seen on special occasions...or in museums. But that wasn't the case. Those arguing that Poland no longer deserved a country are simply parroting the views of certain strategists of the 19th and 20th centuries...who weren't concerned with the true meaning of a nation, but with what the balance of power in Europe should look like. Poland didn't make sense to them, because it didn't have a role to play in their world. I suspect Belgium and Switzerland were more worthy of nationhood to these ignoramuses. Quote:
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I think it is a right time for weak Polish statesmen to probe into even more weak Russian statesmen. The latter are ready to ask pardon for everything what was made in Russian history and to give up all what was acquired during the centuries of hard work and battles.
If Russia were led by real national leaders nobody even could think about such an apology! The Ribbentrop-Molotov pact is a pearl of the history of international affairs of all times. Poland rejected all attempts of the USSR to create a system of mutual safety (also with France, Britain, etc). Poland behaved very silly relying on franco-british garuantees. Don't forget that in 1920 Poland acquired Ukrainian/Belorussian territories far to the EAST of the Kerson line. But in any way: strong countries win, weak ones lose! And I as a citizen of losing country I can rely to my and my people's forces only, and not to moralizing to our enemies. |
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Well, no one is seriously asking for any apology. I think Polish politicians must be having a slow week or something...nothing better to do. In regards to Poland behaving very silly...there's no way in hell Stalin could be trusted. We had three choices...Hitler, Stalin...or a wishy washy pact with the French and British. We took the last option, because making a pact with the devil (Hitler or Stalin) was a bit too much to swallow. |
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Sizewise the Polish diaspora is pretty much unparalleled, except maybe the Irish.
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For all flesh is as grass, and all the glory of man as the flower of grass. The grass withereth, and the flower thereof falleth away: But the word of the Lord endureth for ever. 1. Peter 1:24-25 Real misanthropes are not found in solitude, but in the world; since it is experience of life, and not philosophy, which produces real hatred of mankind. - Giacomo Leopardi (1798-1837) |
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This is a different issue. Like the Irish, Poles began leaving their country to escape proverty. Economic woes started in Poland even before the partitions...largerly as a result of a corrupt, inefficient early democracy. The partitions didn't really help the average Pole, as you might imagine, and a culture of migration sprang up in Poland. People started leaving for the Ruhr, France, America...even Brazil. That has continued to this day. Polish migrants have done well abroad, so the cycle continues. I didn't have a choice when my family left Poland, altough I have been back, and even lived there again for a couple of years. I don't see what that has got to do with staying Polish and patriotic. Sometimes people don't have a choice, but you don't forget who you are. |
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For us, Russians, it would be a great disaster, taking into account quite possible move of Japan in the Far East. |