Thursday, August 31, 2006

74 GB

06:33 Hrs. 13-stopniowo. Mowia, ze w przyszlym tygodniu temperatury spadna do jednocyfrowych. ESSO i Petro Canada sprzedaja dzisiaj benzyne po $0.90 za litr.
Kanadyjskie gesi (Canada Goose - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canada_Goose) zbieraja sie juz na dachu hurtowni do odlotu. Mamy krotkie lata tropikalne i dlugie syberyjskie zimy.

Coraz wiecej w oficjalnych mediach o usteckiej kapeli underground 74 Grupie Biednych i represjonowanym przez komunistyczne wladze PRL-u tzw. "ruchu hippisowskiego". Wyglada na to, ze nawet postkomunistycznym wladzom RP jest nie na reke, ze prawda wychodzi pomalu na wierzch i to kto rzeczywiscie byl represjonowany w PRL-u z powodow politycznych.

W Polsce istnialy jedynie zalazki autentycznej muzyki hipisowskiej. Chodzi raptem o trzy zespoly, ktorych prozno szukac w opaslych encyklopediach polskiej muzyki rockowej. 74 Grupa Biednych z Ustki - nawet jej nazwy nie mozna bylo wowczas wymieniac w mediach; w PRL nie bylo przeciez biednych! Krakowski, dzis zapomniany, kabaretowo-rockowy Zdroj Jana. I wreszczie slynna wsrod bohemy artystycznej Grupa w Skladzie (Kamil Sipowicz, "Polskie dzieci kwiaty", GAZETA WYBORCZA - http://serwisy.gazeta.pl/wyborcza/1,34474,3558287.html

Historie 74 GB ja juz opublikowalem na tym blogu: "JESTEM WOLNY - Autoryzowana historia 74 Grupy Biednych", Sunday, July 02, 2006 - http://szlachta.blogspot.com/2006_07_01_szlachta_archive.html

Watpie aby "generacja Kaczorow" miala na tyle jaj i odwagi aby pokazac aroganckim Amerykanom i Zachodniej Europie, ze polska cywilizacja byla (i jest) najbardziej tolerancyjna na swiecie.
Wystarczyloby tylko zlegalizowac marihuane w Polsce i otworzyc granice Polski dla azylantow przesladowanych z powodu marihuany w USA i UE!
Dla Polskiej Partii Szlacheckiej legalizacja marihuany bedzie pierwszorzedna obietnica programu wyborczego.

Ultra-right views at odds with EU values, Polish PM warned

BY DAVID RENNIE

BRUSSELS * Poland's Prime Minister received a public warning yesterday on his first visit to the European Commission headquarters in Brussels that his nation is seen as threat to "European values" over the ruling coalition's conservative views on issues ranging from the death penalty to homosexuality.
Jaroslaw Kaczynsky, leader of the ruling Law and Justice Party who took over as Prime Minister last month, was on a charm offensive as he took the podium next to his host, the President of the European Commission, Jose Manuel Barroso. The European Commission is the executive arm of the European Union.
Inviting the world to visit Poland and see that his country was home to gay clubs, homosexual writers and a thriving gay press, Mr. Kaczynsky said, "Please, do not believe in the myth of an anti-Semitic, homophobic, xenophobic Poland. Please, come to Poland."
Many officials and politicians in Brussels have expressed alarm in recent months as Law and Justice invited two fringe parties to join the government, one of them a populist anti-European party, the other an ultra-nationalist party, the League of Polish Families, whose leader has links to the anti-Semitic far right.
The League caused dismay by nominating a man whose name appeared on a neo-Nazi magazine's masthead to a senior post in the Polish national broadcaster. It also recently launched a drive to collect 500,000 signatures on a petition calling for the execution of pedophile murderers, a campaign that drew a swift reminder from the commission that capital punishment is outlawed in the founding EU treaties.
Before Mr. Kaczynsky could speak, he had to listen to Mr. Barroso telling reporters that during his meeting with the Prime Minister he had "shared some concerns that have been expressed in some sectors of public opinion" about Poland.
Mr. Kaczynsky had reassured him about his government's stance on issues including non-discrimination, the death penalty and the independence of the central bank, Mr. Barroso said.
Mr. Kaczynsky is a devout Roman Catholic whose identical twin brother, Lech, now the President, twice banned gay-rights marches when he was the mayor of Warsaw. Yesterday, the Prime Minister found himself in the unusual position of offering an encomium to Polish sexual tolerance, noting that the country legalized homosexual acts in 1932, many years before several nations in Western Europe.
The Polish government has also been rebuked for challenging the independence of its central bank and for moving to block foreign takeovers of Polish firms. Warsaw was publicly rapped over the knuckles this week for failing to meet a commission deadline to explain the payment of hundreds of millions of dollars in state aid to ailing Polish shipyards.
In an interview with the Belgian newspaper Le Soir, the Polish Prime Minister suggested every EU nation should be allowed a financial quota that could be spent as it saw fit to subsidize favoured national firms.
The Kaczynsky brothers have promised to fight for "national interests" and have expressed public opposition to the draft EU constitution. At one point, such talk threatened to make the twins and their party icons for Euroskeptics across the EU. But there are pressing reasons why Mr. Kaczynsky was keen not to burn too many bridges. Poland is about to become the largest recipient of union aid, on course to receive more that 60 billion Euro ($85-billion) between next year and 2013.
Nonetheless, the grumpy due have caused widespread dismay through some of their actions. Lech Walesa, founder of Solidarity and an icon of the democracy movement, said this week he had quit the union because he opposed its decision to support the Kaczynsky brothers' party.
In July, all of Poland's former foreign ministers since the fall of communism in 1989 wrote a letter to condemn Lech Kaczynsky's behaviour as "damaging to the interests of Poland" and dismissive of its EU partners.
In response, the deputy defence minister told a Catholic TV station most of the foreign ministers had been in the pay of Russia. While the brothers allow supporters to libel anyone perceived as an opponent, they have shown remarkably thin skins when it comes to their own reputations. This month it emerged Polish police were searching for a 31-year-old homeless man after he failed to appear in court on a charge of "insulting the President."
The Daily Telegraph, with files from news services (NATIONAL POST, Thursday, August 31, 2005).

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