A challenge for people who still believe in the "TOTALITARIAN LEFT"

prior to naziism, were germans and pols getting along in poland?

im always suspicious of the term balkanization, it's from the globalist elite school.

maybe it's just bad people inflaming fears to divide and conquer.

Not really, there were some Polish & German quarrels before WW2, but they were pretty seldom, and exaggerated by the Nazi German propaganda machine.

It's more than just Nazi Germans invading.

It's the events at Bromberg where local Germans were helping Nazi invaders to kill Poles, which lead to the Bromberg Massacre with Poles & Germans killing each other.

It's the Ukrainians killing their Polish neighbors with axes, flames, saws & pitchforks in Wolyn & Eastern Galicia, about 100,000 Poles killed mostly women & children.

It's the Ponary Massacre, where local Lithuanians helped Nazi Germans butcher Poles, Jews, and Soviet POW's.

It's the Skidel Revolt, and Massacre of Brzostowica Mala where Belarussians & Jews killed their Polish neighbors.

It's Salomon Morel who killed his Polish & German neighbors, as a commander of the Zgoda Labour Camp, as a commander of Camp Jaworzno & at Lublin Castle.
 
prior to naziism, were germans and pols getting along in poland?

im always suspicious of the term balkanization, it's from the globalist elite school.

maybe it's just bad people inflaming fears to divide and conquer.

Germans living in Poland, for the most part never wanted to be Polish.

They came to Gdansk for example at the turn of 1300's when Poland invited in Teutons as an alliance to flush out the Danish.
When Gdansk was razed & up to 5,000 Poles & Kashubians were butchered by Germans in the Gdansk Massacre, by Teutons, who promptly bought in German settlers.

Nearly 200 years later, in the Battle of Lubieszow in 1577, 10,000 - 12,000 Germans staged a rebellion against Poland for independence for Gdansk, the rebellion was crushed by 1,400 Poles.

By 1793 Gdansk went back into German hands.
When German Prussians invaded Poland, for such a silly reason, as they breached their 1790 alliance with Poland, due to German Prussians not being informed about Poland's May 3rd Constitution on 1791.


By the 1900's Gdansk was like 95% German, and became a free state.

Hitler despised that it wasn't part of Germany, and that Poles had the Gdansk corridor which was mostly Polish majority.

Germans simply never assimilated in Poland.
 
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should people who say it's questionable be ostracized, or censored, or deplatformed?

Depends on what their reasoning is. If they say it's because trannies are child molesters, then yes, they should be ostracized and deplatformed. I don't think people like that should be given a platform to spew hate speech. They shouldn't be arrested, because even those people should have free speech, but they should be mocked and condemned.
 
Yeah, Communism has always been a mixed bag in Russia. As bad as the Soviet Union was, it was a step up from the Czarist Russian Empire. Though it can be argued that it was even worse when Stalin was in charge. That's the problem with a dictatorship. You never know if at some point, you're going to get a dictator so bad, that the system isn't worth it anymore.

Because serfdom under the Tsar was worse economically than Communism.

But, it's probably true that Communism ultimately held back Central & Eastern Europe.

In the 1930's Poland was slightly richer than Spain.

By 1990 Spain had 3 times or 300% more per capita income GDP than Poland.

Now the gap has narrowed again, Spain's per capita income GDP is more like 15% higher than Poland.
 
Depends on what their reasoning is. If they say it's because trannies are child molesters, then yes, they should be ostracized and deplatformed. I don't think people like that should be given a platform to spew hate speech. They shouldn't be arrested, because even those people should have free speech, but they should be mocked and condemned.

you believe in cancel culture, something you also say doesn't exist. odd.
 
did they obey the laws?

Does the Battle of Lubieszow in 1577 a rebellion against Poland for German Danzig independence sound like obeying the law?

The German - Polish conflict has been bloody.

Poles in the Greater Poland Uprising fought in 1918 - 1919 to regain Polish majority regions that were once German.

Some Polish majority regions were STILL incorporated into Germany, which is why there were the Silesian Uprisings 1919 - 1921.

Poles were shot by firing squad & hanged in the Silesian Uprisings by Germans.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silesian_Uprisings
The army's reaction was harsh; and about 2,500 Poles were either hanged or executed by firing squad for their parts in the violence

Germany as a result, also created a customs trade war against Poland.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German–Polish_customs_war
 
Does the Battle of Lubieszow in 1577 a rebellion against Poland for German Danzig independence sound like obeying the law?

The German - Polish conflict has been bloody.

Poles in the Greater Poland Uprising fought in 1918 - 1919 to regain Polish majority regions that were once German.

Some Polish majority regions were STILL incorporated into Germany, which is why there were the Silesian Uprisings 1919 - 1921.

Poles were shot by firing squad & hanged in the Silesian Uprisings by Germans.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silesian_Uprisings
The army's reaction was harsh; and about 2,500 Poles were either hanged or executed by firing squad for their parts in the violence

Germany as a result, also created a customs trade war against Poland.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German–Polish_customs_war

lol. I deleted that post because it was idiotic. I was an idiot on that one.
 
lol. I deleted that post because it was idiotic. I was an idiot on that one.

A few Germans were loyal to the Polish war effort, I must admit.

Like Wladyslaw Anders, and Emil August Fieldorf.

I know Anders was full German, but fully loyal to Poland.

But, Fieldorf was probably partially Polish ethnically.
 
to mix in nazi symbols into it to embolden globalist counter measures.

Is the CIA also behind a Polish boycott of a Soccer stadium giving refugees proceeds?

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2015/sep/18/lech-poznan-europa-league-refugee

Lech Poznan fans boycott Europa League match over refugee pledge
This article is more than 4 years old
• Supporters stay away after Uefa donates €1 per ticket to crisis
• Banner reading ‘Stop Islamization’ displayed outside stadium
Guardian sport

Fri 18 Sep 2015 07.08 EDTLast modified on Thu 9 Mar 2017 07.42 EST
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Lech Poznan, who usually play in front of 20,000, take on Belenenses in front of a mass of empty seats at the Inea Stadium.
Lech Poznan, who usually play in front of 20,000, take on Belenenses in front of a mass of empty seats at the Inea Stadium. Photograph: Kuba Kaczmarczyk/EPA
Lech Poznan supporters carried out their threat to boycott Thursday’s Europa League match against Belenenses in protest at Uefa’s decision to donate €1 from each ticket sold to the cause of refugees.


Wolfsburg invite 1,200 refugees to Champions League game with CSKA Moscow
Read more
The game, which finished goalless, was played in front of a crowd of around 3,000 at the Inea Stadium, where the club’s average attendance last season was 20,054. A banner reading “Stop Islamization” was hung at one of the entrances.
 
Is the CIA also behind a Polish boycott of a Soccer stadium giving refugees proceeds?

https://www.theguardian.com/football/2015/sep/18/lech-poznan-europa-league-refugee

Lech Poznan fans boycott Europa League match over refugee pledge
This article is more than 4 years old
• Supporters stay away after Uefa donates €1 per ticket to crisis
• Banner reading ‘Stop Islamization’ displayed outside stadium
Guardian sport

Fri 18 Sep 2015 07.08 EDTLast modified on Thu 9 Mar 2017 07.42 EST
Shares
275
Lech Poznan, who usually play in front of 20,000, take on Belenenses in front of a mass of empty seats at the Inea Stadium.
Lech Poznan, who usually play in front of 20,000, take on Belenenses in front of a mass of empty seats at the Inea Stadium. Photograph: Kuba Kaczmarczyk/EPA
Lech Poznan supporters carried out their threat to boycott Thursday’s Europa League match against Belenenses in protest at Uefa’s decision to donate €1 from each ticket sold to the cause of refugees.


Wolfsburg invite 1,200 refugees to Champions League game with CSKA Moscow
Read more
The game, which finished goalless, was played in front of a crowd of around 3,000 at the Inea Stadium, where the club’s average attendance last season was 20,054. A banner reading “Stop Islamization” was hung at one of the entrances.

I would say probably. they get out in front of everything, channeling legitimate impulses and movements into their diabolical clutches.
 
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