Marcinkiewicz dla Fin.Times'a:bierzemy przestepcow

25.04.06, 13:02
i hodowcow swin do rzadu,bo wtedy beda..... mniej radykalni.
    • kaczka7112 mniej niz polski prezio? hehehe 25.04.06, 13:05
      "Marcowa wizyta prezydenta Lecha Kaczyńskiego w Berlinie ciągle przyprawia
      niemieckich dyplomatów o dreszcz" - pisze "FT". Gazeta przypomina, że w trakcie
      wizyty, w miejscu, gdzie prezydent Kaczyński wygłosił wykład, odbył się protest
      homoseksualistów niemieckich. "Prezydent bronił swej decyzji o zakazie
      manifestacji homoseksualistów w Warszawie" - przypomina dziennik.
      • terrestre Re: mniej niz polski prezio? hehehe 25.04.06, 13:08
        artykol na glownej stronie.Ale przeciez wszystko juz wiemy...
    • frau_blada OD PROwokatorow! 25.04.06, 13:16
      Zrodlo poprosze!
      • rydzyk_fizyk Dzisiejszy FT 25.04.06, 13:32
        - lead nawet na 1-szej stronie:

        "The prime minister stressed that there was no need to be alarmed about Andrzej
        Lepper, the oftarrested former pig farmer who heads Self-Defence, entering
        government, where he will probably be deputy prime minister as well as minister
        of agriculture.
        Mr Marcinkiewicz said that the experience of European countries where
        socalled populists had entered government is “very positive” as governing had
        made them less radical.
        Bringing populists into government would not only give him a solid majority
        in parliament, but it would also allow him to pursue a Polish version of
        a “third way” between growth-focused liberal economics and social policy such
        as helping the poor and those who have been hurt during Poland’s transition
        from communism, he added."
        • rydzyk_fizyk Na deser 25.04.06, 13:35
          Zdanie wstępu mnie rozwaliło:

          Europe’s political elite treats Warsaw regime with disdain
          By George Parker in Brussels

          David Cameron, the eurosceptic leader of Britain’s Conservative party, is a
          member of a very small club in Europe: he is an admirer of Kazimierz
          Marcinkiewicz’s ruling Law and Justice party in Poland.
          While Mr Cameron tries to manoeuvre his party into an Atlanticist,
          eurosceptic alliance with Law and Justice members of the European parliament,
          many EU politicians and diplomats can barely disguise their disdain for the
          Warsaw regime.
          For Europe’s political elite, Mr Marcinkiewicz’s party represents many of
          things they despise: narrow national self-interest, parochialism and a
          conservatism that encompasses homophobia.
          The visit by Lech Kaczynski, Poland’s president, to Berlin in March still
          causes German diplomats to shudder.
          After being confronted by gay rights protesters at Humboldt University, Mr
          Kaczynski defended his decision to ban a gay pride march while mayor of Warsaw.
          “I see no reason to promote such attitudes, because if they were common, the
          human race would have to die out,” he explained.
          One German diplomat in Berlin remarked with astonishment that Mr Kaczynski,
          56, had never previously been to his country. “How can you have good relations
          with your neighbours when you don’t know them?” he asked.
          But it is the government’s stubborn defence of national interests in EU
          negotiations – from sugar reforms to tax matters – that have most alarmed
          states in the 25-member club.
          The most dramatic example of this approach came in January, when Poland
          vetoed a deal to create a new reduced rate value added tax regime for the EU,
          which Warsaw felt did not reflect its own priorities.
          The stand-off produced bitter rhetoric. Dominique de Villepin, French prime
          minister, noted that Poland had confirmed his worst fears that the enlargement
          of the EU to 25 members in May 2004 could bring gridlock.
          Bronislaw Geremek, a Polish MEP, remarked that Poland was simply copying the
          hardball tactics of older members. “Perhaps we have learned too well,” he said.
          But one veteran Polish official in Warsaw said: “Poland is not France.
          France might have its problems but it is a European power.
          “We are fighting battles that we cannot win. Kaczynski is a master of
          destruction.”
          José Manuel Barroso, European Commission president, is conscious of the risk
          that Poland, one of the EU’s “big six” countries, could become isolated and
          even more awkward.
          He has gone out of his way in recent weeks to praise the “European
          instincts” of Mr Marcinkiewicz, although cynics would note that those are
          hardly the qualities that first attracted the attentions of Mr Cameron.
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