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Jackals of Europe
Jackals of Europe

Video: Jackals of Europe

Video: Jackals of Europe
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Two decades later, for politically unscrupulous maneuvers in the pre-war period, Winston Churchill christened Poland nothing less than "Jackals of Europe"

Many years have passed since that time, several generations have changed in Poland. And it would seem that the negative "child-harmful" political traits of Poland's character should have matured and acquired at least a hint, if not morality, then ethics. However, looking through the Polish media on the eve of their national holiday, I realized that such reasoning was at least naive.

I am forced to admit that the genius of Dostoevsky pushed the Writer back in 1877 to make an entry in relation to the “fraternal Slavic peoples”, which turned out to be unshakably prophetic. Dostoevsky wrote in his diary:

… "They will certainly begin with the fact that within themselves, if not out loud, they will declare to themselves and convince themselves that they do not owe Russia the slightest gratitude, on the contrary, that they barely escaped the lust for power of Russia at the conclusion of peace by the intervention of a European concert, but if Europe had not intervened, Russia would have swallowed them immediately, “meaning the expansion of the borders and the foundation of the great All-Slavic empire on the enslavement of the Slavs to the greedy, cunning and barbaric Great Russian tribe…

… Maybe for a whole century, or even more, they will constantly tremble for their freedom and fear the lust for power in Russia; they will curry favor with European states, they will slander Russia, gossip about it and intrigue against it

Read this entire entry by Dostoevsky - you will not regret it. What's that Nostradamus.!

However, I got distracted and almost forgot to finish, in fact, the thought I started. So, this idea, unfortunately, is not disagreeable. After reading several articles from the Polish media, I mentally pay tribute to Churchill: Poland, as it was, remains the jackal of Europe. Don't believe me? Read it yourself

A mess reigns in every sphere of the functioning of the Russian state: in the administration, in the army, in cities and godforsaken villages. A mess appears, in fact, wherever Russians appear! It can even start in the Monte Carlo casino if they suddenly find themselves there. This, of course, determines the situation in the country. In Russia, it is impossible to control anything without the use of force. We can say that this is just the specificity of Russian civilizational culture. In the end, each civilization has its own specifics. Take, for example, our western neighbors - the Germans. Wherever they go, they always arrange their ordnung. And the Russians, of course, immediately bring something of their own, that is, the Russian mess - the equivalent of the German order.

In Russia, everything is born out of a mess. And vice versa does not happen. You can even say that at first there was a mess, and then Russia: strong, magnificent, evoking universal admiration and respect. This is how the current Russian state, the Russian Federation, was born. In the early 90s, the Soviet Union collapsed, and on its ruins a new "democratic" Russia was born. Everything got out of control, and the Russians had to change many different things due to the change in the state system. However, in Russia, when creating a new state, everything that symbolized the old system was always changed. This included the national anthem. When the Bolsheviks seized power in 1917 and began to create their own state, they immediately canceled the old hymn "God Save the Tsar." Naturally, because he too directly referred to the era of the overthrown rulers. The Bolsheviks chose the Internationale as their new anthem, slightly revised in the translation by Aaron Kotz. Then came the time of Soviet Russia, Stalin, who decided to establish Stalinism - his own version of the Bolshevik regime. In this regard, at the end of World War II (the Russian version of World War II is two years shorter than the one we are used to), he introduced a new national anthem by the composer and the general in one person - Alexander Alexandrov. This work lasted until the end of the existence of the USSR.

Boris, fear God!

When in 1991 the time came for a truly Great Mess, everything changed in the state again. Including a hymn. It is not clear why the new Russian leader, Boris Yeltsin, chose for him the "Patriotic Song" of the popular 19th century Russian composer Mikhail Glinka.

By chance, Glinka turned out to be a descendant of the Polish gentry. And the "Patriotic Song" attributed to the composer turned out to be the religious hymn "Christe, qui lux es et dies" by Wacław z Szamotuł (Wacław z Szamotuł), which Glinka decided to use in his work. However, the Russians themselves did not know what words to sing when the melody of, in fact, the Polish "Patriotic Song" sounded as a new anthem.

When the liver, and at the same time the heart of President Yeltsin, ceased to cope with state duties, Chekist Vladimir Putin unexpectedly came to power, like a rabbit out of a hat. It was he who decided to put an end to the Great Bardak inherited from the previous president. The first problem was the national anthem: how to govern Russia with Polish music?

Upon learning that the old anthem was de facto Polish, Putin raised a fuss across the Kremlin. He could not believe that for 10 years in a row, Russians celebrated various holidays and solemn dates to the sound of a religious anthem! It even sounded on the anniversary of the victory in the Great Patriotic War, when thousands of heroes gather, and all types of Russian troops take part in the military parade. It irritated Putin even more that the Russians listened to this "anthem" with tears in their eyes. The first reaction was a desire "in Russian", that is, with all severity and ruthlessness, to punish the guilty. There was only one problem: exactly who should be punished? Maybe Yeltsin is to blame? After all, it was he who allowed Russia to use a religious Polish song instead of the national anthem for a whole decade. As a certified Chekist, Putin began to ponder whether this was a provocation by the "Poles" themselves. Didn't they slip Glinka to the Russians in order to discredit and humiliate them? So the Poles were in the first place on the list of suspects. This had its consequences, but only later, and at first urgent action was needed: it was necessary to demonstrate to the world that Russia could have its own Russian anthem, which all its citizens would be proud of. A special commission was even created to study the problem.

Stalin lifting

Putin decided not to experiment anymore and not to look for a work suitable for the anthem, which would then have to be taught to all Russians. He quickly made a decision to return the old melody of the times of the Soviet Union, or rather, the Great Patriotic War. This seemed to be the simplest and most successful solution. Most of the citizens still remembered this solemn music, and the leader of the country only ordered to write new words: he thought it would be more modern this way. Russia was supposed to be like that. Poet Sergei Mikhalkov instantly composed a new text, in which he not only sang the delights of his homeland, but also transferred it to the care of God instead of Lenin. The text was adjusted to the music, and the draft was unanimously adopted by the State Duma. The President waved the document, and finally it was possible to breathe calmly with all the Russian breast.

Only a Polish splinter remained, which sank deeply into Putin's heart, often reminding him of itself. So when the president decided to introduce a new public holiday, of course, the Polish complex also surfaced. In December 2004, the previous holiday of the October Revolution, November 7, was replaced by the Day of National Unity - November 4. Why this particular date? Because this day marks the anniversary of the expulsion of the Poles from the Kremlin in 1612. It was a good reason to take revenge on the cunning "Polish", but there was no complete recovery: the Russian leader could not get rid of his "Polish disease". She tortured him more than once. For example, in the fall of 2005, when Russia imposed an embargo on Polish meat, and then on other products, claiming that Polish goods were of poor quality and could harm Russian stomachs.

When a Polish plane fell on April 10, 2010 in Smolensk, the “hater of the Pole” again spoke to Putin. He decided not to give Warsaw the wreckage of the liner on which our president was flying. And when they started talking in Poland about the mess at the Severny airfield, Putin's illness worsened even more. He ordered, in full view of television cameras (“so that you Poles would see it with your own eyes”), to destroy everything that was left of the Polish plane. Three years have passed since that moment. The wreckage of the crashed plane remains in the hands of the Russians.

maugli copy
maugli copy

In conclusion, I would like to remind you: "Chronicle of Bygone Years", to which the author of the Polish article refers, is a fake, designed to convince ourselves, and the whole world, in what one of the "jackals" began his article with ….. And it concerns only a small part of the Empire - the Kiev principality. But this is a different story, old, but it is on it that the entire political system of the world rests, including our Russian reality. So think, WHO, WHEN and WHY wrote such a "Russian" story.

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