Direction of gap

htb.com.pl 4 days ago

Practically my full life, and I just turned 64, as a country, we were standing on the abyss. I remember 1970. December events, i.e. protests and strikes of workers mainly in Gdynia, Gdańsk, Szczecin and Elbląg, which broke out on 14-22 December 1970 in consequence to a drastic increase in prices. Gomulka, despite the worsening economical situation, did not decide to reform, and alternatively decided to repress the protesters. His speech of April 16, 1970, in which he admitted that we were standing on the abyss, but we made a large step forward was told as a joke.

It wasn't comic to me. In time, I realized Gomulku was right. Prices had to be raised. Then Gierek came and the problems disappeared. Just like today. We started indebted. At the time it was $35 billion. We paid off the game – who will pay ours?

Twice during my life Poland was in a somewhat better situation. 1996-97 erstwhile Włodzimierz Cimoszewicz ruled, and the president was Aleksander Kwasniewski. Although Cimoshevich swept distant the flood of the century, the Constitution was passed. The Constitutional Referendum was May 25, 1987. In 1999, we joined NATO. Poland then joined the European Union on 1 May 2004.

The Prime Minister was Leszek Miler, but it is with Alexander Kwasniewski that reminds me of these events. He was the only president so far who understood what this president was all about. I know that if we do not return to the choice of the head of state through the National Assembly, we will never elect individual like Alexander Kwasniewski. Someone who will not follow Joseph Piłsudski's policy. due to the fact that this is the misfortune of the Polish State.

The polarization we have putin maintains that a long-standing sanction in our policies dominates. That is, whether Poland will resign from being part of the European Union, as it was in England – Putin will decide. Orders have been issued. The next phase is simply a referendum. It's the Kremlin that's in control. If we don't change something here, we've lost.

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