Data: 2010-09-22 11:42:33 | |
Autor: Me | |
Who needed 'loud German' and who did the political analyses more ethically. | |
UNDER THE PROFILE 'LOUD GERMAN' WE GET INTERESTING POLITICAL ANALYSES WHERE - ACCROSS THE CHANNEL BUT FROM LONDON; MAYBE THEY SLIP TO PREJUDICE SOMEWHERE, BUT IS NOT EXPECTED TO BE A PROBLEM - IT IS NOT IN THE CULTURE. SEE FORMER POST IN TEH TOPIC ANALYZING THE LONDON VIEW OF GERMAN. WHAT THE TIMES DO IN TERMS OF PREJUDICE AGAINT GERMANS IS BEYOND THE CONTEMPORARY EDUCATED MIND. I THINK WE ALL DID NOT KNOW HOW FAR THEY WENT. ( IT IS VERY SERIOUS - THE CHEMICAL FUMES RELEASED AT TH ELDERIES IN TOLEDO, OH, I AM TOLD IN 70 TIES OR 80 TIES UNDER BUSH SENIOR, KILLED PEAOPLE IN THOUSANDS IN THE NAME OF GERMAN ORIGIN, AS IF 'PUNISHMENT' YET WE KNOW THEY BUSHLAND JUST STEALS GENETIC LINES BY THE CIVIL ATROCITIES, IN THIS CASE IN OUT FACE , IN THE PEACE TIME; POLISH PEOPLE UNDER THE GERMAN OCCUPATION THAN, AND THE PREVIOUSLY ANECTED IN PARTITION OF POLAND TERRITORY, INCLUDING EAST PRUSIA, IFSPECTER WERE TO BE PRUSSIAN, WERE CALLED 'GERMAN'. THEY ARE MISSING IN NEARBY CLEVELAND - THAT AND MILLIONS OF POLISH IMMGRANTS LANDING VIA ERIE LAKE. THEY WERE CALLED RUSSIANS OR GERMANS, NOT PRUSSIAN - the very operation of ethnic prejudices.) Search results for “LOUD GERMAN” ( 450 ENTRIES) DEBATE OVER COMMEMORATION OF MILLIONS EXPELLED FROM LOST TERRITORIES 1. The German exodus * — Brigitte Pätzold (2004/03) SHOULD there be a centre to commemorate the Germans expelled from Czechoslovakia and Poland after the second world war? And if this buried collective memory is to be revived, where should the centre be located - in Berlin, Wroclaw, Geneva, Strasbourg or Stockholm? There is nothing accidental about this debate, which has been the focus of German public opinion for some time now; 60 years on, (...) The state of Europe 2. The myth of German reunification * — Bernard Umbrecht (2009/11) After the fall of the Berlin Wall in1989, former East German symbols and institutions were speedily consigned to the scrapheap. In today’s uncertain climate, many are questioning what has been lost, and why DRUGS SHOULD BE A COMMON GOOD 3. ( NOT RELATED) ad: 4. Le Monde diplomatique on CD-ROM: 1978-2006 (/) Read Le Monde diplomatique’s complete archives over 28 years. More than 35,000 documents - articles, maps, bibliographical notes - on international relations, political, economic, social issues, media, environment, reports that span the planet. 5. Underneath the foundation * — Mona Chollet (2009/07) The scandal broke late in 1990. Jean Frydman, a former member of the French resistance and a naturalised Israeli citizen, accused François Dalle, former CEO of L’Oréal, of trying to remove him from the board of a group subsidiary to appease the Arab League. (This was threatening L’Oréal with a boycott after it acquired the US company Helena Rubinstein, whose founder was known for her Zionist (...) AOL-TIME WARNER MERGER 6. The cyberdamned — Serge Halimi (2000/02) It is by no means certain that the "new economy" has given birth to the race of entrepreneurs and workers lauded by writers in (cyber) business journals. It is nice to imagine new men (for they are almost always males), funny, flexible, friendly, easy-going libertarians, almost Bohemians, gathered in a garage or council flat, scribbling a brilliant idea on the back of an old envelope that (...) The world at war 7. Lest we forget * — Ignacio Ramonet (2005/05) NAZI Germany surrendered on 8 May 1945, after five years and eight months of the most murderous conflict the world has ever known. Fascist Italy had surrendered earlier; the Japanese empire fought on for another three months, until the atomic bombs dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki. There is obviously enormous media attention for the 60th anniversary of this turning point of the 20th (...) AT THE END OF A SUMMER OF HATE 8. Germany : Rise of the racist rights * — Christian Semler (2000/10) Two months after the Dusseldorf bomb attack Germany is at last taking strong action against the far right. Those found guilty of racist attacks have received heavy sentences. Demonstrations have been banned, violent splinter groups dissolved and the National Democratic Party (NPD) and the Republicans threatened with a ban. But repression, however necessary, is not enough. The underlying causes must be understood and the disease attacked at the roots - in West Germany as well as East. The first general election since 1960 9. EU intervention in the Congo * — Ralf Custers (2006/07) The EU has now decided that disengagement from Africa in the name of political correctness won’t work and has sent a small force to help oversee this month’s election, along with UN troops. President Kabila, however, looks for his military support to the Southern Africa development community. FRANCO-GERMAN ALLIANCE: RATIONAL FOR GOOD REASONS 10. A marriage of convenience * — Pierre Béhar (2004/04) The power of the Paris-Berlin axis cannot be denied, although the alliance between France and Germany is based on pragmatism as much as on true affinities. It can only grow stronger in the current climate. Living on the front line 11. The transsexual’s story — Alison Bracken (2008/10) “I left in 1999 and went illegally first to Mexico and then to the US. I was in the closet when I left and the economic situation was bad. I was begging for food in Mexico. Eventually I ended up in Dallas, homeless and living in the Salvation Army’s shelter. Then I met another transsexual. She helped me get some work selling myself on the corner. Then I began going to nightclubs and picking up (...) Nostalgia for power, dreams of autonomy 12. The cast of characters (2007/02) In the Kremlin Vladimir Putin, president of the Russian Federation Mikhail Fradkov, prime minister German Gref *, minister of economic development and trade Boris Gryzlov*, chairman of the state Duma and the ruling party, United Russia; Sergei Ivanov*, minister of defence Alexei Kudrin*, minister of finance Sergei Lavrov, minister of foreign affairs Dmitry Medvedev*, first deputy (...) 13. Foreign editions (/) Le Monde diplomatique has more than 70 foreign editions in 25 languages (in February 2009 there were 72 editions: 46 in print, 26 online). That represents a world circulation of 2.4 million readers. 14. Secrets and lies — Ignacio Ramonet (2007/03) What is the most apt epithet for European governments caught in the act of colluding with a foreign agency in abducting suspects who were then transported to secret prisons and tortured? It is hard to imagine a more flagrant violation of human rights, a violation committed by states that are forever prating about their respect for the law. Two recent events bear witness to the prevailing (...) Ukraine’s past horrors 15. Who fought who – and why * — Jean-Marie Chauvier (2007/08) Because of many investigations and much new archival material we now know more about the Nazi war of annihilation in the east. It is no longer taboo to mention the collaboration of nationalists, especially in the Baltic republics and Ukraine. The Soviets were ashamed to acknowledge collaboration, and so are those who seek to rehabilitate the nationalists. After the first world war Ukraine (...) UNDER THE IRON FIST OF THE GERMAN CENTRAL BANK 16. Frogmarched into the single currency — Bernard Cassen (1996/11) Belief in the virtues of a single currency based on the Maastricht criteria is now at its lowest ebb but European governments are still pressing ahead with decisions to ensure that it is in place by 1 January 1999, showing scant regard for the stagnating growth and rising unemployment that will follow. The German authorities, who make the rules and monitor their application, are relentlessly set on adapting Europe to the demands of world markets. In France, the powers that be say nothing or toe the line. LABOUR MARKET WRONGLY BLAMED FOR UNEMPLOYMENT 17. Germany: capital flees — Heiner Ganssmann (2004/02) Germany’s generous social welfare provisions and once powerful unions didn’t cause its economy to stagnate. The real problem has been money leaving the country in search of easy profits. LEADER 18. Now is the time for peace — Ignacio Ramonet (2000/06) The Middle East has been through weeks of drama. In Syria, President Hafez al-Assad has died after 30 years in power, and all eyes are on Damascus to see what the future holds. In the West Bank and Gaza, a new wave of Palestinian protests was put down amid bloodshed. In southern Lebanon, Hizbollah - and a good part of Arab opinion - saw the sudden withdrawal of Israel’s army and the inglorious (...) What happened to the defence of vital national interests 19. The candidates and the EU — Bernard Cassen (2007/04) It took more than a year and a prolonged period of complaining in public and in private about the French electorate’s decision in the European referendum of May 2005. But now, finally, the three leading candidates in the presidential election — François Bayrou (UDF), Ségolène Royal (PS) and Nicolas Sarkozy (UMP) — have concluded that the 55% of voters who said “no” to the Constitutional Treaty, (...) LEADER 20. The real price of the cheap euro — Ignacio Ramonet (2000/10) Too weak or too strong? By mid-September the euro was down by more than 27% against the dollar and the debate about its strength had torn the tiny group of "experts" on the European currency wide open. The media express horror that it is so "dangerously undervalued" and European Central Bank (ECB) president Wim Duisenberg voices his "deep concern" everywhere. But less than two years ago, (...) The water dossier 21. The ‘three sisters’ — Marc Laimé (2005/03) THREE of the four leading world water companies are French: Veolia, formerly Vivendi, is an offshoot of the Générale des Eaux, founded in 1853; Ondeo is a subsidiary of Suez-Lyonnaise, founded in 1880; and Saur belonged to the Bouygues group until November 2004 (1). These are the “three sisters”. In less than 20 years they have become top players. Ondeo is the global No 1 in numbers of people (...) OLD TRADITIONS, NEW STRATEGY 22. Germany’s Middle Eastern diplomacy * — Michel Verrier (2002/08) Twelve years after reunification, Germany has international ambitions. It is not a political nonentity but a candidate for a UN Security Council seat, and is trying to claim EU leadership. Kosovo was one turning point; but Germany’s diplomatic efforts are most visible in the Middle East. ’A visible statement of separation and difference’ 23. Saturday afternoon in Dewsbury — Wendy Kristianasen (2006/11) Aishah Azmi, the teaching assistant who refused to remove her niqab, has put Dewsbury back in the news and it now dreads the media. A leading member of the community said, about a hostile article in The Times on 21 October: “The press is writing things that are plain wrong and very damaging. They’re still trying to link the Merkezi mosque to the 7/7 bombers and now they’re weaving a web of (...) |
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Data: 2010-09-22 20:45:07 | |
Autor: u2 | |
Who needed 'loud German' and who did the political analyses more ethically. | |
W dniu 2010-09-22 20:42, Me pisze:
located - in Berlin, Wroclaw How dare u ! Breslau, u butthead. |
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