Dear friends,
Under here a letter I wrote to a Polish e-mail friend of mine who lives in Germany. Nowadys my concern is not about Eastern-Europe, but about Western Europa, where the ethnic, cultural and religious devidance is big and the financial-economical future insecure (when you think of the competition with China, India and Northern-America in the near future).
Fortunately I am a logical-postivist of nature, and a real optimist about my personal international environment and future.
I am only worried about my country, compatriots, Europe and the Europeans. Strangly enough I do not know if I will live here in the Future. Where I will be depends on the personal freedom, the amount of beautiful wildlife in my environment and the population density.
Holland lies in a heavily populated, poisoned and built corner of Europe,
and all problems of Europe are focussed here.
The greatness of America, Poland and South-africa is that it stil has empty space, wildlife and ancient woods (with Wolves, bears, Bisons
and deers).
The letter to the Polish-German friend and an exchange of emails with Jaga:
Dear friend,
Poland is in the news again the last time, in Duch newspapers and television.
Knowing your stanpoint from previous posts and e-mails I think your
favorite of the Polish elections must have been Civic Platform's candidate Donald Tusk.
Today I read that the standpoints of Lech and Jaroslaw Kaczynski's PiS are close to that of Andrzej Lepper, the leader of the radical farmersparty Samoobrona,
although Jaroslaw said that he did not want to cooperate with Lepper (who is internationally unacceptable), because he favours the Civic Platform of Tusk.
Lech also reached out to his "friends of the Civic Platform" after he won the election.
Will he manage to fight corruption and nepotism in the Polish party political, parlaimentary system, and reform the legal system (which is connected to partypolitical developments) and economy (influence of political parties in state companies). In my view the Nepotism of the "old system" was stil present in the New system, and devided over left, center and right parties.
Is this true or false? You ofcourse as a "real" Pole knows more than I,
because you can read the newspapers (Gazetta Wyborcza, Polityka or Rzechpospolita), the Polish tv and Polish internet forums. I follow English language Polish news.
What is for sure is that Lech Kaczynski wil be another president than the Internationalist Aleksander Kwasniewski.
I think that it is able that in the future Kwasniewski wil become a high international function in the EU, NATO or United Nations, because he has a lot international contacts (a network), experiance and goodwill (look at his role in Poland, Ukraine, NATO and Irak (the Polish military presence and Marek Belka, the prime minister of SLD was a high civil administrator in Irak).
Marek wil also have no problem finding a new job in Poland or in the international field, he has a verry good Currucilum Vitea too.
Although Polish politics was stil a "Polish landtag" in the past decade, fact is that there has arisen a new sort of pragmatic generation of Polish political leaders, who are taken seriously internationally.
Poland is big Centre-European country with a large diaspora in other European countries, and so influential, also via its European parlementairnans, administrators and diplomats in Brussels,
Luxemburg and Stasbourg. And Polish diplomats, entrepreneurs and workers are present and influential in many European Capitals and especially agricultural regions, the construction (real estate) world and transport (read my letter under here to Jaga).
Important is to realise how big the market of Poland is (on many consumergoods you can read Polish descriptions or manuals), and that the Industrial (production), financial and Service sectors are growing (foreign investors and banks are interested in Polish assurance companies, banks and industries, a big part of the Polish market is already in foreign hands -and that worries Polish citizens and politicians. But that is the reality of the Capitalist free market
economy and Global fiancial markets.)
I think that Poland has much benifits above the Western-European countries like Germany and Holland. Polish wages are lower, Poles work harder than Germans and Duch, Poland gets new Industries and a new infrastructure (where Holland and Germany have older structures and are handicapped by their heavy Social security systems of their welfarestates, mirgation integration problems and a traditional
underclass of themselves - Neuk�ln in Berlin, and parts of East-germany with 40% unemployment-).
I just see that there were huge riots in Brigton England between asian and black youth (one youngster died). The same problems are visible in Holland and Germany.
A friend of mine (a neigbour of Duch antillian descent, african and native American blood) is also hostile towards Muslim minorities (Turks and Marrocans), because he has been repeatidly being assaulted racist by these people.
He says that Arabs are stil involved in Slave trade of Black africans .
These problems Poland has not, but I think that maybe Poland might have a growing class problem between the working,- Middle and highclass.
In many former Communist countries the gap between rich and poor is evident. Unfortunately this problem is becomming a Pan-European problem, because everywhere you have a poor alienated underclass of illegal immigants and refugees, traditional national minorities, and the old class of the "national minimal wages" (unemployed and low wage Germans, who vote Linkspartei or NPD). Where the foreign underclass is a target for the Islamist recruiters, the poor white ethnic Europeans are targets for left and right populism, which directs itself against Turkey in the EU, Muslim minorities and Polish workers (they take our jobs the Western European Populists, trade Unions, workers and unemployed say).
My fear is that what were in the sixtees the Italian, Spanish and Portugese guestworkers, and in the seventees the Turks and Maroccans, are the Poles nowadays.
The anti-Polish parols are very unpleasant sometimes.
The only ones who like the Poles are the farmers who need motivated workers for their lands (and can't get the unmotivated Duch unemployed), the Transport employers and the people who want to renovate their house (and find the Duch construction company to expensive).
Greetings from Pieter
Arnhem
Jaga,
Nice to hear from you about the presidential debates I could not follow.
You know that actually I come from a liberal country, which has liberalism
in differant flavours. Only last years the society became more conservative,
conservative-liberal I should say (the European version of liberalism).
Tusk looks like an American entrepreneur, and his TV ads looked like
an Democrat or Republican ad.
What can you tell me more about the debates, the two are both rightwingers.
In Poland it sounds not as a benifit if you have been in politics for years,
because they say that every politician works for his/her own goal and
keeps records of his/her oponents.
I keep to my opinion that I hope that there will be a clean, sincere,
more objective kind of politician in Poland, and that the Poles will understand
that they do not have to fear Europe, because in my opinion Europe (Brussels)
has an excellent small bureacracy (if you compare it to the much bigger
bureaucracies of the Nationals states and Metropoles), very good legislation
and a big European inner market is good for all of us.
In the past poorer countries benifitted from the Structural funds from the EU
(EU financial aid), to built their infrastructures (roads, railways, ports),
to create jobs, to boost their education- and healthcare systems.
Spain, Ireland and Portugal are doing well now, Ireland and Spain are
amongst the best economies of Europe now.
Germany, France and the Netherlands, the stabile and growing economies
of the past are having problems with their economies and growing
unemployment and expensive welfarestate (reforming their Social security).
Poland can stil benefit from the low wages compared with Western-Europe,
and a fairly young population.
Skoda-Volkswagen had a factory in Poz�an which was the most modern
factory in the world in the ninetees.
And I remember traveling back to Holland in the bus, that between krakow
and the Polish border in the West I saw a huge factory in the night with the
Opel sign on the roof, a modern production line, and workers standing
outside during a brake (that's how I could look inside, because they opened
the doors from the side, so that I could see it from the highway, passing by).
I understadn that the Poles fear that they might loose some Social security,
because lots of old people had to continue working after their pension,
because their Pensions were not high enough to be able to live from it.
I know that from friends from my mother in Poland, an architect and his wife.
And I saw some -normal- old people begging in Krakow in 2004, and some
of them working as tourist guides or marketsalesmen.
Greetings,
Pieter
Op 24-okt-05 om 5:12 heeft Jagoda het volgende geschreven:
Pieter,
I was also for Tusk but he was consider by some Poles as too much of a liberal. Some Poles were afraid that they would lose some social benefits. I was also a bit dissapointed in the presidential debates. Tusk was too agressive, too confrontational, Kaczynski was actually much more moderate and more calm.
Yes, Tusk is more pro-european but Kaczynski is a guy who sits in politics for years. He is not stupid and he would not try to change the course too much.
Skoda is in Czech republic, opel? I am not sure
come to the forum, we have some discussions about it now:
-- Jagoda Urban-Klaehn
e-mail:
jaga@klaehn.myrf.netVisit [url=BellaOnline ALERT: For anti-spam reasons, we restrict the number of URLs allowed in a given post. You have exceeded our maximum number of URLs.