Cog wrote:Apparently, dissident would have no problem with another Katyn style massacre to occur again on the Polish people. Except on a much grander scale. "glassing them"? LOL good luck with all that. NATO is zero threat to Russia and Russia is well aware of that.
But it never hurts to give the Russians a little something to think about when they want to bully their neighbors, as they have done repeatedly in the 20th century. Hungary and Czechoslovakia immediately come to my mind.
No sane person wants a war with Russia. But lets not forget the brutality of what they were in the 20th century and what they still are in the 21st century.
Alfred Tennyson wrote:We are not now that strength which in old days
Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are;
One equal temper of heroic hearts,
Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will
To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.
rockdoc123 wrote:it's interesting that Poland is still talking about more LNG. Almost a decade ago I remember them planning a new regas facility on the Baltic just so they wouldn't be at the mercy of seasonal fluctuations in pricing out of Russia. At that time they believed the shale gas possibilities in the Ordovician and Silurian would save the day but the rocks just didn't cooperate.
radon1 wrote:Russia is not getting stronger, by any metric. The next few years may turn out to be quite entertaining. In any event, having a spare terminal should be helpful, even if as a backup option.
EnergyUnlimited wrote:Yes but here politicians want to resign from Russian gas ENTIRELY.
Due to geographic location of Poland it is insane or/and sabotage.
Police vans and units in riot gear were dispatched Friday to guard the Warsaw home of the leader of Poland's right-wing ruling party, Jaroslaw Kaczynski. An angry crowd of mostly young people confronted the cordon with chants of “This is war” and vulgar calls for the ruling team to step down.
The court ruling fulfilled a wish that Kaczynski had expressed in 2016 by saying, “We will strive to ensure that even cases of very difficult pregnancies, when the child is certain to die, very deformed, still end up in a birth, so that the child can be baptized, buried, have a name.”
Protesters in Warsaw held up banners with slogans including: “You Have Blood on Your Hands" and “You are Building Women's Hell.”
A 29-year-old, Diana Fidler, joined the protesters, explaining that she opposes abortion in cases of healthy fetuses, but finds the ruling forcing women to carry fetuses with severe defects to term extreme.
This comes after Erdogan's allegation on Saturday that French President Emmanuel Macron had a problem with Muslims and needed checks on his mental health – assertions that prompted France to recall its ambassador from Ankara.
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