@bambuszpontonu@michalgajdek Tez byłem tego zdania aż zobaczyłem statystyki z SORu i interwencji policji w miastach gdzie zrobili prohibicję. No jeśli serio to robi tak dużą różnicę to niestety powinno się to regulować. Wg mnie jednak 23-12 to by było optymalnej, żeby faktycznie walczyć z alkoholizmem
@Skalinskalin Ja zawsze wstaję szybko, żeby jak najszybciej wyjść z samolotu. Prawie nigdy nie mam bagażu i te kilka minut robi różnicę, gdy ktoś na mnie czeka pod lotniskiem. Poza tym po siedzeniu przez 2.5h można szału dostać. Jak masz za dużo czasu to sobie siedź i czekaj aż wszyscy wyjdą
The Ukrainian Insurgent Army (UPA) is responsible for the genocide in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia.
By decision of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy, the Independent Special Operations Center “North” will be named in honour of the “Heroes of the UPA.” The granting of this name was justified as an effort to “restore the historical traditions of the national army.”
The Ukrainian authorities’ promotion of the cult of the Ukrainian Insurgent Army must provoke opposition from all those who remember the activities of this formation.
Founded in 1942, the UPA was based on the ideological foundation of the so-called “Decalogue of the Ukrainian Nationalist” from 1929, which includes, among others, the following statement: “You will not hesitate to commit even the greatest crime if the good of the cause demands it.”
This was a prophetic announcement of the genocide committed against Poles in the years 1943–1945 in Volhynia and Eastern Galicia.
The Volhynia Massacre was a method of building an ethnically homogeneous Ukrainian state, one devoid of the minorities inhabiting those lands, mainly Poles and Jews. “With the beginning of military operations for independence,” declared one of the program documents of the OUN faction led by Stepan Bandera, “the question of national minorities must be resolved at all costs. To resolve this issue, representatives of national minorities, enemies of the people, must be eliminated.”
Organised attacks on Polish villages began in February 1943 and continued until 1945. The peak of the UPA atrocities came on Sunday, July 11, 1943, when thousands of inhabitants were massacred in nearly 100 Polish villages in Volhynia.
In the following months, the genocide carried out by the UPA in Volhynia also spread to Eastern Galicia, the Chełm region, and the Rzeszów region. “You observe the methods of operation in Volhynia - do the same in your own area. You will prevail. [...] The OUN-UPA must have authority among the masses.
The masses must believe in you and follow you. If someone does not wish to believe in the UPA, in you, and in the leadership, they must feel the hard and vengeful punishing hand,” stated an appeal addressed to UPA members in the Chełm region in the spring of 1944.
Polish historians estimate that approximately 120,000 Poles - including women, the elderly, and children - were killed at the hands of Ukrainian nationalists. Victims also included Ukrainians who warned their Polish neighbours of the approaching danger.
🔎To learn more about the Volhynia Massacre, we recommend viewing our website:
https://t.co/SYZrF24PqG