Dlužena von Bankrot und Malhostice.
Pamatujete ještě co říkala?
"Ukradená tisícovka".
"Ožebračování důchodců."
"Krádež za bílého dne na důchodcích."
"Ústavní žaloba."
"Vrátíme vám, co vám Fialova vláda vzala."
Dnes @alenaschillerov zvedla sukni a ukázala důchodcům holou prdel.
@P_Fiala Je to úplně jedno, největší hnus tam sedí opět. Bohužel je to vaše vina, měli jste 108 a nedokázali jste Xavera odvolat. Pozdravujte @marekbenda2013 , vládní sebranka slaví.
@NerdiPrincezna Mně v 90. letech přišlo absurdní to odtržení akademické VŠ sféry od praktického chodu střední školy. Didaktika děs, rady do učitelského života nula, takže kromě pár vyučujících nebylo na co vzpomínat. UJEP Ústí nad Labem.
Why didn't the Germans throw the British into the sea at Dunkirk?
It is the most famous "what if" of World War 2. In late May 1940, the entire British Expeditionary Force, plus tens of thousands of French troops, was trapped in a shrinking pocket on the French coast. Behind them: the sea. In front of them: the most powerful army on earth, fresh off slicing through France in two weeks.
The German tanks were close enough to see the smoke rising over Dunkirk. And then, on May 24, 1940, they stopped.
For decades the popular story was that Hitler showed "mercy," that he secretly admired the British and wanted to let them go so London would make peace. It is a tidy, dramatic story. It is also almost certainly false. Historians today overwhelmingly reject the mercy theory. The real answer is messier, more human, and honestly more interesting.
Here is what actually happened.
1. The tanks were wrecked.
The blitzkrieg that stunned the world had also burned itself out. German armor had raced hundreds of miles in under two weeks, and some panzer units had lost 30 to 50% of their tanks to combat and breakdowns. Engines were shot. Crews were exhausted. Commanders were nervously eyeing how few runners they had left for the next phase: the conquest of the rest of France, which had not even started yet.
2. The ground was a trap.
The country around Dunkirk is low, wet Flanders polder, cut by canals and ditches and soft marsh. It is beautiful terrain for defense and miserable terrain for tanks. Drive armor into that and you risk bogging your best divisions in mud while enemy gunners pick them off. German generals knew it.
3. Arras had spooked them.
Just days earlier, on May 21, a small British counterattack near Arras had punched into the German flank. It ultimately failed, but it rattled the German high command badly. Generals like Rundstedt, Kluge, and Kleist suddenly worried the Allies had more fight left than expected, and that a bigger, stronger counterattack could cut off their overextended spearheads. Caution set in at exactly the wrong moment for Germany.
4. The halt was a general's idea, not Hitler's.
This is the part most people get wrong. The halt order originated with Generaloberst Gerd von Rundstedt, commander of Army Group A, late on May 23. He wanted to rest and refit the armor and protect his flanks. When Hitler visited headquarters the next day, he agreed and made it official on May 24. Hitler did not dream up the halt out of compassion. He ratified a decision his field commander had already made for hard military reasons.
5. Goering oversold his air force.
Into this hesitation stepped Hermann Goering, who phoned Hitler and boasted that his Luftwaffe alone could annihilate the trapped army from the air, no tanks required. It let Hitler preserve his armor for the rest of France while Goering took the glory. The Luftwaffe tried. It did real damage. But weather, RAF Spitfires flying from nearby England, and the simple difficulty of hitting men dispersed on a wide beach meant air power could not finish the job.
And so the door stayed open.
The Royal Navy, joined by a now-legendary fleet of civilian "little ships," launched Operation Dynamo. Over roughly nine days, around 338,000 Allied soldiers were lifted off the beaches and the mole at Dunkirk and carried to England. An army that should have been destroyed lived to fight another five years.
Here is the twist that makes the "mercy" myth so sticky. After the war, captured German generals had every reason to push the story that the halt was Hitler's irrational, sentimental blunder. It conveniently moved blame off the professional officer corps and onto the dead dictator. The myth was, in part, a cover story.
So the truth is less Hollywood and more like real war: worn-out machines, bad mud, a scare at Arras, a cautious general, and an air marshal who wrote a check his pilots could not cash. Five small, human reasons. One enormous consequence.
If those tanks had rolled forward on May 24, there might have been no army to defend Britain in 1940, and the entire war could have turned.
V Rakousku si taky socani mysleli, že je mladí budou volit, když snižovali věk u volebního práva a pak byli strašně překvapený, že mladí volili nácky. Když se podívám na to, jak vám to jde na sociálních sítích, což je dominantní medium této věkové skupiny, tak bych si se sirkami ve stohu opravdu nehrál.
Pořádně se vracím z moto cesty po stopách vyloučení v Normandii. Projel jsem Německo, Lucembursko, Belgii, Francii… všude jsou a upřímně, vůbec mi to nevadí. Ve srovnán�� s nekonečnými skladovými halami na úkor úrodných polí, mě to přijde jako nic. Na poli to zabere pár metrů čtverečních.
„Musí probíhat škrty, musí být personální restrukturalizace, jinak by to nebylo dlouhodobě udržitelné.“
Ministerstvo životního prostředí, leden 2026.
Ministerstvo životního prostředí, o pár měsíců později:
Přestavby kanceláří za 3 miliony pro Turka a Červeného.
Český tým na MS v ničem nevynikal. 13. v úspěšnosti střelby, 14. v přesilovkách, 13. v oslabeních, nejlepší Čech v kanadském bodování je na 50. místě Kubalík, Kořenář 9. v gólmanských statistikách. Jinak to dopadnout prostě bohužel nemělo... 👎