@yapishukino Я, конечно, догадывался, что есть социопаты, для которых животное важнее (это, наверно, тот же типаж, что своих собак называет «дочками»), но страшновато, что их так много, судя по комментариям.
Как правило, свидетельствует о левых взглядах, см схему.
@Viatcheslav@teodossi@aperigator3 Русская она
И этот чудо-язык основан в колоссальной степени на русском. Я свободно говорю на сербском и хорватском (достаточно, чтобы судить о том, что «сербохорватский» это нежизнеспособный конструкт), местные этот чудо-язык не поймут, к сожалению. Идея хорошая, но.
Мне тут в ленте попалась то ли дура, то ли сволочь, которая восторгалась образом Марии-Антуанетты без головы. «Это самое французское, что может быть», дескать. Не могу найти.
Если найдете, ткните в неё вот этим. Судьбой только одного из её сыновей, ему было восемь.
From Wikipedia: https://t.co/W7TWtcc1xn
Immediately following Louis XVI's execution, plots were hatched for the escape of the prisoners from the Temple.
On 3 July 1793, Louis-Charles [the king's son and heir, age 8] was separated from his mother [Marie Antoinette] and put in the care of Antoine Simon, a cobbler who had been named his guardian by the Committee of Public Safety. The tales told by royalist writers of the cruelty inflicted by Simon and his wife on the child have not been proved. Louis Charles' sister, Marie Thérèse, wrote in her memoires about the "monster Simon", as did Alcide Beauchesne.
Stories survive narrating how he was encouraged to eat and drink to excess and learned the language of the gutter. The foreign secretaries of Britain and Spain also heard accounts from their spies that the boy was raped by prostitutes in order to infect him with venereal diseases to supply the Commune with manufactured "evidence" against the Queen.
However, the scenes related by Alcide de Beauchesne of the physical torment of the child are not supported by any testimony, though he was at this time seen by a great number of people.
On 6 October, Pache, Chaumette, Jacques Hébert and others visited the boy and secured his signature to charges of sexual molestation against his mother and his aunt. The next day he met his elder sister Marie-Thérèse-Charlotte for the last time.
1794: Illness
On 19 January 1794, the Simons left the Temple, after securing a receipt for the safe transfer of their ward, who was declared to be in good health. A large part of the Temple records from that time onward disappeared under the Bourbon Restoration, making ascertaining of the facts impossible. Two days after the departure of the Simons, Louis-Charles is said by the Restoration historians to have been put in a dark room that was barricaded like the cage of a wild animal. The story recounts that food was passed through the bars to the boy, who survived despite the accumulated filth of his surroundings.
Maximilien Robespierre visited Marie-Thérèse on 11 May, but no one, according to the legend, entered the boy's room for six months until Paul Barras visited the prison after the 9th Thermidor (27 July 1794). Barras's account of the visit describes the child as suffering from extreme neglect, but conveys no idea of the alleged walling-in.
The boy made no complaint to Barras of any ill treatment. He was then cleaned and re-clothed. His room was cleaned, and during the day he was visited by his new attendant, Jean Jacques Christophe Laurent [fr] (1770–1807), a creole from Martinique. From 8 November onward, Laurent had assistance from a man named Gomin.
Louis-Charles was then taken out for fresh air and walks on the roof of the Tower. From about the time of Gomin's arrival, he was inspected, not by delegates of the Commune, but by representatives of the civil committee of the 48 sections of Paris. From the end of October onward, the child maintained silence, explained by Laurent as a determination taken on the day he made his deposition against his mother.
1795: Death [age 10]
On 31 March 1795, Étienne Lasne was appointed to be the child's guardian in place of Laurent. In May that year the boy was seriously ill, and a doctor, P. J. Desault, who had visited him seven months earlier, was summoned. However, on 1 June, Desault himself died suddenly, not without suspicion of poison, and it was some days before doctors Philippe-Jean Pelletan and Jean-Baptiste Dumangin were called.
Louis-Charles died on 8 June 1795. The next day an autopsy was conducted by Pelletan. In the report it was stated that a child apparently about 10 years of age, "which the commissioners told us was the late Louis Capet's son", had died of a scrofulous infection of long standing. "Scrofula" as it was previously known, is nowadays called tuberculous cervical lymphadenitis referring to a lymphadenitis (chronic lymph node swelling or infection) of the neck (cervical lymph nodes) associated with tuberculosis.
During the autopsy, the physician Dr. Pelletan was shocked to see the countless scars which covered the boy's body, evidently the result of the physical mistreatment which the child had suffered while imprisoned in the Temple.
Louis-Charles was buried on 10 June in the Sainte Marguerite cemetery, but no stone was erected to mark the spot.
@realdonjorge Это слом пятой стены.
Найдите немецкую поп-песенку 80-х годов, которой завершается сериал (после последней реплики Ханны) и клип на нее на ютубе. Первые секунды этого клипа.
Если давно смотрели, может быть, не поймете, я объясню. Это самая гениальная находка авторов сериала.
@prof_preobr У нас в Черногории Джуканович сидел у власти с самой Югославии. Проиграв выборы, спокойно и цивильно ушёл, пожелав удачи новому президенту.
Очень показательно.