Ognistysztorm wrote: ↑Thu Apr 20, 2023 7:11 pm
There is prior sockpuppetry case involving Jacurek and what I found is there are mentions of him hiring or canvassing editors for his cause. It's an obvious tag team, or a cabal.
Piotrus and Marek didn't know. Uh-huh sure. They've been tag teaming for like fifteen years! (Note: Radeksz = Volunteer Marek)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia ... iling_list
Arbitration Committee wrote:
8) Piotrus (talk · contribs) was aware that usage of the list was inappropriate, and made efforts to keep its nature and existence secret from Wikipedia editors.
Hat tip Giraffe Stapler. Jacurek's/GizzyCatBella's first edit is an eye-opener and illustrates exactly what this dispute is about.
https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?ti ... =154352945
Jacurek/GizzyCatBella wrote:
Let's not forget that the first Zionist idea for a "Jewish Homeland" (at the beginning of the 20th century) was not Palestine but what they then called "Judeopolonia", i.e. a huge chunk of what was eastern Poland! Fortunately Poland regained its independence in 1918 and nothing came of this. But the planned treachery left a bitter aftertaste during the inter-war years, as did the inordinate involvement of Jews in the communist movement and in the Russian revolution itself. From a purely political point of view (i.e. leaving aside the Jewish monopoly of trade etc.) Jews in Poland were then as "accepted" and "trusted" as Muslims are in post 07/07 Britain today. Things were made much worse at the beginning of World War II, when -- in Soviet-occupied Poland -- Jews (Polish citizens) collaborated on a truly massive scale with the Soviet secret police, giving them lists of Poles to arrest and deport to Siberia. It goes without saying that: (a) this is still a taboo subject for many Jews, and (b) after World War II the communist regime installed by the Soviets in Poland was largely run by Jews, who'd served the communist cause so well. The wave of "antisemitism" of 1968 was nothing more than an internal squabble in the Polish communist party. The Jews who were kicked out of Poland were all long-serving communist party activists like Mrs. Brus-Wolinska (now living in Oxford -- Poland is still demanding her extradition on murder charges) and Mr. Michnik's brother Stefan (also wanted by Polish courts for murders he committed in the 1950's). Since the beginning of the 1970's many of these Jews have been actively engaged in re-writing Polish history, telling the "West" how badly Jews have been treated by the Poles down the centuries and that Auschwitz was really a Polish invention. And, of course, there were Jews like Jerzy Kosinski (the author of "The Painted Bird"), whose lives had actually been saved by Poles and who'd been brought up in Polish foster families and had everything going for them, who suddenly took it upon themselves to tell English readers how badly they'd been treated in Poland because of their Jewishness. This publicity campaign only really came to an end when Poland became an ally of Britain and America in Iraq. Is it possible to lie so much? Well may you ask. From a Polish perspective, Jews have a lot to answer for. As Yehudi Menuhin once said, their trouble is that they always want to be on the winning side. The so-called Jedwabne "pogrom" was merely a publicly staged execution of Jews by the Germans, who forced Poles to watch at gunpoint. Although the Poles of Jedwabne had no reason to love the Jews (who'd just disgraced themselves by collaborating with the Soviets) the Nazi occuptaion of Poland was particularly brutal and the last thing any Pole wanted to do was collaborate with the Germans: German newspapers at the time often complained about this lack of "gratitude" on their part. It's highly significant that the Jedwabne Jews were buried together with "their" statue of Lenin, which they'd put up as soon as the Soviets came. The Kielce "pogrom" of 1947 you mention was a Russian provocation designed to blacken Poland's name in the West and to "justify" the Russian postwar occupation (an old trick). It was also designed to encourage Jews to move to Palestine (cf. the so-called pogroms in Iraq at the same time). Stalin himself secretly supported the Zionists in Palestine in order to cause trouble for the Brits and to keep a finger in the regional pie.