Cytat:Nie gardzę Zachodem - bardzo cenię USA. Ty za Zachód uważasz chyba wyłącznie zciociałą Unię masturbującą się prawami człowieka; w której uważa się, że pedofile i mordercy powinni być nagradzani życiem, nielegalni imigranci winni być przyjmowani z otwartymi ramionami etc. Gardzę lewacko-humanitarnym dziadostwem.
W USA każdy stan może sobie zadecydować czy Trynkiewiczów należy smażyć na krześle elektrycznym czy nie.
W UE mundre socjalisty wiedzą, że Trynkiewicze winni żyć i chuj - nie ma tu miejsca na żadną dyskusję.
W USA mogę sobie kupić diesla i już.
W UE ekozjebizm mundrych socjalistów doprowadzi zaraz do wyeliminowania diesli z rynku.
I tak dalej. Proszę mi więc nie zarzucać pogardy do Zachodu. Gardzę jedynie zepsutą, zgniłą jego częścią. Dżenderami, ekologami, tolerancjonistami, wielbicielami allahowych przybyszów, zwiększaczami biurokracji i rozdawnictwa.
Nie wiem skąd to jaranie się krajem 3-świata u ciebie lumber. Poczytaj sobie:
Cytat:The U.S. is the country with the largest nominal GDP in the world, but at the same time its poverty rate is larger than Mexico’s and Turkey’s when using the OECD relative poverty measure (Inequality - Poverty rate - OECD Data / How Low-Poverty Countries Do It). This contradiction gives very special traits to U.S. poverty, and relates it to other social problems, like drug and alcohol dependence, and lack of educative opportunities. Therefore, quite a few people believe the poverty in the U.S. cannot be solved just by producing more money and more goods. Not in vain, Nicholas Kristof claims the following in his article 3 TVs and No Food: Growing Up Poor in America: “What many Americans don’t understand about poverty is that it’s perhaps less about a lack of money than about not seeing any path out”. > https://data.oecd.org/inequality/poverty-rate.htm > http://www.demos.org/blog/how-low-povert...ries-do-it
The U.S. is a country based on the idea of individual freedom, but at the same time it is the undisputed leader in incarcerated population (BBC NEWS | In Depth), with almost one and a half the number of prisoners than China has, which is the second country in the list, despite the fact that China has four times more population than the U.S. > http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/shared/spl/hi/uk...2page1.stm
The U.S. is the country with more prestigious universities in the top twenty spots in all the international rankings (QS, Times, ARWU), but at the same time 32 Million U.S. Adults are "Functionally Illiterate", and the U.S. is not among the first 20 countries in PISA Test Results (among 72 countries). > http://www.intellectualtakeout.org/blog/...-even-mean > http://www.businessinsider.com/pisa-worl...ls-2016-12
The U.S. leads the world in technological companies and patented inventions, but at the same time a large portion of its public infrastructure has been so neglected that in the latest report card the American Society of Civil Engineers gave the U.S. a D+ (ASCE's 2017 Infrastructure Report Card | GPA: D+). > https://www.infrastructurereportcard.org/
The U.S. is the country with the most powerful armed forces in the world. Not in vain, the U.S. accounts for 36% of the total global military expenditure, and military spending accounts in the U.S. for more than half of all federal discretionary spending (54% in 2015, according to the National Priorities Project). However, it is difficult to consider its latest (and lengthiest) wars as successes from the geopolitical point of view, even when their costs will probably be paid by several generations (Budgetary Costs of Wars through 2016: $4.79 Trillion and Counting). > https://www.nationalpriorities.org/campa...ed-states/ >http://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/files/cow/imce/papers/2016/Costs%20of%20War%20through%202016%20FINAL%20final%20v2.pdf
The U.S. had a major role in the building of the current world system of rules and alliances, and traditionally it has been called the “Leader of the Free World.” But at the same time the reputation of its leaders is worst than ever, and it is currently the only country that is not part of the two treaties approved by most countries in the history of the world: the Convention on the Rights of the Child, and the Paris Climate Agreement. The U.S. has not ratified the first (although it is partially based on the U.S. Constitution,) and it is withdrawing from the second. > http://www.pewglobal.org/2017/06/26/u-s-...eadership/ > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Convention..._the_Child > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paris_Agreement
The U.S. has associated the word “democracy” with many of its policies. But like it became patently clear during the last presidential election, in strictly sense the U.S. itself is a republic rather than a democracy, because the winner of the election lost the popular vote by three million votes. Given the current state of political polarization, maybe the most relevant data for this question is that since 2016 the U.S. is no longer classified as a “Full Democracy” in the Democracy Index (the most quoted index about the state of democracy in the world,) but as a “Flawed Democracy,” which is the same classification that most developing nations share. Currently, the index considers that Canada and Uruguay are the only two “Full Democracies” in the Americas. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democracy_Index
No ale jaraj się nim dalej, bo hurr durr pedofili zabijają. BTW policja może ci tam skonfiskować każdą większą kasę, jaką wieziesz przy sobie, bo jest podejrzenie, że to kasa z przestępstwa

Dopóki rodzimy się i umieramy, póki światło jest w nas, warto się wkurwiać, trzeba się wkurwiać! Wciąż i wciąż od nowa.

