State ceremonies on May 2 and 3 not only refer to the past, but say a lot about contemporary Poland, about Polish politics. And it turns out that in 2023 the problems that practically destroyed the Republic of Poland throughout the eighteenth century have not disappeared at all. These issues are treason, self-interest, use of foreigners, reporting on one’s own country to foreign leaders and their ambassadors, demanding and encouraging interventions.
The main gangrene, ie jurgielt, has not disappeared. It still functions, although not in the form of gold coins (Augustdors and then Stanislasdors). The phenomenon of foreign “courts” detaining traitors, who are paid for their services in weakening the Republic, has not disappeared. Unfortunately, since the last partition, jurlet practices and services have never become more widespread, massive, and cheap than after 2015, when the opposition is in a veritable race to please foreign “courts”. At the expense of Poland.
Contemporary Jurgielt means positions in international institutions, career support, fellowships, fellowships, awards, commissions, high-paying projects and lectures. It is a band, albeit often formal, with a worldwide or European presence. Contemporary jugglers are drawn to various activities “for the rule of law”, in defense of “equality, prevention of inequality, discrimination based on sex, racial or ethnic origin, religion or belief, disability, age or sexual orientation”.
Jurgielt has become so banal that you can no longer count on any distinction between snitches and accomplices. There’s quite a large group of juggernauts who can’t even imagine a life without using strangers for ducats. They accept it as normal, necessary and even praiseworthy. The jugglers used to haggle, hesitate, regret, though not often. Currently there are no inhibitions and fluctuations. And you can even get the impression that the judges are always on duty, that they can report faster than others and win a prize.
Due to the large supply, the production of jugglers is going to shit. Therefore, denunciations are dominated by nonsense and meaningless nonsense, although there are also forms that are common towards Poland, e.g. declarations by lawyers, with ready-made solutions for cases in which Poland can be kicked. Modern juggernauts and henchmen are in a race to share their accusations with anyone who will listen. Something has happened that a large group of jurielniks and candidates for them have lost all state instinct, not to mention their attachment to independence and sovereignty.
People with the traitor mentality have lost all moral and even aesthetic brakes, because all this snitching and minion mud doesn’t look pretty. With any stupidity you should immediately run to a representative of the aliens, because maybe someone will check it, write it down and you can discount it later. There are so many “professional” traitors that it is difficult for volunteers willing to work for free to break through. Followers and informants are devaluing the traitor’s profession, dwarfing it in a sea of amateur and volunteer traitors.
Selling Poland cannot be combined with attachment to national symbols. But it is also not surprising that many refer to them in early May as if they were never involved in the sell-off of Poland. We have too many negative experiences in the past. And jurielt as a form of institutionalized corruption, although it became a common pathology in the eighteenth century, already existed in the sixteenth century.
Dorota Dukwicz in the work “Secret expenditures of the Russian embassy in Warsaw in the years 1772-1790” collected what was found in the documents about the judge. On April 18, 1794, the Russian ambassador, Osip Ingelström, escaped from Warsaw and the participants of the Kościuszko uprising fell into the hands of papers concerning special corruption funds, including the payment of the judge. This proves that guarantees given to judges can never be trusted, because if something is written down, it will come out sooner or later.
Today, the judge is awarded for contributing to the attribution of violations of the Constitution and the rule of law to Poland and its authorities, as well as violation of European values enshrined in Article 2 of the “Treaty on European Union”. For reporting on court cases and judges. For detecting racism, xenophobia, antisemitism, homophobia, transphobia. For tracking attacks on freedom of the media, universities, cultural institutions, freedom of expression and assembly, civil liberties and human rights. This differs only superficially from the goals awarded with a jurglet in the 18th century. At that time it was also about a catalog of rights, freedoms and values that the legal authorities of the Republic of Poland had to break. Then and now, foreign rulers watched over rights and values.
What connects contemporary and historical justice is that people who practiced it could always count on favor in court, help with promotions, with holding or obtaining offices, social position and rank in the hierarchy of status. Then, as today, when they were caught selling Poland, they appealed to the argument that they acted for the good of the Republic of Poland. That they defend fundamental rights, freedoms and values. That foreign governments, courts and organizations are much better defenders and guarantors of Poland’s rights and freedoms than their own, legal government.
It took a breakthrough during the Kościuszko Uprising and the disclosure of documents for the nation to find out who is who. But even then, many did not believe the evidence. Today, jurgieltniks have so many opportunities to manipulate public opinion that they can even be considered knights of fighting jurgielt and selling poland. If the citizens of Targowica had such communications capabilities as today’s jurgieltnik, they would never have been granted traitor status. And today they pretend to be the saviors of Poland, even if it is not known whether anything will remain of Poland, when these saviors will attach it so tightly to Europe that it will never be able to separate itself from it. In the past, this unhooking took 123 years.
Source: wPolityce