The new issue of the weekly magazine “Sieci” reveals Brussels’ shocking plan for Polish education: schools must lower educational levels and adapt their programs to accommodate immigrants. Soros foundations are involved in the action. Articles from the current issue available as part of the Network of Friends subscription: https://wpolityce.pl/tygodniksieci/wydanie-biezace.
“Brussels invasion of Polish education”
Jan Augustyn Maciejewski comments on the announced changes in the education system in the article “Brussels’ invasion of Polish education”. Comments:
The European Parliament’s Constitutional Committee demands that education be included in the list of “common policies”. This means that decisions about Polish education would be made in Brussels, and not in Warsaw.
The author explains that…
The European Commission has announced the creation of a European Education Area by 2025. There were many useful and innocent assumptions in these plans – […] improving the level of foreign language learning or mutual recognition of diplomas in EU countries.
However, it points out that a European Agency for Special Needs and Inclusive Education has also been established. The aim is to unify the education model in the European Union:
This is why, for example, our victories over Germany disappear from the Polish school curriculum – after all, children in Berlin will not learn anything from them.
According to Ylva Johansson, EU Commissioner for Immigration, Europe needs 4.5 million arrivals to ensure there is no labor shortage. However, Maciejewski notes that immigrants…
they also have children. Growing up in a completely different culture, without knowing the basic concepts from the Western world, they often cannot meet the demands of European education. […] The European Commission will “create favorable learning conditions for groups at risk of poor academic results.” It sounds nice because it can be translated as taking care of children […] who do not have conditions for learning at home or for disabled children. Only in a small detail was it added here – in a footnote – that these were visitors from outside Europe.
He also addresses the topic of changes in Polish schools, prepared by the ruling coalition under the protection of Brussels Maciej Walaszczyk in the article “What should Polish children not know?”
“They are the ‘October Revolution’”
Former Prime Minister Beata Szydło in conversation with Dorota Łosiewicz and Marcin Wikła (“They are the ‘October Revolution’”) comments on the current political situation and chaos in the country, which is deepened by the ruling coalition. It indicates, among other things, what consequences the appointment of Monika Pawłowska as a Member of Parliament will have. First of all, there is a change in the number of deputies, which is not provided for in the Constitution, and this may affect the legality of the laws passed by the Sejm.
This situation will therefore pose a challenge to constitutionalists and experts. It is clear that the ruling majority that makes decisions does not take into account the law and the constitution. After all, the takeover of the public media, changes in the prosecutor’s office and all other activities that were carried out were carried out without using laws and the constitution. An attempt to change legal rules through resolutions is unprecedented. […] The question is of course what we can do about it. We can no longer function in this way because it threatens the stability of the state. In my opinion, changing the Constitution is not possible at the moment, but such a debate would probably be necessary and should take into account the situation on the Polish political scene.
– notes the politician.
Beata Szydło also comments on the government’s project on the National Council of the Judiciary, according to which judges should be re-elected.
This is very bad news for all Poles, because at this moment we are returning to a model in which the judicial caste will decide for itself again. We see the justice system being closed down. […]. This is of course to the advantage of the EU institutions, because the requirements that Brussels sets when it comes to justice are also a condition for fulfilling the KPO. And it is now clear that these demands were an attempt to exert pressure and interfere completely illegally in Polish affairs, because the treaties state very clearly that when it comes to the administration of justice, these are the powers of the Member States.
– explains Beata Szydło.
“The Riddle of the Arctic Wolf”
Marek Budzisz refers to the death of Alexei Navalny in the article “The Polar Wolf Puzzle”. According to official reports, he lost consciousness while walking and died after 30 minutes of resuscitation. The cause of death was reported to be a ruptured clot. The author indicates that this version is not reliable: According to observers, prison services announced the probable cause of death too quickly, agencies began writing about what happened and Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov spoke out. […]. Budzisz adds that the editorial staff of “Nowa Gazeta”… submitted an official petition […] to access recordings from individual video recorders in which […] Russian officers on duty must be provided. […] There is a problem with the recordings, because apparently all the devices in Polar Wolf stopped working on the day of the politician’s death. Suspicions of tampering are also confirmed by anonymous reports from other prisoners.
Budzisz wonders why the decision has now been made to get rid of Navalny. He draws attention to the opinion of Alexander Baunow, an independent journalist and sociologist living in Berlin:
Putin’s regime is waging “a war on two fronts” and it is unclear whether the internal front is more important to the Kremlin than the Ukrainian front.
He notices that…
According to some commentators, the impetus to issue the order to depose Navalny was what the Russians could perceive in connection with the presidential candidacy of former deputy Boris Nadezhdin. […] Russians stood in long lines […], in support of a candidate who openly advocates ending the war. His candidacy was ultimately not registered, but the Kremlin may have concluded that the Russian mood was different […] they start to change.
Interesting commentary and a special addition
The following articles are also worth reading: Konrad Kołodziejski “Sowers of hatred”, Stanisław Janecki “Tusk’s Biggest Hoax”, Jan Rokita “Navalny, or the dream of a ‘beautiful Russia of the future’”, Dariusz Matuszak ” The Qatar Affair”, Małgorzata Wołczyk “If you have to eat a friend”, Grzegorz Górny “Waiting for the next conclave”.
In addition, the weekly magazine contains a special supplement for the National Day of the Cursed Soldiers “For Poland they did not lay down their weapons” and commentary on current events by Krzysztof Feusette, Dorota Łosiewicz, Bronisław Wildstein, Andrzej Rafał Potocki, Marta Kaczyńska -Zielińska, Wojciech Reszczyński, Aleksander Nalaskowski, Andrzej Zybertowicz.
More in the new issue of the weekly magazine “Sieci”. Articles from the current issue are available online by subscription: https://wpolityce.pl/tygodniksieci/wydanie-biezace. We also invite you to watch the broadcasts of Telewizja wPoland.
Source: wPolityce