BLOGGER TEMPLATES AND TWITTER BACKGROUNDS »

Monday, 29 December 2008

lee evans satelite navigation

Friday, 26 December 2008

awsome dresses form Giorgio Armani Haute Couture Collection



this one is my favourite

Thursday, 25 December 2008

SoundSticks II by harman/ kardon



Aint they just amaizingly super cool preety funky awsone speakers? :D :D :D :D :D :D :D :D

Sunday, 21 December 2008

anti smoking ads

















Saturday, 20 December 2008

cats - the best of

Something for cat lovers :P



Friday, 19 December 2008

Newest model of Sony Ericsson


I bet u want this 4 christmass!

Christmass in Poland :)



his is how students do it? ;)

H&M adverts - most fashiable gifts

H&M new christmass collection adverts


Version 1




Version 2


Monday, 15 December 2008

French (i think but not entarely sure)campain against pedophiles



Western Spaghetti by PES

Sunday, 7 December 2008

cool project on youtube :D

Saturday, 29 November 2008

Hungry?

What kid wouldn't like this type of obento! they are absolutely awsome!!!







Saturday, 15 November 2008

Shafting the Poles

My brother found it and I slyly copied it ( THANK YOU!!! )
Proud as hell from my history!
Proud to be Polish!
I bet you are jellaus!


Oh and i know its hard to read it because of the colour scheme of my blog but highlighting it really does help !


Oh and HERE is my brothers blog


Shafting the Poles
By Ralph Peters
New York Post | Tuesday, December 23, 2003

The decisive turning point in the West's long struggle against Islamic conquerors came on the afternoon of Sept. 12, 1683, during the last Turkish siege of Vienna. Severely outnumbered Polish hussars - the finest cavalry Europe ever produced - charged into the massed Ottoman ranks with lowered lances and a wild battle cry.

Led by the valiant King Jan Sobieski, the Poles had marched to save Vienna while other Europeans looked away. The French - surprise! - had cut a deal with the sultan. (To Louis XIV, humbling the rival Habsburgs trumped the fate of Western civilization.)

The odds were grim. Many of King Jan's nobles feared disaster. But Sobieski risked his kingdom - actually a rough-and-tumble democracy - to save a continent.

On that fateful afternoon, the Polish cavalry struck the Turkish lines with such force that 2,000 lances shattered. The charge stunned the Ottoman army. A hundred thousand Turks ran for the Danube.

No army from the Islamic world ever posed such a threat to the West again.

Poland's thanks for its courage? In the next century, the country was sliced up like a pie by the ungrateful Habsburgs, along with the Romanovs of Russia and the Prussian Hohenzollerns. It was the most cynical action in European history until the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact, which divided Poland again in 1939.

But the Poles never gave up their belief in their country - or in freedom. During our own revolution, our first allies were Polish freedom fighters such as Casimir Pulaski and Tadeusz Kosciusko. (Paris only joined the fight when it looked like we might win. And France intervened to spite Britain, not to help us.)

Throughout the 19th century, Poles fought for freedom wherever the struggle raged, in Latin America, Greece and Italy, and on the Union side in our Civil War. Although their country had been raped by the great powers of Europe, Poles kept her cause alive.

Again and again, Poles rose against their occupiers, only to be savagely put down, with their finest young men slaughtered or marched to Siberian prisons. Then, at the end of the Great War, Poland suddenly reappeared on the maps.

What did the Poles do? They immediately saved Western civilization yet again. In the now-forgotten "Miracle on the Vistula," a patched-together Polish army turned back the Red hordes headed for Berlin. One of history's most brilliant campaigns, it saved defeated Germany from a communist takeover.

Poland's thanks? The slaughter of World War II. Then the Soviet occupation.

But the Poles never gave up. Their language, their faith - and their martial traditions - were maintained with rigor and pride. Of all the countries that gained their freedom as the Soviet Union collapsed, none had struggled for liberty as relentlessly as Poland.

Now the Poles are defending freedom again. In Iraq. While the establishment media agonize over the fickle moods of Paris and Berlin, there's little mention in the press of the superb contribution made by our Polish allies - at great cost to their own country.

In the words of an American officer who works closely with them, "Poland has taken to the Iraq mission for idealistic and principled purposes: Its leadership and military truly believe that freedom and justice are universal values worth fighting for."

To how many other nations would those words apply?

Poland has deployed 2,500 of its best soldiers to Iraq. It sent $64 million worth of its newest equipment - which operations in Iraq will ruin. Warsaw selected its finest officers to command and staff the Multinational Division Center South. A Polish major general commands a total of 12,000 troops from 22 nations with responsibility for a sector previously held by twice as many U.S. Marines. The Polish performance has been flawless.

Their reward? Surely America must recognize such a great contribution from an economically struggling ally - at a time when Polish troops also support peacekeeping missions in Afghanistan and the Balkans?

Sorry. Turkey, which stabbed us as deeply in the back as it could on the eve of Operation Iraqi Freedom, will receive a minimum of $2 billion from Washington - and the same elements in the Rumsfeld cabal who failed to plan for the occupation of Iraq hope to increase our aid to Ankara to $5 billion.

Pakistan, which refuses to press home the fight against al Qaeda, will get billions from Washington. The repressive Egyptian regime will get a few billion, too, as it does every year. Even Yemen will get a welfare check from Uncle Sugar.

And Poland? Like the Czech Republic, which sent a few medics to the Persian Gulf then withdrew them in panic, Poland will get a standard package of $12 million for NATO-related programs. Other than some logistical support in Iraq, that's it. Strategic peanuts for our most enthusiastic ally on the European continent.

Poland did have one request - a humble one, in the great scheme of things. Warsaw asked for $47 million to modernize six used, American-built C-130 transport aircraft and to purchase American-built HMMWV all-terrain vehicles so elite Polish units could better integrate operations with American forces. Much of the money would go right back to U.S. factories and workers.

Our response? We stiffed them.

For once, the Pentagon and the State Department agree: No can do. Impossible. Our pocket are empty. Got to FedEx every penny to our favorite dictators.

It's a mistake to over-idealize any nation. But if there's a land of heroes anywhere between the English Channel and the coast of California, it's Poland. Our Polish allies have taken a brave, costly, principled stand for freedom and democracy in Iraq. They desperately want to be seen by Washington as reliable friends in this treacherous world.

The least we could do is to treat them with respect.

Monday, 10 November 2008

Black McCain and white Obama ( Obama all the way)


GREAT PICTURE

its old but i wanted to put it on ,y blog

Tuesday, 28 October 2008

sponsored condoms



which one is your favourite?

Trick or treat?


hannah : i always hated the cookie monster...


I bet the cookie monster didnt want to give her any sweets for haloween

Think of the sausages!

every time you look at the tomato ketchup its actually sausages blood. Think of the sausages!

Monday, 27 October 2008

True fan

Sunday, 26 October 2008

Get in there!



Im sorry but I couldn't stop myself xD

Banao Elite banana?

Yes.. I found it on ebay while looking for my new pencilcase...do you find it cute? All i can say that I dont want a pervy banana looking at me during biology.... just look at his eyes......










Saturday, 25 October 2008

gun shoes!



Oh yes, oh yes, oh yes they both

Oh yes, they both

Oh yes, they both reached for

The gun, the gun, the gun, the gun,

Oh yes, they both reached for the gun

for the gun.

(Chichago lyrics - We both reached for the gun)

I wouldn't be hard in these shoes :P they come from Chanel Cruise 2009 collection.

Drainage grafiti


I found it on
this blog. Its Slpuch blog :) pretty funky stuff:) Its graffiti on drainage systems :D





rave-vitamins and fat cats on your knees

Hello :)

this is my first blog lol. i tried so many names and spent about half an hour thinking about the name. Amount of posibilities that failed scare me....

But yes it ended up as rave-vitamins for some strange reason.

My cat influenced this blog because believe me or not, when this big furry thing crawls on your knees and sleeps on them, you cant move for the next 3 hours. No one was on msn and i couldnt be bothered with bebo anymore.....

So i made a blog.