I am 100% polish and don't know how to feel about the taking in of rap culture. Although I feel some shame, I actually enjoy this music. He is talking about tying a person up and cutting off their head.
Here is a better example of Polish music, it is more upbeat; Disco Polo.
Same here. White kids listening to Arab/Turkish/Kurdish rap music. The shit is everywhere, and it is always a sign of the lower class, since it is basically jew music.
When I was your age, I was under age influence too. Start listening to electronic, techno or hard rock. It is white music by definitipn. Metal is for the teenagers. Red pill your friends.
Rap is for pussies.
Xavier Fisher
This was my only casette, when I was living in Poland back in the early 90s.
I grew up in Jersey City(The most diverse city in US) and it may have had a great influence on me. But yeah, I do listen to a lot of electronic and techno already, but some rap gets me hyped up for some reason.
>Does music represent culture as a whole or should it hold lesser value? It should represent culture. It was used to. I'm not against music evolving though, but I oppose how they dumbed music down to the lowest common denominator.
They broke our culture, our art, our music... They desecrated everything we had and attacked from all fronts. Western culture will never be the same, but let's hope we rise better than ever from the ashes.
Look at eastern Europe. Commies tried to kill culture, nationality yet they failed and now eastern European nationalism as strong as ever. Don't lose hope yet.
Chase Allen
>I am 100% polish If you're a citizen you're 100% American
Nathaniel Johnson
I appreciate your encouraging words and I haven't lost hope yet. I long for a big upheaval and I hope that we all get to witness it.
Jason Jackson
> Commies tried to kill culture, nationality yet they failed
Where do you take your information from, your local Pravda outlet?
> up until the 60's, the Soviets had complete hegemony and control over the Eastern European countries, micro managing everything with local proxies and not allowing the expression of nationality as it was seen as a dangerous contribution to the Block. > after the Soviets retreated most of their armies from the Eastern European countries, the local communists slowly but surely shifted to a more national-driven policy, encouraging the population to express gratitude and pride regarding their own country > In between the 60's and 90's, up until the fall of the Iron Curtain, the sense of nationality and patriotism was cultivated like hell (especially in my country). Ceausescu actually tried to brake apart from the Soviet control, shifting his axis from Moscow to Beijing, as the Chinese Communists were in competition with the soviets. > Culture, nationality, patriotism, preservation of history etc, all of these were actively promoted by the communists in order to strengthen the populace, to give them a common goal at the end of the day.
Hell, Socialist Romania was considered to be officially atheist, as the commies did not look at religion with a good eye. That did not stop the preservation of our orthodox values, that did not stop the people to go to church, and after more than 40-50 years of commie rule, 90% of our populace consider themselves to be active orthodox.
Adrian Wood
>yea commies tried to kill culture and nationality, but they failded That is exactly what I wrote