
el asesino92
Iron
- Joined
- Apr 24, 2025
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Slavic people can be incredibly nationalistic, sometimes to the point of being obnoxious. Take Ukrainians, for example — they never stop going on about Crimea being theirs, even though it was handed over to Ukraine by Soviet leaders, not because of any real historical claim. When Russia took it back in 2014, it was just returning to where it always belonged. Belarus is pretty much just a small Russian state, and Ukraine isn’t all that different. It’s almost laughable how similar they are.
It’s even more frustrating when some of these groups act like they’re so above the whole immigration debate in Western Europe. Their ancestors were the ones flooding Europe centuries ago, and now they’re up in arms about immigrants from the Middle East or Africa. It’s a little hypocritical, don’t you think?
And then there’s Poland. Polish people, honestly, can be exhausting. They’re so obsessed with “cultural purity” that it just comes off as arrogant and out of touch. They’re so focused on their own sense of pride that they forget how much better it is to work together with the rest of Europe. Their need to hold on to their own ego-driven nationalism makes them tough to deal with sometimes.
At the end of the day, it’s clear that these countries are more concerned with their own pride than with actually building a stronger, more united Europe. Whether they’re arguing over Crimea or constantly complaining about immigration, their brand of nationalism just holds Europe back.
It’s even more frustrating when some of these groups act like they’re so above the whole immigration debate in Western Europe. Their ancestors were the ones flooding Europe centuries ago, and now they’re up in arms about immigrants from the Middle East or Africa. It’s a little hypocritical, don’t you think?
And then there’s Poland. Polish people, honestly, can be exhausting. They’re so obsessed with “cultural purity” that it just comes off as arrogant and out of touch. They’re so focused on their own sense of pride that they forget how much better it is to work together with the rest of Europe. Their need to hold on to their own ego-driven nationalism makes them tough to deal with sometimes.
At the end of the day, it’s clear that these countries are more concerned with their own pride than with actually building a stronger, more united Europe. Whether they’re arguing over Crimea or constantly complaining about immigration, their brand of nationalism just holds Europe back.
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