Strona startowa Ludzie pragną czasami się rozstawać, żeby móc tęsknić, czekać i cieszyć się z powrotem.swiadkowie bozego milosierdzia- Ostatnim etapem mojego planu jest wylanie mojego miłosierdzia na was wszystkich...gegen alles, was Menschen heilig zu sein vermag, in das Feld zogen, Staat und Regierung in der infamsten {267 Die "anständige" Presse} Weise angriffen...1981 114 Nazwa programu KARMANIOLA Ile wściekłości trwoga w was zajadła Potrafi ciągle z ludzkiej dobyć mowy A wszak Bastylia...you carried away?16:11 How is it you do not understand that it was not aboutbread that I spoke to you? But beware of the yeast of thePharisees and Sadducees...Powiedz, co się stało? Co oni zrobili z wami? Gdzie jest „Zielone Pudło”? Ograbili was i wy- gnali...Co do zdarzeń, na poziomie grupy, to nie mogę wam chyba powiedzieć nic, co miałoby dla was jakiekolwiek znaczenie...The performance (speed) and the reliability of the connection with my kppp was much improved after I upgraded from RH5..."You know what they say afterwards," she was going on...say the weather was...It was all very awful...
 

Ludzie pragną czasami się rozstawać, żeby móc tęsknić, czekać i cieszyć się z powrotem.


In the old Danubian Monarchy political thought was wider in its range and had a richer variety of interests than in the Germany of that epoch – excepting certain parts of Prussia, Hamburg and the districts bordering on the North Sea. When I speak of Austria here I mean that part of the great Habsburg Empire which, by reason of its German population, furnished not only the historic basis for the formation of this State but whose population was for several centuries also the exclusive source of cultural life in that political system whose structure was so artificial. As time went on the stability of the Austrian State and the guarantee of its continued existence depended more and more on the maintenance of this germ−cell of that Habsburg Empire.
The hereditary imperial provinces constituted the heart of the Empire. And it was this heart that constantly sent the blood of life pulsating through the whole political and cultural system. Corresponding to the heart of the Empire, Vienna signified the brain and the will. At that time Vienna presented an appearance which made one think of her as an enthroned queen whose authoritative sway united the conglomeration of heterogenous nationalities that lived under the Habsburg sceptre. The radiant beauty of the capital city made one forget the sad symptoms of senile decay which the State manifested as a whole.
Though the Empire was internally rickety because of the terrific conflict going on between the various nationalities, the outside world – and Germany in particular – saw only that lovely picture of the city. The illusion was all the greater because at that time Vienna seemed to have risen to its highest pitch of splendour.
Under a Mayor, who had the true stamp of administrative genius, the venerable residential City of the Emperors of the old Empire seemed to have the glory of its youth renewed. The last great German who sprang from the ranks of the people that had colonized the East Mark was not a ‘statesman’, in the official sense. This Dr. Luegar, however, in his rôle as Mayor of ‘the Imperial Capital and Residential City’, had achieved so much in almost all spheres of municipal activity, whether economic or cultural, that the heart of 41
Mein Kampf
the whole Empire throbbed with renewed vigour. He thus proved himself a much greater statesman than the so−called ‘diplomats’ of that period.
The fact that this political system of heterogeneous races called Austria, finally broke down is no evidence whatsoever of political incapacity on the part of the German element in the old East Mark. The collapse was the inevitable result of an impossible situation. Ten million people cannot permanently hold together a State of fifty millions, composed of different and convicting nationalities, unless certain definite pre−requisite conditions are at hand while there is still time to avail of them.
The German−Austrian had very big ways of thinking. Accustomed to live in a great Empire, he had a keen sense of the obligations incumbent on him in such a situation. He was the only member of the Austrian State who looked beyond the borders of the narrow lands belonging to the Crown and took in all the frontiers of the Empire in the sweep of his mind. Indeed when destiny severed him from the common Fatherland he tried to master the tremendous task which was set before him as a consequence. This task was to maintain for the German−Austrians that patrimony which, through innumerable struggles, their ancestors had originally wrested from the East. It must be remembered that the German−Austrians could not put their undivided strength into this effort, because the hearts and minds of the best among them were constantly turning back towards their kinsfolk in the Motherland, so that only a fraction of their energy remained to be employed at home.