RadioBanter

RadioBanter (https://www.radiobanter.com/)
-   Shortwave (https://www.radiobanter.com/shortwave/)
-   -   SPECIAL: Democracy requires revolution (https://www.radiobanter.com/shortwave/141359-special-democracy-requires-revolution.html)

dave March 1st 09 01:53 PM

SPECIAL: Democracy requires revolution
 

Saturday, 4. November 1989
Foto

The center of East Berlin has been entirely filled with demonstrators
since the early morning. Traffic has come to a complete standstill.
Actors wearing green and yellow sashes bearing the slogan »No Violence«
are on hand to keep order, and are accepted goodnaturedly by everyone. A
security partnership with the People's Police has been established.

There are almost no uniforms in sight, not even in front of the People's
Chamber and the Council of State building, which in the course of five
hours will see hundreds of thousands file past, demanding freedom of
press and assembly and radical reform. According to official estimates,
more than half a million people take part in this, the largest protest
demonstration in East German history. It concludes with a rally on
Alexanderplatz that opens with actor Ulrich Mühe expressing what
everyone is feeling: »It was just wonderful.« East Berlin has never
witnessed so much shared determination and imaginative spontaneity, in
such a radical yet calm atmosphere.

Author Christa Wolf points out that the revolutionary movement has also
liberated speech: »What was so difficult to articulate before suddenly
rolls freely from our tongues. We are amazed at what we have obviously
been thinking for so long, and what we now call out to each other,
Democracy - now or never!, by which we mean power to the people.«

Even though the difficult phase of restructuring still lies ahead, all
agree on this day that East Germany has changed more in the past four
weeks than in all the previous four decades. November 4 becomes a
milestone. The SED leadership can no longer ignore the demands of the
masses; there is no going back to old methods of rule.

© 1999, Christoph Links Verlag, Berlin

[email protected] March 1st 09 03:08 PM

SPECIAL: Democracy requires revolution
 
On Mar 1, 7:53*am, dave wrote:
Saturday, 4. November 1989
Foto

The center of East Berlin has been entirely filled with demonstrators
since the early morning. Traffic has come to a complete standstill.
Actors wearing green and yellow sashes bearing the slogan »No Violence«
are on hand to keep order, and are accepted goodnaturedly by everyone. A
security partnership with the People's Police has been established.

There are almost no uniforms in sight, not even in front of the People's
Chamber and the Council of State building, which in the course of five
hours will see hundreds of thousands file past, demanding freedom of
press and assembly and radical reform. According to official estimates,
more than half a million people take part in this, the largest protest
demonstration in East German history. It concludes with a rally on
Alexanderplatz that opens with actor Ulrich Mühe expressing what
everyone is feeling: »It was just wonderful.« East Berlin has never
witnessed so much shared determination and imaginative spontaneity, in
such a radical yet calm atmosphere.

Author Christa Wolf points out that the revolutionary movement has also
liberated speech: »What was so difficult to articulate before suddenly
rolls freely from our tongues. We are amazed at what we have obviously
been thinking for so long, and what we now call out to each other,
*Democracy - now or never!, by which we mean power to the people.«
Even though the difficult phase of restructuring still lies ahead, all
agree on this day that East Germany has changed more in the past four
weeks than in all the previous four decades. November 4 becomes a
milestone. The SED leadership can no longer ignore the demands of the
masses; there is no going back to old methods of rule.

© 1999, Christoph Links Verlag, Berlin


Eastern Europeans thank President Ronald Reagan, Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher and Pope John Paul II for their freedom from
Communist tyranny:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/commandingheights/

Dr.DaviD, PhD [Piled Highest & Deepest] scarfed this from the WOODROW
WILSON Center.

You know Woodrow Wilson:

The first president to have a "PhD"
The first "Liberal Fascist" President
The first "Socialist" president who implimented numerous entitlement
progroms which ended the first greatest U.S. economic expansion.
The "Liberal Fascist" President who brought the United States into
World War I.

Wilson and his supporters welcomed World War I as an opportunity to
expand the state, instituting “war socialism” and a far-reaching
crackdown on dissent.

FDR picked up where Wilson left off. The crisis of the Great
Depression was the occasion for reviving “war socialism.” The man who
ran the National Recovery Administration was an open admirer of
Mussolini, and the alphabet soup of New Deal agencies had their roots
in World War I and the classic fascist impulse to mobilize society and
put it on a war footing.

and now enter ObaMao - stage Left... HEIL HITLER!

Yes, Dr.DaviD, PhD [Piled Highest & Deepest] Democracy does require
Revolution - AGAINST SOCIALIST/MARXIST MURDEROUS TYRANNY.

Oh yes - the revolution quitely assembles.

[email protected] March 1st 09 05:20 PM

SPECIAL: Democracy requires revolution
 
On Mar 1, 9:45*am, dave wrote:
wrote:
On Mar 1, 7:53 am, dave wrote:
Saturday, 4. November 1989
Foto


The center of East Berlin has been entirely filled with demonstrators
since the early morning. Traffic has come to a complete standstill.
Actors wearing green and yellow sashes bearing the slogan »No Violence«
are on hand to keep order, and are accepted goodnaturedly by everyone. A
security partnership with the People's Police has been established.


There are almost no uniforms in sight, not even in front of the People's
Chamber and the Council of State building, which in the course of five
hours will see hundreds of thousands file past, demanding freedom of
press and assembly and radical reform. According to official estimates,
more than half a million people take part in this, the largest protest
demonstration in East German history. It concludes with a rally on
Alexanderplatz that opens with actor Ulrich Mühe expressing what
everyone is feeling: »It was just wonderful.« East Berlin has never
witnessed so much shared determination and imaginative spontaneity, in
such a radical yet calm atmosphere.


Author Christa Wolf points out that the revolutionary movement has also
liberated speech: »What was so difficult to articulate before suddenly
rolls freely from our tongues. We are amazed at what we have obviously
been thinking for so long, and what we now call out to each other,
*Democracy - now or never!, by which we mean power to the people.«
Even though the difficult phase of restructuring still lies ahead, all
agree on this day that East Germany has changed more in the past four
weeks than in all the previous four decades. November 4 becomes a
milestone. The SED leadership can no longer ignore the demands of the
masses; there is no going back to old methods of rule.


© 1999, Christoph Links Verlag, Berlin


Eastern Europeans thank President Ronald Reagan, Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher and Pope John Paul II for their freedom from
Communist tyranny:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/commandingheights/


In your warped little world, perhaps. *It was West German TV that roused
the Berliners; *Gorbachev was already dismantling the Soviet Union when
the Wall came down. *Reagan and Thatcher were a sideshow. *Lech Walesa
did more than the Polish Pope.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


bwaHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH AHAHA
Yet another Neo-Commie propaganda lie!

My gosh, are you an imbecile.

Telamon March 1st 09 07:20 PM

SPECIAL: Democracy requires revolution
 
In article ,
dave wrote:

Saturday, 4. November 1989
Foto

The center of East Berlin has been entirely filled with demonstrators
since the early morning. Traffic has come to a complete standstill.
Actors wearing green and yellow sashes bearing the slogan »No Violence«
are on hand to keep order, and are accepted goodnaturedly by everyone. A
security partnership with the People's Police has been established.

There are almost no uniforms in sight, not even in front of the People's
Chamber and the Council of State building, which in the course of five
hours will see hundreds of thousands file past, demanding freedom of
press and assembly and radical reform. According to official estimates,
more than half a million people take part in this, the largest protest
demonstration in East German history. It concludes with a rally on
Alexanderplatz that opens with actor Ulrich Mühe expressing what
everyone is feeling: »It was just wonderful.« East Berlin has never
witnessed so much shared determination and imaginative spontaneity, in
such a radical yet calm atmosphere.

Author Christa Wolf points out that the revolutionary movement has also
liberated speech: »What was so difficult to articulate before suddenly
rolls freely from our tongues. We are amazed at what we have obviously
been thinking for so long, and what we now call out to each other,
Democracy - now or never!, by which we mean power to the people.«

Even though the difficult phase of restructuring still lies ahead, all
agree on this day that East Germany has changed more in the past four
weeks than in all the previous four decades. November 4 becomes a
milestone. The SED leadership can no longer ignore the demands of the
masses; there is no going back to old methods of rule.

© 1999, Christoph Links Verlag, Berlin


WWIII draws closer every day.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California

dxAce March 1st 09 08:10 PM

SPECIAL: Democracy requires revolution
 


wrote:

On Mar 1, 9:45 am, dave wrote:
wrote:
On Mar 1, 7:53 am, dave wrote:
Saturday, 4. November 1989
Foto


The center of East Berlin has been entirely filled with demonstrators
since the early morning. Traffic has come to a complete standstill.
Actors wearing green and yellow sashes bearing the slogan »No Violence«
are on hand to keep order, and are accepted goodnaturedly by everyone. A
security partnership with the People's Police has been established.


There are almost no uniforms in sight, not even in front of the People's
Chamber and the Council of State building, which in the course of five
hours will see hundreds of thousands file past, demanding freedom of
press and assembly and radical reform. According to official estimates,
more than half a million people take part in this, the largest protest
demonstration in East German history. It concludes with a rally on
Alexanderplatz that opens with actor Ulrich Mühe expressing what
everyone is feeling: »It was just wonderful.« East Berlin has never
witnessed so much shared determination and imaginative spontaneity, in
such a radical yet calm atmosphere.


Author Christa Wolf points out that the revolutionary movement has also
liberated speech: »What was so difficult to articulate before suddenly
rolls freely from our tongues. We are amazed at what we have obviously
been thinking for so long, and what we now call out to each other,
Democracy - now or never!, by which we mean power to the people.«
Even though the difficult phase of restructuring still lies ahead, all
agree on this day that East Germany has changed more in the past four
weeks than in all the previous four decades. November 4 becomes a
milestone. The SED leadership can no longer ignore the demands of the
masses; there is no going back to old methods of rule.


© 1999, Christoph Links Verlag, Berlin


Eastern Europeans thank President Ronald Reagan, Prime Minister
Margaret Thatcher and Pope John Paul II for their freedom from
Communist tyranny:
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/commandingheights/

In your warped little world, perhaps. It was West German TV that roused
the Berliners; Gorbachev was already dismantling the Soviet Union when
the Wall came down. Reagan and Thatcher were a sideshow. Lech Walesa
did more than the Polish Pope.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


bwaHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH AHAHA
Yet another Neo-Commie propaganda lie!

My gosh, are you an imbecile.


He lives in Daves World!



dave March 1st 09 09:56 PM

SPECIAL: Democracy requires revolution
 
Bob Dobbs wrote:
Telamon wrote:
WWIII draws closer every day.


You better hope not,
Ventura is well within the coastal target zone
for a lot of ****ed off nations.


They have spook **** at Pt. Mugu.

Telamon March 2nd 09 12:25 AM

SPECIAL: Democracy requires revolution
 
In article 49ac0380.9745437@chupacabra,
Bob Dobbs wrote:

Telamon wrote:

WWIII draws closer every day.


You better hope not,
Ventura is well within the coastal target zone
for a lot of ****ed off nations.


They would never bomb Hollywood, where else are they going to get their
entertainment?

--
Telamon
Ventura, California

Telamon March 2nd 09 12:28 AM

SPECIAL: Democracy requires revolution
 
In article ,
dave wrote:

Bob Dobbs wrote:
Telamon wrote:
WWIII draws closer every day.


You better hope not,
Ventura is well within the coastal target zone
for a lot of ****ed off nations.


They have spook **** at Pt. Mugu.


The Port Hueneme navel base is even closer to me.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California

Telamon March 2nd 09 12:47 AM

SPECIAL: Democracy requires revolution
 
In article 49ab29c1.4219593@chupacabra,
Bob Dobbs wrote:

Telamon wrote:
In article 49ac0380.9745437@chupacabra,
Bob Dobbs wrote:

Telamon wrote:

WWIII draws closer every day.

You better hope not,
Ventura is well within the coastal target zone
for a lot of ****ed off nations.


They would never bomb Hollywood, where else are they going to get their
entertainment?


...but they might aim just a bit north to prove a point


There could be a small input error that sends it your way.

--
Telamon
Ventura, California

[email protected] March 2nd 09 02:05 AM

SPECIAL: Democracy requires revolution
 
Want to know one of the reasons why the PIAPS/Pig In A Pants
Suit/Hitlery Beast Klintoon recently went to China?

www.tbrnews.org
Mass Counterfeiting of American Coins.
cuhulin



All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:40 AM.

Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
RadioBanter.com