Sunday, December 3, 2017

THE UNITED EUROPE THIRD REICH MEMBERSHIP CARD IS VALID FOR THE EU OF TODAY

Belgrade and Zagreb in 1941 through the German soldier's lens / VIDEO

Source
Rasen

They've had a dream! From Napoleon, via Hitler to the Present day. The Third Reich didn't manage to establish The United Europe for longer than 1939 - 1945. The United Europe they led to conquer Russia. Wild hordes of the UE reached the doorway of Moscow, passing through Ukraine. Serbs were not in that Horde. We didn't want to. However, apple polishing Croatians were there. They kissed Serb's arse in 1918., but in 1941 it was the "Danke Deutchland" time, like in 1991.
The EU appeared to be not different from UE. The Fourth Reich had gathered its former allies. Unlike the British and the French, the Germans did not forget their allies from the wars of the 20th century. Especially from the Second World War. They are all in the EU, now! Croatia and Bulgaria and Hungary and Romania. Only Muslims from Bosnia and Albania are missing, but this is another story.
Just compare the UE from 1941, and EU of today, and the similarities are striking. Britain is "isolated island", again. EU is fighting Russians in Ukraine, advancing toward Moscow. All Serbian neighbors are in EU - Romania, Hungary, Bulgaria, Croatia. Bosnia and Herzegovina are a Protectorate (like before the Great War). Great Albania is under reconstruction like in WWII. Muslims are pets of the West used to pacify Serbs. 
The path of Croatia toward EU began in 1941. Let's see how ...  

Monday, April 17, 2017

A PRIZE FOR "STABILITY" IS A FAIRY TALE FOR THE ONE, AND A CRUEL REALITY FOR MANY

Germany Praises Serbia as Source of Stability, Enabling a Fairy Tale for a Good European


By
Dragoslav DEDOVIĆ (partly)
Source
Deutsche Welle

Whether it’s kissing frogs, slaying dragons or battling wits with the wicked witch, fairy tales hold salient leadership lessons for today’s executives..
And fairy tales, with their immediately recognizable dramatics, characters and fundamental moral truths provide universal insights into human behavior, illustrating the dangers of leadership and various ways in which executives can derail.
The Emperor is like many leaders we encounter. They can be intimidating, even frightening, but when we study them more carefully, we realize their power and authority have no substance.
Fairy tales are written in such a way to make executives aware of the dangers they will encounter on their various quests and the fundamental issues they will confront associated with the leadership mystique. There are five "deadly dangers":
• The first danger, one many leaders are prone to, is lack of self-knowledge. Why do some leaders succeed and others derail? What differentiates effective and ineffective leaders? Why do bad things happen?
• The second is hubris. Many leaders become too arrogant and lose touch with reality. Why do so many leaders self-destruct in this way?
• The third danger is a leader’s inability to get the best out of people. Ineffective leaders fail to stretch the people who work for them. They don’t know how to make people better than who they think they can be.
• Linked to this danger is the fourth and greater danger, a leader’s inability to create well-functioning teams. Effective leaders are aware of and accept their personal limitations and surround themselves with people who have the strengths they lack, creating executive role constellations of people with complementary characteristics.
• The fifth danger is the creation of an organizational gulag. What is it that prevents leaders building great places to work? And why are there so many workplaces that stifle people? 

A leader does not just need the right tools. To be an effective leader, they need to recognize their own unique capabilities and passions. 
The model of the hero or heroine, who struggles and eventually succeeds by taking resolute action, may stimulate emerging leaders to do the same. Although fairy tales take us into imaginary realms, peopled with talking animals and monstrous beings.
In life, what really matters is that we have the chance to be what we are, and to become what we are capable of becoming. One of the greatest human fears is that at the end of our life we might discover that we have never really lived. We all have the urge to live fully, to do something significant, and to make a difference.
The messages contained in fairy tales can be seen as warnings of what can go wrong for people in a leadership position. However, they are also intended to inspire hope and the belief that something better can be achieved. With this in mind, reading fairy tales with open ears and heart may help leaders understand what they can do better. 
[The picture on the top left has no connection with the above text, beside a convenient title. The above text consists of parts recomposed from the larger text entitled "Leadership Lessons From the Brothers Grimm"]

Thursday, April 6, 2017

76 YEARS SINCE THE AXIS FORCES AGGRESSION ON THE KINGDOM OF YUGOSLAVIA AND THE BOMBING OF BELGRADE

WWII
Belgrade 41: Hitler’s Attack


By
Carl SAVICH
Source
Serbianna

On this very day, April 6, 1941 - Axis in the form of Nazi Germany bombed Belgrade, although it was declared an open city! This was followed by shredding the Kingdom of Yugoslavia to pieces... .Yugoslavia was fragmented, in very similar way to how it is fragmented today when the Fourth Reich united with our former false allies of World War II attacked Yugoslavia in 1991, and bombed Belgrade in 1999. The same people who were enslaved Yugoslavia in 1941, hold us in slavery today. The same who betrayed the country of South Slavs in 1941, they betrayed it today.  
We won than. We gonna win this time, again!

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

BARI 1991- RED STAR BELGRADE’S EPIC JOURNEY TO EUROPEAN GLORY

The night of May 29 1991 will be forever written in the football history books as the single most successful moment of a nation sitting on the cusps of extinction—Yugoslavia..
Symbolically enough, the country’s civil war and the subsequent break up were symbolized by an unbelievable football story, which at the same time also stood for the best things former Yugoslavia should be remembered by. The last hooray of a golden generation of, according to western standards, an obscure group of players who managed to beat the odds in a formidable manner and grab a European crown right in front of the noses of a football Goliath, is an epic endeavor which is unlikely to be repeated by a club from the Balkans or even Eastern Europe.
It was the night when Red Star Belgrade won the European Cup, beating French powerhouse Olympic Marseilles on penalties, after a goalless 90 minutes and additional 30 of extra-time at the final, which played out at the Stadium San Nicola in Bari.