THE LAST DITCH

Wawa-1

Al. Jana Pawla II

It's not that my enthusiasm for travel blogging is not as great as it was for the political kind, it's just that I don't travel as much as I think about politics!

My latest trip was last weekend, to Poland. I dislike flying these days; mostly because I flew millions of miles during my professional life and prefer now to watch the world go by from ground level. Also I avoid it because the airport "security theatre" gets pointlessly worse each time.

Still it's a short flight to Warsaw and was well worth it.

I lived and worked in Poland from 1992 until I moved to Moscow in 2003. My daughters' childhood memories are set there and I have more friends in Warsaw than in London. This trip was purely for the pleasure of meeting as many of them as I could.

I also took the opportunity to attend the Caledonian Ball, which is held there by the Scottish community (and their fanbase) on St Andrews Day. One of my Polish friends is such a nut about Scotland that he has his own kilt etc. He even has the right to his own tartan now! I, more conventionally clad, sat on his table and enjoyed the malt and the company.

The city has changed quite a lot since my last visit a couple of years ago and no longer much resembles the city I first saw in 1992. I wish every Guardian reader in Britain could have the experience of contrasting a great capital city wrecked by fifty years of Socialism with its counterpart rebuilt by the market forces they so despise.  I had the pleasure of being driven around last Saturday by an old friend who is a leading Polish urbanist, so was updated in more detail than most could handle! I enjoyed it though. It was good to see in reality projects that were just twinkles in capitalists' eyes when I left.

There are more pictures (and a high-resolution version of this one) here if you are interested.

4 responses to “It’s been a while, Warsaw”

  1. Furor Teutonicus Avatar
    Furor Teutonicus

    XX I wish every Guardian reader in Britain could have the experience of contrasting a great capital city wrecked by fifty years of Socialism with its counterpart rebuilt by the market forces they so despise. XX
    I live in one, and even after all the time since the wall fell over, in only ten minutes with the U-Bahn/S-Bahn, you can be right in the middle of what the DDER left over of “Their” Berlin.
    It is getting less, but that makes the contrast so much more obvious.

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  2. Furor Teutonicus Avatar
    Furor Teutonicus

    THAT should be DDR! :-§

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  3. Tom Avatar

    Guardianisti should be marched at gunpoint from one to the other until even the stupidest gets the point. Lucky for their delusions our worldview doesn’t permit such measures as theirs does.

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  4. James Higham Avatar
    James Higham

    If we’re interested? Very much interested and thanks.

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Tom is a retired international lawyer. He was a partner in a City of London law firm and spent almost twenty years abroad serving clients from all over the world.

Returning to London on retirement in 2011, he was dismayed to discover how much liberty had been lost in the UK while he was away.

He’s a classical liberal (libertarian, if you must) who, like his illustrious namesake, considers that

“…government even in its best state is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”

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