Lech Walesa — "They must know that a minority cannot impose itself on the majority. They can at…"
They must know that a minority cannot impose itself on the majority. They can at most sit on the last bench and that's it.
They must know that a minority cannot impose itself on the majority. They can at most sit on the last bench and that's it.
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"Democracy is when people can spit in my face, and I have to wipe it off."
"I am not a dictator. I am a democrat."
"The time of words is over. Now is the time of deeds."
"If you want to be a politician, you have to be a little bit crazy."
"We have to build bridges, not walls."
Polish electrician who founded Solidarity in 1980, won the 1983 Nobel Peace Prize, and became the first post-communist president of Poland (1990-1995). Closely associated with Václav Havel (fellow Eastern-bloc dissident-turned-president) and Pope John Paul II (the Polish pope whose 1979 visit catalyzed Solidarity). For an intellectual contrast, see Wojciech Jaruzelski, Polish general and Communist leader — Jaruzelski imposed martial law in 1981, banned Solidarity, and interned Wałęsa. He represented the Soviet-backed institutional power Solidarity's nonviolent labor movement was organized to displace — they ultimately signed the 1989 Round Table Talks together that ended Polish communism.
Interview with Radio Maryja, referring to gay politicians in parliament
Date: 2013
Social & RacialFound in 1 providers: grok
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