Thursday, July 16, 2009
Jerzy Buzek press conference
just because I love U2
[description directly from EU Tube]
you can read more on U2.com
Tuesday, July 14, 2009
rejoice and celebrate with Buzek and all Poles
As I myself am just reading everything published in the last 40 min, excuse lack of comments, this time links only:
Gazeta Wyborcza
WSJ
AP
Reuters
BBC
AFP
The New York Times
Europarl tv:
Opinions from some bloggers:
2. "But Jerzy Buzek is still the wrong choice, for three simple reasons:
* He is old.
* He is male.
* He has built his political career on national politics.
(...)
Party politics and power positions are dominated by old males. With Barroso in place for a second term on top of the European Commission, and with no women in sight for the post of European Council president and High Representative for Foreign and Security Policy (if the Lisbon Treaty is ratified), the post of the European Parliament president could have been the only one where MEPs could have made a point for equal opportunities and equal share of power. But they have missed their chance." [from: Julien Frisch Watching Europe]
3. "Sucede al alemán Hans-Gert Pöttering Cuando el card. Ratzinger fue elegido Papa, circulaba un chiste en Alemania: ¿sabes en qué se nota que Hartz IV (la reforma al mercado laboral) da resultado? En que un alemán reemplaza a un polaco en un trabajo. Hoy es al revés ;)" [from: Alemania: Economía, Sociedad y Derecho]
Friday, July 10, 2009
EU losers generation
"Today's 'baby losers', as they are also known, are increasingly a minority in Europe. They are portrayed as well-educated but overqualified in some respects, which explains the seemingly never-ending unpaid intern phase many are forced to endure. They are the generation that passively boomerangs back to their parents' homes once they have run out of options and motivation. They are also the precarious generation suffering from the crisis of the welfare state, who will experience the effects of ageing and demographic change to the fullest in the course of their own lives. "
An entire generation summed up in a paragraph, and how non-optimistically;( There is as usual more to read but it was this particular excerpt that 'shook me'.
Other generations of course had it bad, the ones turned adults just as the war broke out naturally had it worse, but our future (as described in the above article) seems plain gloomy. It not only makes the today sound bad, it gives little hope of ever bouncing up and away from the current state. Very depressing. I have to say if the intention was to spear us up, motivate to do and stimulate to proactively steer circumstances towards the better - for me it had the opposite effect, just lay and do nothing, as it's never gonna get better, your efforts and hard work will be all in vain, might as well, not bother at all. brrr... not a feeling I like to have induced.
I like to believe that everything in nature finds it's balance, there are sinusoidal ups and downs, which are brought on by human impact or by nature itself, but in the long run, things bounce back and settle into 'norm'. This is not to say that I am a supporter of doing nothing because things 'settle on their own' (sometimes this settling can take a generation's lifetime, a century or more), just means I don't like 'scaring' with dark perspectives. Just a mistaken approach according to me. You can stimulate someone much more with a carrot than with a stick, or am I wrong?
Thursday, July 9, 2009
Can Sweden please hold the presidency for longer than just 0.5y?
You can read all about food that has 25 % lower climate impact here.
Wednesday, July 8, 2009
se plaire
I always get it wrong, between wanting to say: I like Brussels, I like Lucy, we like each other, Lucy likes me, gggrrr again! Someone needs to explain this to me:(
plaire /plɛʀ/ (conjugate⇒)
- plaire à verb+preposition
- elle plaît aux hommes men find her attractive;
elle m'a plu tout de suite I liked her straight away;
- mon travail me plaît I like my job;
un modèle qui plaît beaucoup a very popular model.
- elle plaît aux hommes men find her attractive;
- se plaire reflexive verb (+ v être)
- [people, couple] to like each other;
- ils se plaisent ici they like it here;
- il se plaît à dire qu'il est issu du peuple he likes to say that he's a son of the people.
Thursday, July 2, 2009
vaya tela marinera: ALDE, Greens and Socialists team up
Guy Verhofstadt "(...) not accept timetables imposed on Parliament".
Martin Schulz: "a victory on blocking the fast-track reappointment of Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso."
EPP's 264 and European Conservatives and Reformists (ECR)'s 56 votes, not enough for the 368 simple majority.
more here
Wednesday, July 1, 2009
some European fears of the Lisbon Treaty settled
Moreover, (...) the treaty does "not confer on the European Union the competence to use the member states' armed forces without the approval of the respective member state affected".
Now we just wait for some necessary changes (in September) to the German national legislation (also a recommendation of the German Constituional Court), of course later (in October) for the Irish referendum, ultimately for Lech Kaczyński and Václav Klaus...
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
should I stay or should I go
I guess all I need to do is complain a little;)
Ps. I've been adding quite a few restaurants to my right hand side list. Almost all of the ones I've visited so far have been great, some have been just OK, but still good, just not recommendable enough, none have been terrible:) That is another wonderful aspect of Brussels, the variety of food and it's quality:) Plus the service is usually just excellent, friendly, awake, aware, with a smile and ready to assist you - I know a few locations where this package is either incomplete, not present at all, or very very rare...;)
I absolutely recommend going to all of the places on my list, and if anyone will have a bad experience in any of those, I just won't believe it...:)
Sunday, June 21, 2009
you need warmer clothes in the summer than in the winter...
And I even chose Alaska for a honeymoon, so I really enjoy cold summers; but not like this. Not when dressing for the weather means still feeling cold.
In fact all weekend long I've been having Alaska déjà vus and didn't know why. That was the last place during summer when I felt this cold and so bulky from all the layers I had on LOL. Alaska was much more dry though....
Wednesday, June 17, 2009
the Eurocity in barbed wire
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
understanding the current situation of the EU
Perhaps a side topic, but definately related to the moment's unsettled issues, is something I have not paid attention to, i.e. the number of commissioners who participated in the latest EP elections, and the implications of this, in the event they got reappointed for commissioner. This section I'll just paste in directly, as it's really thought provoking...
Of particular interest this year, however, was the fact that a number of commissioners put themselves forward for June's EU elections as high-profile names on their national party lists. According to EU rules, if commissioners choose to return to their home countries to engage in active campaigning, they must leave their positions. However, if they simply attach their name to a party list, they are not required to step down.
As a result, a commissioner could, in theory, head an electoral list in their member state and gain many votes due to his/her high profile, then decide to not take up their seat in the Parliament, thus passing their seat to the next person on the list, all the while continuing to work for the EU executive. Indeed, this is precisely what happened as Commissioners Kuneva, Hübner and Reding topped the poll in Bulgaria, Poland and Luxembourg respectively.
Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, president of the Party of European Socialists (PES), told EurActiv that "some commissioners will use their position to promote themselves as candidates. That is wrong, and the president of the Commission should insist that anyone who does so must stand down".
Strongly rebuking this practice, Rasmussen said although "commissioners are party-political," they "need to keep their official duties very separate from their political activities," adding that he "can name, shame and complain" if he believes "commissioners are abusing their positions or taking advantage of their president's party-political sympathies".
[edit] Although, since I just read that Lewandowski was chosen for the Polish Commissioner I guess, at least in the case of Poland, there won't be dissapointed voters who will realise they have given their support to a person, who has turned down to represent them, and passed on the mandate to the next in line....who doesn't necessarly have to be bad...just wasn't the one voted for...
Let's see what happens in Bulgaria and Luxembourg.
Sunday, June 14, 2009
3 things I love about Brussels
Number 1 - plenty of roses. everywhere you look there's a rose garden, either a public space, the entrance of an apartment building, the front lawn of someone's private home, often they just grow wild, next to a tree in the middle of a sidewalk. Additional plus, they smell. The ones in The Netherlands never smelled. God knows I searched and searched up and down the bloemenmarkt, and all the flower shops of the Jordaan...
Number 2 - brids singing. For the moment we live in a place not too far away from the Council and Commission, so it's not literally in the centre, but it's still central Brussels. It's a jogging 7 minutes away from the Berlaymont. Our windows do go out to an interior courtyrard rather then the busy street, but still, we are right on a busy road. And I hear birds all day long. How perfect:)
Number 3 - so many people jog. The Cinquantenaire is almost always filled with joggers. It gives me a feeling of a city full of people who care about their health and fitness. Plus they're omnipresence gives me a healthy peer pressure, not to be any worse.
For the moment those 3 suffice, for a 1st month's summary:)
Thursday, June 11, 2009
Faces of MEPs
You don't judge a book by its cover, but I love seeing a face next to a name. If a face can be misleading, a name alone, even more. I think you can tell much more from a face than most people are willing to admit they do. Eyes further tell a wealth of information. I know this from personal experience and from some so far very limited reading. The study of interpreting human eyes though, I'm leaving for when I'm 65 - or perhaps by then I won't need psychology books to explain it all to me.
Malcolm Gladwell in his Outliers explained at a level for people with little science understanding, how many muscles there are in human face, how different combination of contracting together different muscles reflect an emotion, and how the observer, often unaware, reads (and acts upon) this information flawlessly. So yes, I think a face is important to see. Not for aesthetic judgement, but for a complete appreciation of the personality. Although, a face seen live (or least recorded in movement), tells much more, than one frozen on a photograph, it is always a step closer to full appreciation. So here are the faces of the new Polish MEPs.
European Election results & Polish MEPs
I could just give you a link, but I'm worried it will soon cease to function, so I'll copy from the article of Gazeta Wyborcza as well, the results of the Polish elections to the European Parliament. You never know when you'll need this;)
Podział głosów i mandatów:
PO - 44,43 - mandatów - 25
PiS - 27,40 - mandatów - 15
SLD-UP - 12,34 - mandatów - 7
PSL - 7,01 - mandatów - 3
Centrolewica - 2,44 proc.
Mandaty:
PSL
Andrzej Grzyb
Kalinowski Jarosław
Siekierski Czesław
SLD- UP
Lidia Geringer de Oedenberg
Adam Gierek
Bogusław Liberadzki
Wojciech Olejniczak
Joanna Senyszyn
Marek Siwiec
PO
Piotr Borys
Jerzy Buzek
Róża Thun
Małgorzata Handzlik
Hibner Jolanta
Hübner Danuta
Danuta Jazłowiecka
Sidonia Jędrzejewska
Filip Kaczmarek
Lena Kolarska Bobińska
Janusza Lewandowski
Krzysztof Lisek
Elżbieta Łukacijewska
Bogdan Marcinkiewicz
Sławomir Nitras
Jan Olbrycht
Jacek Protasiewicz
Jacek Saryusz Wolski
Joanna Skrzydlewska
Bogusław Sonik
Rafał Trzaskowski
Jarosław Wałęsa
Paweł Zalewski
Artur Zasada
Tadeusz Zwiefka
PiS
Adam Bielan
Tadeusz Cymański
Ryszard Czarnecki
Marek Gróbarczyk
Michał Kamiński
Paweł Kowal
Jacek Kurski
Ryszard Legutko
Marek Migalski
Mirosław Piotrowski
Tomasz Poręba
Konrad Szymański
Jacek Włosowicz
Janusz Wojciechowski
Zbigniew Ziobro
Podział mandatów w okręgach wyborczych
Okręg nr 1 Pomorze:
Janusz Lewandowski PO
Jarosław Wałęsa PO
Tadeusz Cymański PiS
Okręg nr 2 Kujawsko-pomorskie:
Tadeusz Zwiefka PO
Janusz Zemke SLD.
Okręg nr 3 Warmia, Mazury i Podlasie:
Krzysztof Lisek PO
Jacek Kurski PiS.
Okręg nr 4 Warszawa:
Danuta Huebner,
Paweł Zalewski i
Rafał Trzaskowski PO,
Michał Kamiński z PiS-u oraz
Wojciech Olejniczak z SLD.
Jolanta Hibner PO,
Jarosław Kalinowski PSL
Adam Bielan z PiS.
Okręg nr 6 Łódź
Jacek Saryusz-Wolski
Joanna Skrzydlewska PO,
Janusz Wojciechowski z PiS.
Okręg nr 7 Wielkopolska
Filip Kaczmarek
Sidonia Jędrzejewska PO,
Konrad Szymański z PiS
Marek Siwiec z SLD
Andrzej Grzyb z PSL.
Okręg nr 8 Lubelszczyzna:
Lena Kolarska-Bobińska PO
Mirosław Mariusz Piotrowski PiS.
Okręg nr 9 Podkarpacie:
Elżbieta Łukacijewska PO
Tomasz Poręba z PiS.
Róża Thun,
Konstanty Miodowicz oraz
Bogusław Sonik z PO,
Zbigniew Ziobro,
Paweł Kowal oraz
Władysław Włosowicz z PiS,
Joanna Senyszyn z SLD i
Czesław Siekierski z PSL-u.
Okręg nr 11 Na Śląsku:
Jerzy Buzek,
Jan Olbrycht,
Małgorzata Handzlik oraz
Bogdan Marcinkiewicz z PO,
Marek Migalski i
Izabela Kloc z PiS oraz
Adam Gierek z SLD.
Okręg nr 12 Dolny Śląsk:
Jacek Protasiewicz i
Danuta Jazłowiecka z PO,
Ryszard Legutko z PiS i
Lidia Geringer de Oedenberg z SLD.
Okręg nr 13 Lubuskie i Zachodniopomorskie:
Sławomir Nitras i
Artur Zasada z PO,
Elżbieta Rafalska z PiS i
Bogusław Liberadzki z SLD.
sleepless in Bruxelles
The last apartment we lived in wasn't perfect, although it seemed so when we decided on it. Same story with the preceding one. This is what makes me worried and what perhaps contributes to insomnia more then excitement. I guess judgement on rented places is always weak... you can only notice so many things during a visit or two. The rest of the character of the apartment you can only discover living in it. Some later-discovered are just worse than others. For instance, the 2 last places had mice. Yes, I'm not kidding, real grey mice. Not every day, of course, but for me once in a lifetime of an apartment is enough... So I'll already be happy if our new Brussels home is a mice-free environment.
Many other things bothered us in the last 2 places, too many to waste time writing about them, but through these experiences a list got created, with all the apartment no-nos:) Things we in essence could have avoided had we known they'd cause trouble, or had we known they existed. 2 bad apartment experiences smarter than before, we approached this search with an extensive list of criteria. So demanding turned out to be our requirements, that many agencies remained silent after receiving the list haha. Whereas for me, those were just the basics that needed be satisfied for me to at all consider visiting the place. The very subjective do I like it, or do I see my things arranged here, or is it my style obviously could only be considered in the case an apartment met all the 'basic' demands.
I have seen very many places; most not satisfying the basic. But not satisfying 1 or 2 of them was good enough for me to contemplate it. All depended on which criteria was not met and how overachieving were the satisfied ones. Regardless my flexibility, all runner ups stayed as runner ups just for a short time. Whatever they failed in was usually just the beginning of other major drawbacks, often realized with a delay.
I have lived in very many rented places, well to me 7 is many, especially if I consider it was just during the last 8 years. Most places were found relatively quickly. I often found them towards the beginning of the search, continued to look some more and than realised the others were worse. A common mistake often made, I let charming places fool me, Charming is great, for a neighbour's dog, a postcard, or a weekend hotel. Your home, should be most of all safe and practical. The current narrowed down of runner ups is obviously full of charming places haha. I guess that's what charming is all about, fogging up your vision, keeping you hooked on something without letting you focus on the objective aspects. Keep your fingers crossed for a quick resolution; I've gotta move on to gym and job hunt.
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Complaint about 24counter.com + my to do list is not shrinking:(
Tuesday, June 2, 2009
from St. Martin to Anguilla
Monday, June 1, 2009
4 days in a row of great weather...
Thursday, May 28, 2009
mess on apt-for-rent pictures
Good for the ones who are less demanding I guess...
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Elections to the European Parliament
You can read more of the official notice here. Or go directly to the online registration which allows to register to vote anywhere outside of Poland (i.e. everywhere abroad where Polish Consulates organise elections). Very handy, easy, done in a minute.
The website of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs actually clears up one last doubt I had, that is, do you need to register if you obtain a certificate of right to vote at home. I had called my city hall before digging all these infos on the web. As I had voted outside my place of residence before (but within Poland) knew I required the certificate and knew it was a simple formality to get it. Figuring that voting abroad should be similar I got the certificate just in case. Now I know that having registered online, the requirement of presenting a certificate does not apply to me. But since you never know, and since it cost me no trouble, plus was free of charge, I'm glad I have it just in case;)
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
aujourd'hui il fait vraiment beau
Without being too sarcastic, there's one advice I need to give to anyone who is planning a move to Brussels soon, 2 items you can not forget are a coat and a hair dryer. Air drying hair is not an option here at all, unless July proves me wrong. The lack of a coat just means you run a daily risk of wearing wet clothes. An umbrella is not always enough...
Tuesday, May 19, 2009
First week in Brussels
Brussels has turned out to be much less complicated in that sense. I still have plenty to discover, plenty to get wrong and plenty to be disillusioned about, but I can say with satisfaction, the first stage, which is behind me and which tends to pose most difficulty turned out to be fun and not difficult at all.
Brussels has so much of what I've missed for a very long time. Many deny it the status of a metropolis, stating it is obviously no NY or Paris, but I think it has all it needs to feel like a true great city. Public transport, boulevards, parks, cafes, boutiques, museums, gyms...I could go on, but from this list alone you already must realise I have lived deprived of basic urban civilisation and therefore understand am easily pleased.
Arriving here in spring has its advantages; the season in the north of Europe has a particular charm, everything has just turned vivid green from being grey for months, the plants are either in full bloom or about to, in both cases boasting the freshest of colours and offering the most tranquil of moods.
I did get sick though. I am still in awe of how unreasonably I behaved wearing flip-flops in Brussels in May... It seemed warmer. It was sunny and central heating is still on in the temporary accommodation we're staying at; I was under the impression that it really was warm enough. This feeling was reinforced by the fact that the preceding day I had seen so many people so 'over'dressed; there was plenty of wool scarves, jackets with fur collars, boots, thick tights. I was very surprised to see this because it seemed like full fledged autumn attire, where was everyone's spring closet? Not only were the colours all dark earth tones, focused mainly around black, but the fabrics were all heavy and thick. I was running late to a lunch date with my former classmates and as I underestimated the distance, was walking rather fast through the city centre. I wore a jacket but quickly got rid of it staying in a short sleeve t-shirt. I must have turned quite a few heads haha, but I was honestly too warm. In fact having gone jogging in the Cinquantenaire early that morning I had already then realised it was not cold at all. This one day experience of being too warm drove me to the conclusion that everyone here must be too stressed out to care about how they dress, insane or just very in love with their autumn clothing and made me all the more confident that I can dress much more spring appropriate. So I opted for bare legs and flip-flops; and here I am, second day in bed curing my cold. I still love the city though;)