TT <
[email protected]> Wrote in message:r
PeteWasLucky kirjoitti 27.2.2024 klo 3.03:> *skriptis <[email protected]> Wrote in message:r>> PeteWasLucky <[email protected]> Wrote in message:> For an American man to feel this way and make the decision to send a public message in this
extreme way made me to realize how bad we became ignoring anything that upsets us and telling ourselves it's not our business to fix, but guess what, I just forgot what I wrote in the first sentence above and I will pretend it never happen in order to
have a happy night :)It's sad that he did it.He did it in front of a Jew embassy and I bet, once those Jews inside found out what was that all about, that the guy was "protesting" genocide of Palestinians and set himself on fire to die in agony, a bunch
of hooked nose Jews inside started laughing.It's so sad because it is true.-- ----Android NewsGroup Reader----
https://piaohong.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/usenet/index.html> > The sad part is that the media intentionally ignored the incident instead of
giving it the attention and publicity the soldier meant to haveBest not to encourage crazies more.And why should the media - or anyone - care about political opinions from mentally disturbed people?
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jan_Palach
Jan Palach (Czech pronunciation: [jan ˈpalax]; 11 August 1948 – 19 January 1969) was a Czech student of history and political economics at Charles University in Prague. His self-immolation was a political protest against the end of the Prague Spring
resulting from the 1968 invasion of Czechoslovakia by the Warsaw Pact armies.
I find this part hilarious.
The funeral of Palach turned into a major protest against the occupation. A month later (on 25 February), another student, Jan Zajíc, burned himself to death in the same place. This was followed in April of the same year by Evžen Plocek in Jihlava, and
by others. People in other Warsaw Pact countries also emulated his example, such as the Hungarian Sándor Bauer on 20 January 1969 and another Hungarian, Márton Moyses on 13 February 1970.
Palach's self-immolation was the third act of that kind after those of Ryszard Siwiec in Poland and Vasyl Makukh in Ukraine, which were successfully suppressed by the authorities and went mostly forgotten until the fall of communism. Palach was not known
to be aware of Siwiec's and Makukh's protests.
So nobody remembers you mostly.
And this is comedy ending
Palach was initially interred in Olšany Cemetery in Prague. As his gravesite was becoming a national shrine, the Czechoslovak secret police (StB) set out to destroy any memory of Palach's deed and exhumed his remains during the night of 25 October 1973.
They then cremated his body and sent the ashes to his mother in his home town of Všetaty;
Lol cremated.
But it is a regular thing in Czechia
Several later incidents of self-immolation may have been influenced by the example of Palach and his media popularity. In the spring of 2003, a total of six young Czechs burned themselves to death,[8] notably Zdeněk Adamec, a 19-year-old student from
Humpolec who burned himself on 6 March 2003 on almost the same spot in front of the National Museum where Palach burnt himself, leaving a suicide note explicitly referring to Palach and the others who killed themselves in 1969, after Prague Spring.[9]
Just walking distance from the site of Palach's self-immolation, a statuary in Prague's Old Town Square honours iconic Bohemian religious thinker Jan Hus, who was burned at the stake for his beliefs in 1415. Hus himself was celebrated as a national hero
for many centuries; some commentary has linked Palach's self-immolation to the execution of Hus.[10
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