Comment by qwytw

2 years ago

> rapidly approaching the development level of leading EU countries further emphasizes the point.

Well same applies to pretty much all of Central/Eastern Europe, and my point is that events prior to the 1900s didn't necessarily have a huge impact on the current situation (look at Finland). It's not like the Russian Empire in the 1800s was particularly more oppressive towards the overwhelming majority of the population or mismanaged the country to higher degree than the Polish nobility that preceded them (of course only in relative terms).

Napoleon winning/not losing as bad might have changed significantly everything but Poland's problems in the 1600s and the 1700s were primarily caused by internal issues.

Being independent alone is often not enough (e.g Portugal/Spain were left completely behind the rest of Western Europe economically and even socially until the mid to late 20th century).

It's not like the Russian Empire in the 1800s was particularly more oppressive towards the overwhelming majority of the population or mismanaged the country to higher degree than the Polish nobility that preceded them

The Russian Empire literally tried to eradicate the Polish language.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russification#Lithuania_and_Po...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Polish_sentiment#Before_t...

You're also not mentioning the fact that the mismangement of the 19th century was in large part due to foreign actors.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liberum_veto#Zenith

You don't seem to know much of what you're talking about, so like I said, I'm not interested in having this conversation.

  • > You're also not mentioning the fact that the mismanagement of the 19th century was in large part due to foreign actors.

    Well, yes.. Since Poland/Lithuania wasn't an independent state anymore and Poland lost most of its autonomy after the uprising in 1830 and 63 I would agree it was not only in large part but almost entirely due to foreign actors.

    > The Russian Empire literally tried to eradicate the Polish language.

    As I said, in relative terms. The Russian Empire was of course highly oppressive and put in a lot of effort suppressing the local Polish landholders/nobility because they were the biggest political threat. Peasants (i.e. the overwhelming majority of the population) were one of the main beneficiaries of this, getting to buyout their land at a significant discount if not outright for free.

    By the 1900s in Congress Poland over 60% of land was owned by peasants and small landholders, I find it hard to believe that would have happened without foreign intervention so it's not like it was entirely black and white.

    > You don't seem to know much of what you're talking about

    Not sure about that, you do seem to lack nuance to a rather severe degree, though