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Post by diurpaneus on Jan 5, 2012 6:21:51 GMT -5
La multi ani!
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Post by diurpaneus on Nov 23, 2011 7:37:30 GMT -5
Didn't bother reading the entire thread. I don't want to be cynical. I don't have anything against the greeks. But with Greece's incoming bankruptcy, I bet more and more Vlachs will admit to their Romanian ethnicity and will ask for Romanian citizenship.
We await our brothers. They are more than welcomed here in Transylvania. We need as many Romanians here as possible.
If you can get your hands on this documentary, don't miss it. It's good. I was born in those mountains and spent my childhood there. Seeing those breathtaking landscapes makes me have tears in my eyes. The documentary is called "Wild Carpathia". I used to roam those mountains, and never get lost. I knew all the paths, the climate of different mountain zones, the places with springs with potable water, caves etc. etc. Aromanians are more than welcome here.
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Post by diurpaneus on Nov 23, 2011 7:21:42 GMT -5
HAHAHAHA no
Only if he can prove he has Vlach blood flowing through his veins.
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Post by diurpaneus on Nov 13, 2011 12:36:29 GMT -5
I pity that poor Bulgarian kid. These Bulgarians just use him for their own entertainment. Also, that Bulgarian music sounds bad. And did you notice how many Bulgarian men put their hands down his pants with the pretext of giving him money?
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Post by diurpaneus on Nov 13, 2011 7:57:04 GMT -5
He sure knows how to move...
BTW the video is made in Bulgaria.
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Post by diurpaneus on Nov 13, 2011 4:28:39 GMT -5
We already have our own Royal House, the Romanian branch of the Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen. And it will always stay that way. In the event that Romania would revert to a monarchy we will be led once again by our German friends. The heirs are Princess Margarethe or Prince Karl Friedrich (according to the salic law). en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen#RomaniaHeil dir im Siegerkranz!
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Post by diurpaneus on Sept 27, 2011 5:39:19 GMT -5
Some facts about this guy... This guys' tears cure cancer. Too bad he has never cried. This guy counted to infinity - twice. This guy does not hunt because the word hunting infers the probability of failure. This guy goes killing. If you can see this guy, he can see you. If you can't see this guy you may be only seconds away from death. This guy sold his soul to the devil for his rugged good looks and unparalleled money-making ability. Shortly after the transaction was finalized, this guy roundhouse kicked the devil in the face and took his soul back. The devil, who appreciates irony, couldn't stay mad and admitted he should have seen it coming. They now play poker every second Wednesday of the month. When the Boogeyman goes to sleep every night he checks his closet for this guy. This guy built a time machine and went back in time to stop the Pope John Paul II shootings. As Mehmet Ali Ağca shot, this guy met all bullets with his mustache, deflecting them. The Pope's back exploded out of sheer amazement. This guy has already been to Mars; that's why there are no signs of life there. They once made toilet paper with this guys' face, but it wouldn't take s**t from anybody. A blind man once stepped on this guys' shoe. He replied, "Don't you know who I am?" The mere mention of his name cured this man blindness. Sadly the first, last, and only thing the former blind man ever saw, was a fatal roundhouse delivered by this guy.
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Post by diurpaneus on Sept 26, 2011 9:36:48 GMT -5
Bullets can't kill him. He eats Chuck Norris for desert!
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Post by diurpaneus on Sept 19, 2011 8:18:37 GMT -5
Uite aici graiul moldovenesc din nordul Bucovinei. Nu se mai prea aude acest grai pe la noi. Grigore Leşe e maramureşean. E! Dară că îi. Amu vreo 4 ani am baut cu Leșe în crâșma EMA din țentăru Clujului. O fost o onoare. O trimăs Impăratu carte (Franz Joseph)
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Post by diurpaneus on Sept 9, 2011 10:11:21 GMT -5
Batăr că meri mă d'aci de-ți be' pălinca aia moldovinească și lasă-ne.
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Post by diurpaneus on Aug 31, 2011 17:08:52 GMT -5
Transylvanian Vlach from the Western Carpathian mountains and proud of it.
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Post by diurpaneus on Aug 30, 2011 9:19:02 GMT -5
I was there not too long ago as well. Infrastructure is impressive with huge posters of politicians on them. I like some of the modern skyscrapers but heres my complaint. I dont think its proper to have them by the Bosporous or close to historic areas. Its doesnt look good, its an eye sore. They should build these huge buildings out more where there is nothing there instead of building monstrosities close to the historical city.The AKP is also scaring me a bit with the Islamiscation of the country. Lastly, Be careful of a property bubble burst in the future. You guys are spending way too fast ! Yeah I noticed that too. That's why I said Istanbul is like a mini-Romania (in all the good ways and bad ways). You give an envelope to the city planners and you can build everywhere you want, what you want Simple as that... Also, most of the merchants tried to f**k me over for money. But you can't steal from a thief. I don't hold a grudge against them for this. It's like I was home in Romania. One of the merchants told me I was the hardest negotiator he met for some time.... that Russians, English and other tourists buy objects for the prices he asks without negotiating.
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Post by diurpaneus on Aug 30, 2011 3:57:16 GMT -5
I visited your country this summer. By car. The traffic was HELL ON EARTH and nobody gives a flying f**k about traffic signals or such. I was shocked... and I thought the Bucharest traffic is horrible...
Anyway... just wanted to say that I was impressed by your country. It's pure capitalism... like every democracy should be. And the infrastructure is great. Plus, every 1 out of 3 Turks in Istanbul spoke Romanian. Istanbul is a lot like Romania. From all points of view, the good ones and the bad ones.
Congratulations to Ataturk for making such a country out of the ashes of a retrograde empire.
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Post by diurpaneus on Aug 27, 2011 4:51:55 GMT -5
"Hai siktir du-te-n pizda ma-tii"
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Post by diurpaneus on Aug 27, 2011 4:41:31 GMT -5
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Post by diurpaneus on Aug 26, 2011 10:22:05 GMT -5
Bulgaria have experienced discrimination, abuse and intimidation. I can vouch for this. I was two days at the Bulgarian sea side this summer, at Sunny beach next to Nesebar. They really don't like us. Then I went to Istanbul for 5 days and I was very fucking impressed... except the traffic... that was hell on earth. But that's another story. As a side-note, when Steaua played with CSK Sofia here in cluj, CSK supporters HIT A GIRL that was passing by, on the street, with her boyfriend. Luckily some Gendarmes were nearby and arrested the criminals and showed them some good-old Romanian policing with those rubber clubs they have. www.ghimpele.ro/2011/08/fanii-lui-cska-sofia-s-au-luat-la-bataie-in-centrul-clujului/
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Post by diurpaneus on Aug 21, 2011 7:05:10 GMT -5
this is very interesting. this is a topic seldom discussed. i'd also like to see a similar focus on the germanic tribes (goths) that entered the balkans in the 4th-5th century and the legacy they left. There still are some goths left in the balkans... Here they are.
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Post by diurpaneus on Jul 27, 2011 16:40:33 GMT -5
Whether you're a Roman slave or an Ottoman slave, a slave's a slave. You guys never got it and will never get it. It's not about being a slave, it's about being a part of*greater good. Being a part of a stronger being: Being a military force, a cultural mammoth, an economical steam engine. You are independent, self-standing Bulgarians (for some limited time, as the topic says) but still, you are poor, uncultured, underdeveloped and envious upon all it's neighbors. We Romanians never viewed a foreign occupation as being a slave to others. We tried to learn from others, assimilate them. Romans learned us to build mines and roads. Hungarians learned us to wage war. Austrians/Germans learned us to build magnificent buildings and to organize armies. Turks learned us to enjoy the small things of life. Russians learned us to bond with the ones of our faith, to have the guts to declare war when all odds are against us. I for one am from Transylvania, from a village in the Apuseni (western Carpathian) mountains. For 300 years long Transylvania was a part of the Austrian Empire. One of my great-grandfathers, even tho he was a peasant, spoke 4 languages... Romanian, Hungarian, German and Italian... he had to learn them if he wanted to sell his sheep at Vienna, Budapest or Trieste. One of my other great-grandfathers was a mountain ranger (Gebirgsjäger) in his majesty's Franz Joseph's and later Karl's Imperial Army and fought against the Russians in Galicia and Italians in the Alps.... even tho he was 100% Romanian. Even tho they were simple Romanian peasants they both learned something... languages, different cultures, discipline, and most importantly, that the world is not limited to their mountain village or land. They learned to build things, different ways to make business. The biggest sin in my opinion in this life is to live your life and learn nothing. I`m not referring to material things, some sort of craftsmanship... even a life philosophy will do. You Bulgarians on the other hand have learned nothing, instead of learning SOMETHING from those Turks that conquered you... after all, they did beat you, that means they were better than you so you had something to learn from them. That's why your nation will slowly fade away into history and your lands will be inhabited by different populations. You pride yourself with a distant history that you could never reproduce.. instead of priding yourself with what YOU CAN DO. We can do many things, build, create and even fight. What can you do? That's why, my boy, we "pride" ourselves with the ones that passed our lands. Not conquered us... we're independent now as you see... but passed our lands. And left their mark on us. Like Charles Darwin once said that the one who will survive will be the one that will be compliant to change. Now listen to this. PS: Nach mehrere Stamperl Pali geschrieben.
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Post by diurpaneus on Jul 27, 2011 12:14:20 GMT -5
And exactly how many of those 5.666.624 Orthodox Christians are Romanians / Aromanians or Greeks is unknown. But I have a small hunch that they are many.
Also, I now claim the soon-to-be-deserted land of today's Bulgaria in Cisleithania's name. The land formerly known as Bulgaria will now be known as Thrakerland.
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Post by diurpaneus on Jul 26, 2011 1:45:22 GMT -5
Check this out. It's hilarious ;D
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