MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 14, 2009 15:56:52 GMT -5
Not bad. Why stop there? Why not take pieces of Italy. Shit, you're entitled to it.
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 22:40:41 GMT -5
Haha, it never hurts to aim high, that's for sure.
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 14:07:25 GMT -5
Dude, what the hell is wrong with you guys? It isn't just the Serbs fault, it was every single people's of Yugoslavia fault. Maybe you guys, with your hatred of Serbs, cannot see that, nor does this article condone a neutral point of view (It's far from it, very bias against the Serb people). It wasn't just the Serbs. Yugoslavia fell apart for a million different reasons, the main one being the Socio-Economic inequality of the nation.
Yugoslavia needed a strong leader who acted as a glue for all people, because all people believed in him; like Josip Broz Tito. Everybody wanted their own, and if they had some smarts to salvage the economy and split peacefully, we'd all have been 1000x better off than today. Yugoslavia was a complex nation, with a question that needed a complex solution. Nobody could provide it, and everyone went their own separate ways.
Serb, Croat, Albanian, Bosnian Muslim, Slovene, or Macedonian Nationalism is what was the end factor to a near 6-8 years of Socio-Economic decline within the old country.
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 11:51:43 GMT -5
In a span of some 6 weeks since I last posted here this stupid thread is up only 3 pages. So, expected completion time Mid-March 2012. LOL! No giving up!! No. The best looking singer is the fat gypsy movie who removes the nail from a wooden board in that Kustuica movie. [She has a fan base in Africa and Asia] Lol. JK. I don't find Savic attractive. may be because she's part of "Grand Production" <-- I collectively hate everything hate everything linked to it. She's so proper bro, I don't understand why you'd dislike her. BUT, since you typed "hate everything" twice, I understand.
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 11:34:21 GMT -5
LOL! I remember watching that game as a kid. Bro, it was sick! Ladic saved a PK too. Mwahaha! Evo je, jedna za pamcenje. AJMO DINAMO! I love my team bebeh!
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 11:32:42 GMT -5
Hope she gets it. Either way, someone is bound to give her a chance somewhere. What a beautiful voice. Where's Vinjak when you need him?
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 11:24:24 GMT -5
Any good programs (Like eMule or LimeWire) that have a large selection of our Music?
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 11:21:41 GMT -5
Dude, the EU started out as an Economic Partnership/Economic Dialogue/Common Market treaty. As soon as nations see Brussels get involved in their local/domestic and foreign affairs, people get nervous. The local politicians get paid to say good shit bout the EU, but the fact is that they will get robbed. When I was down there, I asked if the EU was a good idea, and practically everyone said no. Why? Wages. Nobody will get paid more, but the prices will increase 100-150%. The EU is not a simple nor practical solution for Croatia. It's best to take a stance of Neutrality, and just go with NATO. Other than that, for now, we don't need anything else. Fix the budget, improve the nation over the next decade, and stick with what we've got. We can build a great economy, only IF the government spent a little time restructuring their budget to benefit the locals and local businesses instead of foreign businesses. Also at the same time, the thieves such a Sanader or anyone else, anywhere else, should get capital punishment from stealing from the people. That shit is unacceptable. ^^^ Actually a great majority, up to about 45% in Croatia who LIVE THE reality pre/post and after Yugoslavia (not including diaspora dual citizens) are against it. So before you open into discussion, read clearly the stats. Mig you're point about the unclosed cases is amazing, I read something similar a while back and ask my dad's cousins who's a lawyer back in Osijek what's the go???...no one seems to care. But THIS is one of the reason's why we MUST stay put for now. EU out! I'm telling you man. When I read about that little fact, I nearly shat my pants of surprise.
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 11:13:02 GMT -5
Answer me this one question. What is the predominant religion amongst Bosniaks?
I just say weird shit like that to piss him off. God knows he does it to others. But you have to also see it from the others perspective. If you want and claim you respect others, and want a "Multi-Ethnic Bosnia", then you shouldn't bag on anyone else and their ways or customs. Sure we have the smallest differences in culture and language (nearly no differences in language), but the simple fact is when he goes off on the idiotic little tantrums, he will get the same kind of responses he first puts forth in his initial presentation.
You understand? It's not Sad and Pathetic. What is Sad and Pathetic is that you will defend him to a degree, but you won't see the others side.
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 1:45:52 GMT -5
Amazing voice. I hope she wins it all.
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 1:37:24 GMT -5
Yugo.
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 0:54:28 GMT -5
World Game Record - Australia vs Samoa - 31-0 HAHAA!!!
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 0:15:09 GMT -5
Croatian-Bulgarian WarsDate: 854 - 1000 Location: Croatia Result: Inconclusive Territorial changes: Both states had numerous territorial changes, especially in the valley between Bosna and Drina The Croatian-Bulgarian Wars were a series of conflicts that erupted three times during the 9th and 10th centuries between the medieval realms of Croatia and Bulgaria. During these wars, Croatia formed alliances with Eastern Francia and Byzantium against the Bulgarian Empire. First warDuring the middle of the 9th century, Bulgaria was the dominant power in the central, eastern and northern Balkans. In 854, the Bulgarian ruler Boris I forged an official alliance with the Moravian prince Rastislav against Louis the German of East Francia. Duke Trpimir of Croatia was a faithful Frankish vassal and was weary of Bulgaria's ongoing expansion when it expanded to Croatian borders after the wars against Rascia. Bulgaria is said to have invaded Croatia in approximately 854, but there is also a possibility that King Louis gave some compensation to Trpimir to attack Bulgaria. During the war of 854, there was only one great battle on the territory of present-day northeastern Bosnia, and neither side emerged victorious from the battle. Soon afterward, peace negotiations began between Boris of Bulgaria and Trpimir of Croatia, resulting in gifts exchanged and the establishment of peace, with the border between the Croatian-Dalmatian Duchy and Bulgaria stabilized at the river of Drina (between modern-day Bosnia and Herzegovina and Republic of Serbia). Second warA very long and arduous war was prosecuted between the Bulgarian Tsar Simeon I, who wanted to take over the Byzantine Empire, and the Empire's monarch Romanos I. Under heavy pressure from the Bulgarians and amassing defeat after defeat, the Byzantine Empire negotiated with Serbia and Croatia in an effort to forge an alliance against the Bulgarians. Having been informed of these plans by Prince Mihailo Višević of Zachlumia, who was forced to the islands as the Serbian rulers took direct control most of his local lands for themselves, Simeon overran Serbia in 924, destroyed it by tricking its nobility, and made it directly part of the Bulgarian Empire. Serbia's ruler Zaharija Pribislavljević fled and found exile at the Croatian court, while after the realm's destruction massive waves of Serb refugees fled and found refuge in Tomislav's Croatia. Trying to gain Croatian entry into this coalition, Romanos I ordered the province of Dalmatia in ca. 925 to pay taxes not to Byzantium but rather to the Croatian state; the Dalmatian territories, including most cities and the northern islands, were henceforth administered by King Tomislav and were to remain under Croatia. The Serbs of Zahumlje, allied with Croatia and Prince Mihailo, became vassals of Tomislav some time before 926. Tsar Simeon sent Duke Alogobotur to drive the Serb refugees further into Croatia, causing outright war in ca. 926. The climax of the war was the Battle of the Bosnian Highlands on 27 May 927, when Croatian forces under the command of King Tomislav completely defeated the Bulgarian forces under the command of Alogobotur, killing most of the Bulgarians in the battle. The Croatian victory was so decisive and the battle so big that contemporary sources greatly overestimated Croatia's Army at 160,000 men, with a slightly bigger force on the Bulgarian side. This was the only battle Tsar Simeon ever lost. Since both rulers maintained good relations with Pope John X, the pope was able to negotiate an end to the war soon afterward without any further border changes. Although the eastern border was extended down to the river of Bosnia, the Croatian realm was greatly strengthened both militarily and in natural resources: it emerged from the war as one of the most modern realms of the period and was able to consolidate a moderately sized navy. On the same day as the battle Simeon died in Preslav and his successor Peter I faced internal difficulties and revolts by his brothers Michail and Ivan. The Serbs were able to take advantage of this situation and many of them returned by 931 to their homes in the renewed Serbian realm, thus terminating Croatia's short-lived Bulgarian neighbor at the east. Third warIn the second half of the 10th century, the Croatian realm was ruled by Stjepan Držislav. Stjepan formed an alliance with the Eastern Roman Empire, which in turn recognized him as the King of his lands. After his death in 997, his son Svetoslav Suronja continued his pro-Byzantine policy. His brothers Krešimir III and Gojslav did not want Svetoslav as ruler and attempted a coup d'etat, asking the Bulgarian tsar Samuil for help. Answering their call, Samuil went on a rampage in 998 and razed the Dalmatian cities of Trogir and Split, but was stopped at the siege of Zadar. The Bulgarian forces then returned to their home country using the Bosnian route. Territory taken by Samuil during the war was given to Krešimir III and Gojslav, who, with further Bulgarian support, won the Croatian civil war and took over the realm in the year 1000. Svetoslav Suronja, a Byzantine and Venetian ally, was sent to exile in Venice, but after a change in government in Venice he was exiled to Hungary. Following Ivan Vladislav's death in 1018 Bulgaria fell under Byzantine rule, and Krešimir III and Gojslav, the two Croatian kings, became Byzantine vassals. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Croato-Bulgarian_Wars
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 13, 2009 0:03:28 GMT -5
Haha, w00t!! Look how SEXY we are, damn. *tsssssss* yee!
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 12, 2009 23:55:46 GMT -5
Now now, no need for name calling.
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 12, 2009 23:53:11 GMT -5
C'mon guys, I need some pointers here. ;D
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 12, 2009 23:47:07 GMT -5
Hej Slaveni, jošte živi Riječ (duh) naših djedova Dok za narod srce bije Njihovih sinova Živi, živi duh slavenski Živjet će vjekov'ma Zalud prijeti ponor pakla Zalud vatra groma Nek se sada i nad nama Burom sve raznese Stijena puca, dub se lama Zemlja nek se trese Mi stojimo postojano Kano klisurine Proklet bio izdajica Svoje domovine! *Solutes*
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 12, 2009 23:27:08 GMT -5
Eastern Europe has produced some very powerful teams and even players in the recent decade or two.
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 12, 2009 15:44:19 GMT -5
Why so much hate Tito? If you wanted a truly multi-ethnic Bosnia for all Bosnian people's then you wouldn't shun, or look down upon, Serbs, Croats, or whomever, that respects and honors their ethnic identity.
|
|
MiG
Amicus
Republika
Posts: 4,793
|
Post by MiG on Aug 12, 2009 15:42:03 GMT -5
|
|