In any election campaign, whether in elections to parliament or local elections, or to the President's Office, we have a real rash of election banners. Banners grow up like mushrooms after rain on walls, fences and fences, including private property. How do they affect the result of the election? Is it possible to convince the voter by an advertising banner, to vote for the group or candidate? It would seem that the influence of banners is small.
But in the event of a heated political dispute, a strong division with which we are presently dealing in Poland, banners are a form of breaking the media barrier of isolation, they slip from the scissors of modern censorship. erstwhile we put up mass banners advertising a peculiar candidate, we show how much support this candidate has, we mobilise undecided, fearful voters, not seldom manipulated, and at the same time we show the other side of the political dispute that there is no monopoly that their candidate has not yet won, that they must number on us. We show ourselves that we are. This is the strength and value of election banners.
It is well known to those who follow the rule that the end justifies the means. The goal is to gain power. Getting power, but not to serve, just to regulation and share. Share fructs and divide society. The intent justifies the means, which is why banners of any candidates, especially those representing national, patriotic and conservative values, are destroyed, torn, painted, depreciated. This is the case now, this was the case in the erstwhile elections, this was the case in the fresh presidential election. It was then in 2020, in 1 of the towns in Warsaw, that nearly a 100 banners of Andrzej Duda were destroyed in 1 night. The appalled residents gathered the destroyed banners in 1 place and threw a picket under the slogan “Stop Hate”:


Unfortunately, specified pickets, although they are an crucial voice of opposition, pass without echo, do not bring the expected results, do not impress those who commit vandalism and sow hatred. Hence, residents of the village felt that it was pointless to hang more banners on the side streets, which would be destroyed again under the cover of the next night. They decided to take matters into their own hands and stand alone with a banner on the main exit way from Warsaw. In this way, the banner was guarded against vandals and had a maximum scope of influence, as it was visible not to respective or respective twelve people, but to hundreds or even thousands

The banner was visible and induced reactions, utmost reactions. From kind greetings to insults and rude insults. The short, unconfronted text "My president Andrzej Duda" caused any travelers to burst with aggression. The most eloquent, even frightening case, is simply a motion of the mediate finger manifested right next to the Rosary suspended by the mirror. It remains to be believed that individual was driving a borrowed car, unaware of what the Rosary is, unaware of what it does. You gotta believe. It is certain that the banner was noticed, and they told me about it even a fewer months after the election the inhabitants of another towns who then passed through Warsaw.
Today, in 2025, the division in society and the emotions associated with it are even greater. Not only are banners destroyed, especially Karol Nawrocki, but the arbitrary and unlawful decision of the Minister of Finance was deprived of the main opposition organization of the subsidy. Andrzej Domanski did not execute the final decision of the State Election Commission, blocking the payment of due money, destroyed with 1 decision not respective twelve but thousands of banners. In many cities and towns across Poland people make donations to print posters and banners. They deposit and fear that the first night after the banners are displayed, they will be destroyed. Therefore, it is worth inspiring the thought of the inhabitants of Podwarszawska village from erstwhile 2020 presidential elections. alternatively of hanging banners in the side streets exposed to vandalism with hateful neighbors, it is worth standing with specified a banner on the main street, on a busy route. Stand at the rush hour. Stand so as not to hinder the street movement to show everyone that we are, to show that we have our views, which we are not ashamed of, to show that we have a past that is an experience and inspiration for us, to show that we are reasoning about the future of Poland, to show that for Poland we are ready to sacrifice, that Poland will not quit for Judas silverware and hot water in the tap.
Let's go to the roads and streets of our cities with banners, rise high-white red flags. Let us remind our countrymen that our home is not Berlin, Moscow or Brussels, let us remind them that:
There's a place at the intersection of roads,
Where he meets the west east...
Our navel of the world,
Our mediocre paradise...
There's a place.
It's a country.
Jan Pietrzak
Let us stand at the intersection of roads, “Help God! And endure give, Here we belong, This is our country!“
Mr Bogdan
If you are curious in having a book, delight make a voluntary contribution to the statutory purposes of the Solidarni2010 Association and send information to the address == sync, corrected by elderman ==
Here's the account number:
67 2490 0005 0000 4520 4582 2486
The book was published by the efforts and means of members of the 2010 Solidarity Association as part of statutory activities.












