Spis treści - About a creature that only wanted to live
- Introduction
- Foreword
- 0.1. Purpose of the work
- 0.2. Sources
- Part 1
- What kind of world do we live in?
- 1.1 What can we expect from our planet?
- 1.2. What is good and what is evil?
- 1.3. Freedom as a choice
- 1.4. Who is a human?
- 1.5. So war! What does this mean to me?
- 1.6. Hegemony in Modern Europe
- Part 2
- Political Aspects
- 2.1. The Significance of NATO’s Creation
- 2.2. Putin will not stop
- 2.3. The capitulation of Kiev
- 2.4. American politics in history and today
- 2.5. Anti-Semitism
- 2.6. Why do Germans hate Poland?
- 2.7. No Difference — The League of Nations and the United Nations
- 2.8. 1997 — Constitution of the Republic of Poland
- 2.9. Adolf Hitler’s Conversation with Death — a Warning for Vladimir Putin
- 2.10. What makes it difficult to interpret criminals as doing wrong?
- 2.11. Is the war still relevant?
- Part 3
- In the footsteps of history
- 3.1. Rebellion, or the beginning of the fall of evil
- 3.2. Hitler’s Third Reich
- 3.3. The Third Reich!
- 3.4. The former glory of the USSR and 1991
- 3.5. Japan before and after World War II
- 3.6. Ubi sunt
- 3.7. Why is history important?
- Part 4
- Concepts of the vision of a new world in the first half of the 21st century
- 4.1. Nuclear war
- 4.2. Resuscitatio dictare sovietyzmu
- 4.3. Graveyard of totalitarian states
- 4.4. Today’s End of the Beginning and the Uncertain Future
- 4.5. The Birth of the End of History
- Part 5
- About a creature that only wanted to live
- Introduction
- 1949, Westerplatte
- 1930, Westerplatte
- (19 years earlier)
- 1931, Westerplatte
- 1932, Westerplatte
- 1933, Berlin
- 1933, Westerplatte
- January 26, 1934, Berlin — Warsaw
- 1934, Westerplatte
- 1935, Westerplatte
- 25 January 1936, Westerplatte
- 02 February 1936, Westerplatte
- 1937, Westerplatte
- 1938, Westerplatte
- 1938, Third Reich — Austria
- 1939, Westerplatte
- 01 September 1939, Westerplatte
- September 1, 1939, the whole world
- 02 September 1939, Westerplatte
- 03 September 1939, Westerplatte
- September 3, 1939, the whole world
- 06 September 1939, Westerplatte
- 07 September 1939, Westerplatte
- September 7, 1939, the whole world
- 08 September 1939, Westerplatte
- April 8, 1940, the world of the dead
- April 9, 1940, Copenhagen
- April 9, 1940, the whole world
- May 10, 1940, Baltic Sea
- May 10, 1940, the north-eastern border of France with the Third Reich
- May 10, 1940, the whole world
- May 11, 1940 and a few weeks later, Paris
- June 25, 1940, the whole world
- 1940, the whole world
- July — October 1940, Great Britain
- July — October 1940, the whole world
- June 15, 1941, western areas of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
- June 22, 1941, western areas of the Soviet Union
- July 3, 1941, USSR
- July 3, 1941, Worldwide
- July 1941, USSR
- 1941, a harsh winter in the USSR
- 1939 — 1941, Worldwide
- January — March 1943, Warsaw
- A week after all events, Warsaw
- January — May 1944, Italy
- January — May 1944, the whole world
- 01 June 1944, Great Britain
- June 4, 1944, Great Britain
- 06 June 1944, Normandy
- June 6, 1944, Worldwide
- April — May 1945, Berlin
- April-May 1945, Worldwide
- 1945—1946, Nuremberg
- 1949, Westerplatte