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Quote by Maciej Jarkowiec

“Migocząca Gwiazda opowiadała też, że jej własna babcia była pod Grzbietem Tłustej Trawy, kiedy trwała tam słynna bitwa, którą biali nazywają bitwą pod Little Bighorn. Lakoci, Czejenowie i Arapaho pokonali w niej 7 Regiment Kawalerii pułkownika George'a Custera. – Biali kłamią – opowiadała Migocząca Gwiazda – twierdząc, że Custer zginął w walce. Indianie chcieli go oszczędzic, żeby wrócił do swoich upokorzony. Po bitwie gromady kobiet przepędzały z indiańskiej ziemi niedobitki kawalerzystów. Custer w popłochu uciekał przed kobietami. W końcu zatrzymał się, wyciągnął rewolwer i palnął sobie w łeb. Babcia babci widziała to na własne oczy.”

Quote by Maciej Jarkowiec

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Powrócę jako piorun. Krótka historia Dzikiego Zachodu

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Maciej Jarkowiec

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“Faith is the surrender of the mind, it's the surrender of reason, it's the surrender of the only thing that makes us different from other animals. It's our need to believe and to surrender our skepticism and our reason, our yearning to discard that and put all our trust or faith in someone or something, that is the sinister thing to me. ... Out of all the virtues, all the supposed virtues, faith must be the most overrated”

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“I am looking forward to fully understanding what is occurring. Other than the fact that we are well over a century in my future—if it is MY future; in America, in an underground government facility of some sort near the Colorado Rocky Mountains, specifically Pikes Peak, so I assume the nearest city of any import to be Colorado Springs…I am afraid I have little grasp of your project.” ~Sherlock Holmes”

“After Dunkirk, the Luftwaffe had turned its sights onto England. We’d seen the destructive force of German military might playing to universal horror across cinema screens up and down the country, and with our army gone, Hitler and Göring’s eyes turned west to the white cliffs of Dover. Warsaw, Rotterdam… was London next? Leeds, Manchester, Liverpool, Edinburgh? They bombed us relentlessly for a fortnight, even before France signed her official surrender. Night-time bombing raids on London, now called “The Blitz”. Fires in the night sky, women and children screaming, the shriek of the bombers, the deathly silence that briefly, fatefully follows. And then dust, blood, sirens. Noise and smells and screeching yells, panic and terror. The rising panic of a people under fire, who knew they had no army left to defend them when the enemy came.”

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