Kasia grew up on the other side of the Iron Curtain, in Warsaw. There was no coddling there. When she was in first grade, her teacher took her on a field trip to the site of a recent plane crash, where she stared at the charred sneakers of dead passengers. The lesson seemed to be: Bad things happen, and there is no point in pretending otherwise. Oh, yeah, and build better planes. That plane, by the way, was headed to Warsaw from — where else? — the United States. The symbolism went deep.
I don’t know if that’s supposed to be a dig at Communist Poland for something or a lament about how Americans were victims somehow. But glad to hear the US has always had a trend of crashing planes, makes me feel much better. Build better planes, West.
I think the symbolism he’s trying to get at is that things are good in America, but bad in Poland, which is why that plane from America only crashed in Poland, because somehow, being in Poland made that plane bad
I don’t know if that’s supposed to be a dig at Communist Poland for something or a lament about how Americans were victims somehow. But glad to hear the US has always had a trend of crashing planes, makes me feel much better. Build better planes, West.
I think the symbolism he’s trying to get at is that things are good in America, but bad in Poland, which is why that plane from America only crashed in Poland, because somehow, being in Poland made that plane bad