It's just a bad idea. So bad that I hardly need to prove it.
It would make some sense if entire Europe was a voting district, or if countries had a choice whom to team up with.
She also speaks flawless Czech,
Being a citizen of Czech Republic and attending a czech school, it's nothing surprising
comes from a town which is overwhelmingly Czech,
She is a member of luteran church which, in this region, was a very polish-patriotic organisation (unlike local catholic church, it's a local phenomenon). The village in question comes from an area in which, 90 years ago, there were less Czechs than Germans, not to mention Poles. And in which even today Poles still are present, although their number is falling systhematically.
is young, foolish, and uses her ethnic origin to appeal to Czech teen audience which loves exotic (Slovak, Polish...) influences in their crappy music.
If Poland and Slovakia (close neighbours with many historical, cultural, ethnic and linguistic ties) are exotic for you, than I really pity Czech Republic. Probably everything 10 miles outside of Prague and Brno is exotic for you.
You apparently care if a Czech citizen identifies herself as an ethnic Pole. If she is of polish descent, speaks polish and considers herself polish, why don't you let her be polish?
Damn czech imperialism
I am just telling you that when I hear a 13 year old Czech pop-star babble about her ethnic identity, I am not taking it very seriously.
She's 17, not 13. And she doesn't claim to be an Eskimo. She claims to be Polish, which is consistant with the ethnic history of the region she comes from and with her own language.
Yeah yeah yeah, all the people in countries neighbouring on Poland are Poles, they just don't know about it
I was refering to this