Do Rzeczy (original) (raw)

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Polish weekly news magazine

Do Rzeczy

Logo of Do Rzeczy
Editor-in-chief Paweł Lisicki
Political alignment Pro-PiS
Categories News magazine Political magazine
Frequency Weekly
Publisher Orle Pióro
Founder Paweł Lisicki
Founded 2013; 11 years ago (2013)
Country Poland
Based in Warsaw
Language Polish
Website Do Rzeczy

Do Rzeczy (Polish: [dɔ ˈʐɛt͡ʂɨ] ; lit. 'To the point') is a Polish-language conservative weekly news and political magazine published in Warsaw, Poland.[1] It often promotes the PiS party narrative.[2]

History and profile

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Do Rzeczy was established in January 2013 by Paweł Lisicki [pl][3] and a group of journalists who previously worked for the weekly magazine Uważam Rze.[1] The magazine is published on a weekly basis and has its headquarters in Warsaw.[1]

The magazine has been described to have a stance ranging from Christian and conservative-liberal stance[1] to ultra-conservative[4] and Catholic fundamentalist.[4]

The magazine has also supported pro-Polexit, nationalist and hard eurosceptic stances.[5][6]

It has also published articles with strong anti-LGBT rhetoric,[5][7] warning that Poland is in danger of a "LGBT dictatorship".[8] It has also claimed that feminism has communist ideological foundations.[9]

  1. ^ a b c d "Do Rzeczy". VoxEurop. Archived from the original on 11 May 2015. Retrieved 10 May 2015. Conservative and liberal, the weekly Do Rzeczy was founded in 2013 by former Rzeczpospolita editor Paweł Lisicki and a group of journalists from the weekly Uważam Rze. Conservative, because it respects the Christian tradition, and liberal, because it supports the free market. The weekly is accompanied weekly historical magazine Do Rzeczy Historia.
  2. ^ "Do Rzeczy". eurotopics.net. Archived from the original on 4 December 2020. Retrieved 5 July 2021. The Polish media group Platforma Mediowa Point Group S.A (PMPG) launched the news magazine Do Rzeczy in 2013. It represents conservative bordering on nationalist positions and frequently supports the PIS party line.
  3. ^ Jan Cienski (7 March 2013). "Polish media baron faces uphill struggle". Financial Times. Warsaw. Retrieved 10 May 2015.
  4. ^ a b "Od rzeczy". Press (in Polish).
  5. ^ a b "Narzucanie Polsce ideologii LGBT? Lisicki: To granica non possumus. Rozważyłbym wyjście z UE". Do Rzeczy (in Polish).
  6. ^ "Unii trzeba powiedzieć: dość. Polexit – mamy prawo o tym rozmawiać". Do Rzeczy (in Polish). No. 48.
  7. ^ Alexandra Yatsyk (18 September 2023), PiS's Biopolitical Sovereignty vis-à-vis Brussels' 'Gender Ideology': The LGBTIQ Issue on the Eve of the 2023 Polish General Election, Taylor & Francis, pp. 40–54
  8. ^ Poland's ruling party confronts the "LGBT dictatorship", The Economist, 2 May 2019
  9. ^ Grzegorz Wysocki (16 September 2024), Kto rządzi Polską? Prawica wskazuje i wylicza główne zbrodnie feministek-komunistek, Gazeta Wyborcza