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Offline Matthew

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Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
« on: January 26, 2013, 11:07:35 PM »
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  • Coming to America soon?

     

    December 22, 2012 - What I am about to tell you is something you've probably never heard or read in history books, she likes to tell audiences.

    I am a witness to history."

    I cannot tell you that Hitler took Austria by tanks and guns; it would distort history.

    If you remember the plot of the Sound of Music, the Von Trapp family escaped over the Alps rather than submit to the nαzιs. Kitty wasn't so lucky. Her family chose to stay in her native Austria. She was 10 years old, but bright and aware. And she was watching.

    We elected him by a landslide 98 percent of the vote, she recalls.

    She wasn't old enough to vote in 1938 approaching her 11th birthday. But she remembers.

    Everyone thinks that Hitler just rolled in with his tanks and took Austria by force.

    No so.


    In 1938, Austria was in deep Depression. Nearly one-third of our workforce was unemployed. We had 25 percent inflation and 25 percent bank loan interest rates.

    Farmers and business people were declaring bankruptcy daily. Young people were going from house to house begging for food. Not that they didn't want to work; there simply weren't any jobs.

    My mother was a Christian woman and believed in helping people in need. Every day we cooked a big kettle of soup and baked bread to feed those poor, hungry people about 30 daily.

    We looked to our neighbor on the north, Germany, where Hitler had been in power since 1933. she recalls. We had been told that they didn't have unemployment or crime, and they had a high standard of living.

    Nothing was ever said about persecution of any group Jєωιѕн or otherwise. We were led to believe that everyone in Germany was happy. We wanted the same way of life in Austria. We were promised that a vote for Hitler would mean the end of unemployment and help for the family. Hitler also said that businesses would be assisted, and farmers would get their farms back.

    Ninety-eight percent of the population voted to annex Austria to Germany and have Hitler for our ruler.

    We were overjoyed, remembers Kitty, and for three days we danced in the streets and had candlelight parades. The new government opened up big field kitchens and
    everyone was fed.

    After the election, German officials were appointed, and like a miracle, we suddenly had law and order. Three or four weeks later, everyone was employed. The government made sure that a lot of work was created through the Public Work Service.

    Hitler decided we should have equal rights for women. Before this, it was a custom that married Austrian women did not work outside the home. An able-bodied husband would be looked down on if he couldn't support his family. Many women in the teaching profession were elated that they could retain the jobs they previously had been required to give up for marriage.

    Then we lost religious education for kids

    Our education was nationalized. I attended a very good public school.. The population was predominantly Catholic, so we had religion in our schools. The day we elected Hitler (March 13, 1938), I walked into my schoolroom to find the crucifix replaced by Hitler's picture hanging next to a nαzι flag. Our teacher, a very devout woman, stood up and told the class we wouldn't pray or have religion anymore. Instead, we sang Deutschland, Deutschland, Uber Alles, and had physical education.

    Sunday became National Youth Day with compulsory attendance. Parents were not pleased about the sudden change in curriculum. They were told that if they did not send us, they would receive a stiff letter of warning the first time. The second time they would be fined the equivalent of $300, and the third time they would be subject to jail.
    And then things got worse.

    The first two hours consisted of political indoctrination. The rest of the day we had sports. As time went along, we loved it. Oh, we had so much fun and got our sports equipment free.

    We would go home and gleefully tell our parents about the wonderful time we had.

    My mother was very unhappy, remembers Kitty. When the next term started, she took me out of public school and put me in a convent. I told her she couldn't do that and she told me that someday when I grew up, I would be grateful. There was a very good curriculum, but hardly any fun, no sports, and no political indoctrination.

    I hated it at first but felt I could tolerate it. Every once in a while, on holidays, I went home. I would go back to my old friends and ask what was going on and what they were doing.

    Their loose lifestyle was very alarming to me. They lived without religion. By that time, unwed mothers were glorified for having a baby for Hitler.

    It seemed strange to me that our society changed so suddenly. As time went along, I realized what a great deed my mother did so that I wasn't exposed to that kind of humanistic philosophy.

    In 1939, the war started and a food bank was established. All food was rationed and could only be purchased using food stamps. At the same time, a full-employment law was passed which meant if you didn't work, you didn't get a ration card, and if you didn't have a card, you starved to death.

    Women who stayed home to raise their families didn't have any marketable skills and often had to take jobs more suited for men.

    Soon after this, the draft was implemented.

    It was compulsory for young people, male and female, to give one year to the labor corps, remembers Kitty. During the day, the girls worked on the farms, and at night they returned to their barracks for military training just like the boys.

    They were trained to be anti-aircraft gunners and participated in the signal corps. After the labor corps, they were not discharged but were used in the front lines.
    When I go back to Austria to visit my family and friends, most of these women are emotional cripples because they just were not equipped to handle the horrors of combat.
    Three months before I turned 18, I was severely injured in an air raid attack. I nearly had a leg amputated, so I was spared having to go into the labor corps and into military service.

    When the mothers had to go out into the work force, the government immediately established child care centers.
    You could take your children ages four weeks old to school age and leave them there around-the-clock, seven days a week, under the total care of the government.

    The state raised a whole generation of children. There were no motherly women to take care of the children, just people highly trained in child psychology. By this time, no one talked about equal rights. We knew we had been had.

    Before Hitler, we had very good medical care. Many American doctors trained at the University of Vienna.
    After Hitler, health care was socialized, free for everyone. Doctors were salaried by the government. The problem was, since it was free, the people were going to the doctors for everything.

    When the good doctor arrived at his office at 8 a.m., 40 people were already waiting and, at the same time, the hospitals were full.

    If you needed elective surgery, you had to wait a year or two for your turn. There was no money for research as it was poured into socialized medicine. Research at the medical schools literally stopped, so the best doctors left Austria and emigrated to other countries.

    As for healthcare, our tax rates went up to 80 percent of our income. Newlyweds immediately received a $1,000 loan from the government to establish a household. We had big programs for families.

    All day care and education were free. High schools were taken over by the government and college tuition was subsidized. Everyone was entitled to free handouts, such as food stamps, clothing, and housing.

    We had another agency designed to monitor business. My brother-in-law owned a restaurant that had square tables.
    Government officials told him he had to replace them with round tables because people might bump themselves on the corners. Then they said he had to have additional bathroom facilities. It was just a small dairy business with a snack bar. He couldn't meet all the demands.

    Soon, he went out of business. If the government owned the large businesses and not many small ones existed, it could be in control.

    We had consumer protection, too

    We were told how to shop and what to buy. Free enterprise was essentially abolished. We had a planning agency specially designed for farmers. The agents would go to the farms, count the live-stock, and then tell the farmers what to produce, and how to produce it.

    In 1944, I was a student teacher in a small village in the Alps. The villagers were surrounded by mountain passes which, in the winter, were closed off with snow, causing people to be isolated.

    So people intermarried and offspring were sometimes retarded. When I arrived, I was told there were 15 mentally retarded adults, but they were all useful and did good manual work.

    I knew one, named Vincent, very well. He was a janitor of the school. One day I looked out the window and saw Vincent and others getting into a van.

    I asked my superior where they were going. She said to an institution where the State Health Department would teach them a trade, and to read and write. The families were required to sign papers with a little clause that they could not visit for 6 months

    They were told visits would interfere with the program and might cause homesickness.

    As time passed, letters started to dribble back saying these people died a natural, merciful death. The villagers were not fooled. We suspected what was happening. Those people left in excellent physical health and all died within 6 months. We called this euthanasia.

    Next came gun registration. People were getting injured by guns. Hitler said that the real way to catch criminals (we still had a few) was by matching serial numbers on guns. Most citizens were law abiding and dutifully marched to the police station to register their firearms. Not long afterwards, the police said that it was best for everyone to turn in their guns. The authorities already knew who had them, so it was futile not to comply voluntarily.

    No more freedom of speech. Anyone who said something against the government was taken away. We knew many people who were arrested, not only Jєωs, but also priests and ministers who spoke up.

    Totalitarianism didn't come quickly, it took 5 years from 1938 until 1943, to realize full dictatorship in Austria. Had it happened overnight, my countrymen would have fought to the last breath. Instead, we had creeping gradualism. Now, our only weapons were broom handles. The whole idea sounds almost unbelievable that the state, little by little eroded our freedom.

    This is my eye-witness account.

    It's true. Those of us who sailed past the Statue of Liberty came to a country of unbelievable freedom and opportunity.

    America is truly is the greatest country in the world. Don't let freedom slip away."

    After America, there is no place to go.

    Kitty Werthmann
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    Offline brainglitch

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #1 on: January 28, 2013, 07:14:41 PM »
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  • Hmm....downthumbs?

    Apparently some people like to believe the lie that Hitler was a good Catholic dictator like Franco and Salazar.


    Offline Traditional Guy 20

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #2 on: January 28, 2013, 07:57:09 PM »
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  • Quote from: brainglitch
    Hmm....downthumbs?

    Apparently some people like to believe the lie that Hitler was a good Catholic dictator like Franco and Salazar.


    No just that some people realize that originally Austria was a part of the Holy Roman Empire, so it was technically German territory. Now why don't you go back to the Frankfurt School Institute?

    Offline Quo Vadis Petre

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #3 on: January 28, 2013, 08:05:43 PM »
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  • Austria was a part of the Holy Roman Empire, all right, not a part of Protestant Prussia, which Hitler's regime was the successor of. You really want a Protestant nation ruling a Catholic one? the Austrian chancellor, Dolfuss, was a very good Catholic putting into practice Catholic social principles and Hitler's thugs αssαssιnαtҽd him!
    "In our time more than ever before, the greatest asset of the evil-disposed is the cowardice and weakness of good men, and all the vigour of Satan's reign is due to the easy-going weakness of Catholics." -St. Pius X

    "If the Church were not divine, this

    Offline brainglitch

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #4 on: January 28, 2013, 08:55:04 PM »
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  • Quote from: Traditional Guy 20
    Quote from: brainglitch
    Hmm....downthumbs?

    Apparently some people like to believe the lie that Hitler was a good Catholic dictator like Franco and Salazar.


    No just that some people realize that originally Austria was a part of the Holy Roman Empire, so it was technically German territory. Now why don't you go back to the Frankfurt School Institute?


    You really need to brush up on your history. Austria hadn't been part of Germany for centuries. It was the seat of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the remnant of the old Holy Roman Empire. Ever hear of the Hapsburgs?


    Offline Incredulous

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #5 on: January 28, 2013, 09:29:44 PM »
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  • Hitler was welcomed in Austria not for his politics, but because he had the military resources to put the tribe on the run.  

    After the Consecration of Russia, so too will the zio-international mafia will be pounded asunder.




    INSTITUTE FOR HISTORICAL REVIEW

    How 'The Sound of Music' Distorts History
    Hollywood Mythology About Austrians and Hitler


    By Mark Weber


    "The Sound of Music" is perhaps the most popular American musical picture ever produced. This entertaining 1965 movie, which includes such catchy tunes as "My Favorite Things" and "Do-Re-Mi," won five Academy Awards, including Best Picture. But whatever its merits as entertainment, the film's presentation of history is deceitful. In particular, its portrayal of the 1938 union or Anschluss of Austria with the German Reich is a gross distortion of reality.

    Ordinary Austrians are portrayed in the movie as decent, patriotic and devout, and unhappy with the grim German takeover of their country. For decades American educators and scholars have similarly presented the Anschluss as an act of aggression. Historian William L. Shirer, for example, in his best-selling book, The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich, refers to the 1938 union as the "Rape of Austria."

    What really happened?
    According to the movie, the head of the von Trapp family decides to flee the country with his wife and children to avoid having to serve in the German navy. While it's true that Georg Ludwig von Trapp, who is played in the movie by Christopher Plummer, was a monarchist who was hostile to Hitler and National Socialism, he was never forced to choose between service in the German armed forces or emigration from the country.

    In the movie, the von Trapps flee Austria in secret, hiking over the mountains into Switzerland carrying their suitcases and musical instruments. In reality, they left the country by train, and they did so quite openly. And instead of going to Switzerland they traveled to Italy before ultimately settling in the United States. As daughter Maria said years later in an interview: "We did tell people that we were going to America to sing. And we did not climb over mountains with all our heavy suitcases and instruments. We left by train, pretending nothing,"

    A more serious distortion of reality is the movie's portrayal of Austria in 1938, and the attitude of Austrians toward Hitler and National Socialism. In fact, the vast majority of Austrians joyfully welcomed the union of their homeland with Hitler's Reich. This is explained in detail, for example, in Hitler's Austria, a scholarly and well-referenced book by Evan Burr Bukey, a professor of history at the University of Arkansas.

    In the years before the March 1938 Anschluss, Austria was ruled by the Dollfuss-Schuschnigg regime, a repressive one-party dictatorship that called itself a "Christian Corporative" state. It imprisoned National Socialists, Marxists and other dissidents. But there was one important section of Austria's population that supported the dictatorial regime. That was the Jєωιѕн community, which made up 2.8 percent of the total. As Prof. Bukey writes: "The Jєωιѕн community regarded the Dollfuss-Schuschnigg regime as its protector ... Under the Dollfuss-Schuschnigg regime the Jєωιѕн community recovered a measure of governmental protection it had not enjoyed since the days of the Habsburgs. The public was outraged."

    In spite of their small numbers, Austria's Jєωs wielded vast and disproportionate wealth and power. As Prof. Bukey writes: "The predominant position of the Jєωs in an impoverished country only intensified the fear and loathing of the Austrians masses. As we have already seen, Jєωιѕн businesses and financial institutions managed much of the country's economic life. At the time of the Anschluss three-quarters of Vienna's newspapers, banks and textile firms were in Jєωιѕн hands ... The extraordinary success of the Jєωs in the learned professions also inspired jealously and spite. Over 50 percent of Austria's attorneys, physicians and dentists were Jєωιѕн. "

    On the eve of the Anschluss, Austria's economy was in a catastrophic condition, and nearly one-third of Austrians were out of work. But people also knew that, just across the border in the German Reich, unemployment had been eliminated, living standards and working conditions had greatly improved, and economic, social and cultural life was flourishing.

    Even Hitler, who was himself a native of Austria, did not realize just how eagerly Austrians looked forward to the union of their homeland with the Reich. Commenting on his entry into his Austria in March 1938, Prof. Bukey writes: "What he [Hitler] did not take into account was the tumultuous welcome he would receive from the Austrian people, an outburst of frenzied acclimation seldom seen the days of the Caesars."

    Virtually the only people in Austria who did not join in the general outpouring of joy was a small minority of Jєωs, Marxists and monarchists. Hitler ordered a free and secret national referendum on this great issue. As Prof Bukey notes:"Hitler sincerely believed that 'all state power must emanate from the people and [be] confirmed in free state elections'."

    In the run-up to the referendum, Austria's Roman Catholic and Protestant leadership, along with the country's labor leaders, issued statements welcoming the incorporation of their country into Hitler's Germany. The Catholic primate of Austria, Theodor Cardinal Innitzer, personally welcomed Hitler to Vienna. Together with the country's other Bishops, Cardinal Innitzer issued a pastoral letter urging the faithful to vote for Hitler. The Catholic leaders also authorized the draping of swastika banners from the country's churches. In Austria, well as in the rest of the German Reich, approval of the Anschluss -- as reflected in the plebiscite -- was nearly unanimous. Even foreign observers acknowledged that the lopsided, 99 percent "Yes" vote reflected popular sentiment.

    Following Austria's incorporation into the Reich, conditions improved dramatically. As Prof. Bukey writes: "In one of the most remarkable economic achievements in modern history, the National Socialists reduced the number of unemployed in Austria from 401,000 in January 1938 to 99,865 in September; in Vienna from 183,271 to 74,162 ... By Christmas [1938] 27 percent more jobs existed in Austria than before the Anschluss." In 1940 the unemployment rate fell to just 1.2 percent.

    Between June and December 1938 -- that is, in just seven months -- the weekly income of industrial workers rose nine percent. "All in all," writes Prof. Bukey, "the Austrian GNP rose 12.8 percent in 1938, and 13.3 percent in 1939." Seldom in history has a country experienced such rapid, dramatic economic growth.

    Shortly after the Anschluss, Germany's National Labor Law and the Reich's comprehensive social security system were introduced in Austria. These guaranteed basic rights at the workplace, afforded protection from arbitrary dismissal, quickly provided relief to more then 200,000 desperately poor people, and extended health care benefits to the working class. A large-scale construction program was launched to provide affordable housing. Cultural life was greatly encouraged, with energetic promotion of music, the fine arts and literature. Together with the increase in prosperity and optimism came a jump in the birthrate.

    Economic growth continued even after the outbreak of war in September 1939, in spite of a shortage of labor and other difficulties. In 1941, Austria's GNP increased by 7.2 percent. "By 1941," writes Prof. Bukey, "wartime mobilization was bringing palpable improvement in the material conditions of everyday life to many Austrians."

    In November 1941, Austria's bishops issued a pastoral letter, which was read in all churches, that reiterated support for the war against Soviet Russia. In it the Catholic leaders solemnly declared that Germany was conducting a crusade against a monstrous "threat to Western civilization." Rather than "keep silent," the bishops went on, Catholics should "recognize the danger for all Europe should Bolshevism prevail."

    During the war years, Austrians continued to apply in large numbers to join the National Socialist Party, so that by May 1943 two-thirds of a million had signed up. Austrian support for the regime remained strong to the bitter end in May 1945.

    In short, the "Sound of Music" portrayal of the Austrian people's attitude toward Hitler and the National Socialist Reich is a deceitful perversion of historical reality.
     
    -- May 2011
    "Some preachers will keep silence about the truth, and others will trample it underfoot and deny it. Sanctity of life will be held in derision even by those who outwardly profess it, for in those days Our Lord Jesus Christ will send them not a true Pastor but a destroyer."  St. Francis of Assisi

    Offline Quo Vadis Petre

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #6 on: January 28, 2013, 09:37:27 PM »
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  • The IHR distorts the Catholic rule of Dolfuss, who was praised by Pope Pius XI! ANd it ignores the fact of Dolfuss' assassination by Hitler's thugs. And Hitler didn't really put the tribe on the run; he was being used by the International Money Power as Hoffman docuмents.
    "In our time more than ever before, the greatest asset of the evil-disposed is the cowardice and weakness of good men, and all the vigour of Satan's reign is due to the easy-going weakness of Catholics." -St. Pius X

    "If the Church were not divine, this

    Offline roscoe

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #7 on: January 28, 2013, 10:12:25 PM »
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  • In am just about to begin reading Fr Messner's Bio of PM Dolfuss.
    There Is No Such Thing As 'Sede Vacantism'...
    nor is there such thing as a 'Feeneyite' or 'Feeneyism'


    Offline Traditional Guy 20

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #8 on: January 29, 2013, 06:16:50 AM »
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  • Quote from: Quo Vadis Petre
    The IHR distorts the Catholic rule of Dolfuss, who was praised by Pope Pius XI! ANd it ignores the fact of Dolfuss' assassination by Hitler's thugs. And Hitler didn't really put the tribe on the run; he was being used by the International Money Power as Hoffman docuмents.


    Uh no. Hitler was so terrified that the assasination of Dolfus would provoke Mussolini he immediately disowned the coup. He never supported the assasination to begin with.

    Offline Traditional Guy 20

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #9 on: January 29, 2013, 06:22:52 AM »
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  • Quote from: brainglitch
    You really need to brush up on your history. Austria hadn't been part of Germany for centuries. It was the seat of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the remnant of the old Holy Roman Empire. Ever hear of the Hapsburgs?


    The point is Austria was a part of Germany. And I know all about the Hapsburgs thank you. If you ever read Mein Kampf Hitler speaks of the Austro-Hungarian Empire losing its Germanic core to the Slavic 'comrade' which was becoming ever populous, one reason he hated the Hapsburgs.

    You want to talk about brushing up on your history here you go. Hitler did not want war with Western Europe. His foreign policy was the reclaiming of the old German Empire and the traditional German policy of the Drang Noch Osten, the drive to the East to crush Bolshevism in Russia. Britain, France, America, etc. were not threatened by Hitler. Britain and France declared war on him and Hitler declared war on America because of FDR's continued provocation by attacking German U-boats when America was neutral. The break-up of Czechoslovakia actually returned people back to how they wanted to be ruled since the Czech nation of Tomas Masaryk actually enveloped many people who did not want to be in the Czech nation. Hitler also tried to negotiate with Poland but the Poles refused because they relied on the British-French war guarentee.


    Offline Telesphorus

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #10 on: January 29, 2013, 06:26:47 AM »
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  • The nαzιs were bad, not because they were in opposition to Jєωs, but because they were opposed to morality.

    Austria overwhelmingly supported the Anschluss, and Hitler did not adhere faithfully to the Concordat.

    People who oppose Jєωs don't have to defend the Third Reich.

    We need an honest appraisal of the nαzιs, so that we show our first concern is the truth.

    Practically speaking, irrational apologetics for Adolf Hitler and the nαzιs are highly counter-productive in the struggle against Jєωry.


    Offline Telesphorus

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #11 on: January 29, 2013, 06:30:04 AM »
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  • Quote from: brainglitch
    Holy Roman Empire.


    Quote from: wikipedia
    In a decree following the 1512 Diet of Cologne, the name was officially changed to Holy Roman Empire of the German Nation (German: Heiliges Römisches Reich Deutscher Nation, Latin: Imperium Romanum Sacrum Nationis Germanicæ).[9] This form was first used in a docuмent in 1474.


    It's right there in the name that it was the empire of the German nation, of which Austria was a part.

    Offline Traditional Guy 20

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    Austria - we INVITED Hitler to power here
    « Reply #12 on: January 29, 2013, 06:30:18 AM »
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  • Quote from: Telesphorus
    The nαzιs were bad, not because they were in opposition to Jєωs, but because they were opposed to morality.

    Austria overwhelmingly supported the Anschluss, and Hitler did not adhere faithfully to the Concordat.

    People who oppose Jєωs don't have to defend the Third Reich.

    We need an honest appraisal of the nαzιs, so that we show our first concern is the truth.

    Practically speaking, irrational apologetics for Adolf Hitler and the nαzιs is highly counter-productive in the struggle against Jєωry.


    We are discussing if Hitler was a threat, not if he was a good guy.

    Offline Telesphorus

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    « Reply #13 on: January 29, 2013, 06:35:16 AM »
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  • Quote from: Traditional Guy 20
    We are discussing if Hitler was a threat, not if he was a good guy.


    Quote from: PaxRomanum
    Apparently some people like to believe the lie that Hitler was an evil anti-Christian pagan dictator


    I don't think it's a lie to say that Hitler led Germany to catastrophe, and that he did not act in a Christian spirit.

    That's not to say we shouldn't speak in defense of the reputation of Germany from the relentless Jєωιѕн atrocity propaganda, and from the lies about who was behind the war.  



    Offline brainglitch

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    « Reply #14 on: January 29, 2013, 09:56:01 AM »
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  • Quote from: Telesphorus
    Quote from: Traditional Guy 20
    We are discussing if Hitler was a threat, not if he was a good guy.


    Quote from: PaxRomanum
    Apparently some people like to believe the lie that Hitler was an evil anti-Christian pagan dictator


    I don't think it's a lie to say that Hitler led Germany to catastrophe, and that he did not act in a Christian spirit.

    That's not to say we shouldn't speak in defense of the reputation of Germany from the relentless Jєωιѕн atrocity propaganda, and from the lies about who was behind the war.  




    Naturally, a lot of the stories of German atrocities were exaggerated (victors write the history unfortunately), but I think it's pretty obvious that Hitler and the nαzιs were not friendly to the Church, although some elements of the German officer corps and old aristocracy were. Stauffenberg, for example, who tried to αssαssιnαtҽ Hitler.