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Thursday, February 02, 2006
An historic Nazi poster ![]() Translated, the poster reads: "The Marshall and the corporal fight alongside us for peace and equal rights" Can you get a more Leftist slogan than that? Modern-day Leftists sometimes try to dismiss Hitler's socialism as something from his early days that he later outgrew. But when this poster was promulgated he was already Chancellor (Prime Minister) so it was far from early days. Once again we see what a barefaced lie it is when Leftists misrepresent Hitler as a Rightist. He campaigned and gained power as a democratic Leftist. The March 5, 1933 election was the last really democratic election prewar Germany had. Another example of the easy transition from Fascism to modern Leftism: "Where have we seen this story before? An influential European writer and thinker, celebrated in his mature years for works of sophisticated philosophical nuance, turns out to have been an anti-Semitic, pro-Hitler creep in his 20s. The standard query immediately presents itself: Will the nefarious politics destroy the reputation? Marta Petreu's An Infamous Past: E.M. Cioran and the Rise of Fascism in Romania (Ivan R. Dee, 2005), inevitably hurtles humanists of a certain age back to other names and scandals — de Man, Heidegger, Eliade — with its exposé of the expatriate Romanian anointed by Susan Sontag in her 1968 introduction to The Temptation to Exist as "the most distinguished figure" then writing in the lyrical, aphoristic, antisystematic tradition of Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, and Wittgenstein". For more on how Leftist Nazism was, see here The "anti-racism" (really reverse racism) of the modern-day Left is a recent affectation. Before the war practically everybody was racist -- including such notable "Progressive" U.S. Presidents as Theodore Roosevelt, Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Delano Roosevelt. See here for details of that. (For more postings from me, see EDUCATION WATCH, GREENIE WATCH, POLITICAL CORRECTNESS WATCH, GUN WATCH, SOCIALIZED MEDICINE, AUSTRALIAN POLITICS and DISSECTING LEFTISM) Blogger News Network is advertiser-supported, and your visits to our advertisers help BNN to meet its expenses. Help keep us afloat! posted by JR at 1:14 AM |
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4 Comments:
I wish you would explain to me all about politics. I'm terribly fascinated yet remains such a breedling; if you wanna explain to me my blog is leviathanthoughts, and my email is noojoo@gmail.com
You appear to possess much insight bout pol sci.
You have posted fascinating comments. The point could also be improved if the hackneyed shorthand were not so over-used and instead the actual name of the party was used: The National Socialist German Workers' Party.
Here is more evidence of the points that you make.
1. Dr. Rex Curry showed that the USA's early Pledge of Allegiance (to the flag) used a straight-arm salute and it was the origin of the salute of the monstrous National Socialist German Workers' Party (Nazis). Dr. Curry helped to establish that it was not an ancient Roman salute, and that the "ancient Roman salute" is a myth. http://rexcurry.net/pledgesalute.html The myth is still repeated in modern efforts to cover-up Dr. Curry's discoveries about the Pledge's poisonous pedigree.
2. The original Pledge began with a military salute that then stretched out toward the flag. Historic photographs are at http://rexcurry.net/pledge2.html and at http://rexcurry.net/pledge_military.html In actual use, the second part of the gesture was performed with a straight arm and palm down by children casually performing the forced ritual chanting. Professor Curry showed that, due to the way that both gestures were used sequentially in the pledge, the military salute led to the Nazi salute. The Nazi salute is an extended military salute. http://rexcurry.net/book1a1contents-pledge.html
3. Francis Bellamy (author of the "Pledge of Allegiance") and Edward Bellamy (author of the novel "Looking Backward") and Charles Bellamy (author of "A Moment of Madness") were socialists. Edward and Charles were brothers, and Francis was their cousin. Francis and Edward were both self-proclaimed National Socialists and they supported the "Nationalism" movement in the USA, the "Nationalist" magazine, the "Nationalist Educational Association," and their dogma of "military socialism," and Edward inspired the "Nationalist Party" (in the USA) and their dogma influenced socialists worldwide (including Germany) via “Nationalist Clubs.” http://rexcurry.net/bellamy-edward-german-connections.html The Pledge was the origin of the Nazi salute. "Nazi" means "National Socialist German Workers' Party." A mnemonic device is the swastika. Although the swastika was an ancient symbol, Professor Curry discovered that it was also used sometimes by German National Socialists to represent "S" letters for their "socialism." Curry changed the way that people view the symbol of the horrid National Socialist German Workers' Party. Hitler altered his own signature to use the same stylized "S" letter for "socialist" and similar alphabetic symbolism still shows on Volkswagens. http://rexcurry.net/book1a1contents-swastika.html
Dr. Curry showed that many modern myths about swastikas use the false belief that Nazis called their symbol a "swastika." German National Socialists did not call their symbol a "swastika."
Professor Curry showed that many modern myths use a false belief that Nazis called themselves "Nazis." The myths cause widespread ignorance of the eytmology of the word "Nazi." Party members called themselves "National Socialists," not "Nazis."
It's interesting that you don't mention the first group that the Nazi's persecuted, Communists. While you may show how Nazi's incorporated leftist rhetoric, their politics were fiercely nationalistic, opposed to individual rights and workers power, and essentially corporatist.
The other point you forget is, who were the first to fight in arms against european fascism? Anarchists, socialists, and social democrats in Spain.
The "transition" from "nazism to leftism" is as invented as the term "leftism" itself.
Lastly, I wonder if you realize that the ideological precedence to your argument comes from Milton Friedman, who said "socialism is fascism." I always found this quote delightfully ironic, as Milton Friedman was such a supporter to an actual fascist government in Chile. See
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miracle_of_Chile
It is interesting that Simon Fitzgerald didn't mention the first group that was persecuted by the German National Socialists: capitalists. While Simon may show how German socialists incorporated leftist rhetoric, their politics were also socialist in being fiercely nationalistic, opposed to individual rights and workers power, and essentially elitist, similar to that of the other members of the socialist Wholecaust (of which the Holocaust was a part): The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (65 million slaughtered); the People's Republic of China (35 million); German socialists (21 million slaughtered).
The other point you forget is, who were the first to kill other socialists or anyone perceived as a threat to their government power: socialists, as shown above in the socialist Wholecaust, the worst slaughter of humanity that ever occurred.
The attempt to differentiate the National Socialist German Workers Party from all the other homicidal socialists in as invented as the term "Nazi" itself.
Lastly, I wonder if you realize that the ideological precedence to your argument comes from Stalin, Mao, and Hilter, who were the worst criminals and murderers of all time and always promoted socialism. I always found their quotes delightfully ironic, as the top socialists were such supporters of misanthropy, theft, poverty, and mass slaughter.
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