Godlike Productions - Discussion Forum
Users Online Now: 1,196 (Who's On?)Visitors Today: 171,457
Pageviews Today: 289,286Threads Today: 89Posts Today: 1,770
04:15 AM


Rate this Thread

Absolute BS Crap Reasonable Nice Amazing
 

America now is Germany then: Analogies

 
Face Palmer

User ID: 43285854
Germany
08/25/2017 09:42 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Related but went unnoticed: Thread: In 1939, I didn’t hear war coming. Now its thundering approach can’t be ignored
"The world will soon wake up to the reality that everyone is broke and can collect nothing from the bankrupt, who are owed unlimited amounts by the insolvent, who are attempting to make late payments on a bank holiday in the wrong country, with an unacceptable currency, against defaulted collateral, of which nobody is sure who holds title."

Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity.

The woman who is not pursued sets up the doctrine that pursuit is offensive to her sex, and wants to make it a felony. No genuinely attractive woman has any such desire. - H.L. Mencken, In Defense Of Women
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 72774274
Canada
08/25/2017 09:52 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Similarities

Hitler became popular with the marginalized public
Trump same

Hitler targetted an immigrant race causing internal problems as the cause of all ills
Trump same

Hitler made youth PROUD to be nationalists
Trump same

Hitler is said to have jjwsh blood in his family
Trump same

there is ONE MAJOR DIFFERENCE no one ever mentions cause its between the lines of history.
At the time of the rise of Nazism the Aryan Community was becoming very united and strong politically
and there were 8 million of us who got carpet bombed by NATO under Hitler's reign.

I personally believe Hitler was part of this planned extermination of German Aryans.

Hope trump doesnt repeat this.

 Quoting: 7he4ryan


agree 100%
Hitler was a traitor and sold out the aryan community to the you know who-s ... we getting too powerful for them
veils and excuses were created to exterminate 8 million aryan women and children civilians carpet bombed

this is how history SHOULD read
and people need to learn this lesson.
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 72774274


to this i wish to add ...
truth lies between the lines
no one will ever tell it to you


the agenda is revealed by the result

8 million exterminated aryans was the result of hitler
if it wasnt the agenda it could not have happened
he is the worst traitor in history loyal to those khazar banker jjjws
not the people of pure race
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 75426300
Malta
08/25/2017 10:00 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Spot on OP. I'm surprised you haven't already been banned though.

clappa
rekinom8

User ID: 75436087
Germany
08/25/2017 10:51 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Hitler became popular with the marginalized public
Trump same
 Quoting: 7he4ryan

Did you miss the last election results?


Hitler targetted an immigrant race causing internal problems as the cause of all ills
Trump same
 Quoting:

Trump doesn't target the "immigrant race", he targets the swamp that invited those with uncertain goals in mind.


Hitler made youth PROUD to be nationalists
Trump same
 Quoting:

True for every country not under communist regime


Hitler is said to have jjwsh blood in his family
Trump same
 Quoting:

No and No, unless you mean some relatives of Trump's children, but they are not Trump and he doesn't arrange their marriages.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 12739365
Switzerland
08/25/2017 11:39 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Disturbing truth about all American Wars in the Mideast since WW2

By Preston J., Ph.D on August 23, 2017

America had no legal or constitutional right to be involved in any Mideast Wars since WW2.

The USG never had any valid legal right to attack Iraq over its invasion of Kuwait in 1991 under US law, the US Constitution or International Law either.

Why? Because Iraq was very craftily manipulated by the USG and the CIA to invade Kuwait.

Here’s how it happened.

It was a very crafty CIA covert operation that created the Invasion of Kuwait through political manipulation.

The CIA had approached the leaders of Kuwait with a plan to engage in horizontal drilling into Iraq’s main oil field.

Kuwaiti production was waning, and the CIA proprietary drilling company from Sante Fe [sic] assured Kuwaiti officials that the plan was foolproof and would never be discovered by Iraq.

After the horizontal drilling was completed and the oil was being pumped, it is alleged by some well-informed insiders that US Ambassador to Iraq, April Glaspie met with Saddam Hussein.

She informed him that Kuwait was using a new type of drilling (horizontal drilling) and was pumping oil from Iraq’s biggest oil field.

It has been alleged that Saddam Hussein was also provided with satellite photos made with ground penetrating radar that showed the horizontal drilling.

Saddam reacted with anger and asked Ambassador Glaspie what would happen if Iraq invaded Kuwait and took back the land which was rightfully theirs in the first place, taken away by the British earlier. Glaspie supposedly replied, the USG would view that as an “inter-Arab” affair and would consider it none of our concern.

Saddam Hussein took this as a green light from the USG and proceeded to invade Kuwait. Immediately there was an outcry in Congress that something had to be done to stop this Iraqi aggression, which was supposedly threatening the security of the whole Mideast.

Of course the public was never informed that Saddam Hussein had started working for the CIA as a bicycle hit-man at 15 years of age, and worked his way up through the system to become a full-fledged CIA dictator-puppet like Noriega and so many others. Saddam Hussein was willing to attack Iran on Israel’s behalf, in a lengthy war that resulted in millions of dead, with many of these being innocent women and children non-combatants.

Right now Iraq is a destroyed nation. Its major infrastructure has been destroyed by American bombs, and a once modern nation has been reduced to rubble.

Continue to read:
[link to twitter.com (secure)]
MissCleo

User ID: 73977055
United States
08/25/2017 11:41 AM

Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
if history repeats there will be a huge genocide and lots of destruction and then peace.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 2785235
Switzerland
08/25/2017 11:54 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
There’s a Reason Why Washington and London Won’t Quit the Business of Killing

25.08.2017 Author: Vladimir Odintsov

The god of war is a greedy beast all right.

On August 23, a coalition of Arab countries, led by Saudi Arabia, carried yet another barbaric bombardment in the Yemeni capital of Sana’a, which resulted in the death of at least 35 people.

On July 18, at least 20 civilians fell victims of a Saudi air strike in the Yemeni Taiz Governorate, as it’s been reported by the Daily Mail with a special reference to the United Nations.

Since the beginning of the civil war in Yemen in 2014, more than 10,000 civilians perished in the poorest country of the Arabian Peninsula, while another 3 million were displaced. In March 2015, Saudi Arabia unleashed an armed aggression against this state without any sort of approval from the UN, but with an extensive amount of military and political support coming from the United States and Britain. Such acts of aggression have for a long time been a trademark of Washington, but now it’s allies seem to be willing to follow in its footsteps. The Saudi coalition carries on air strikes against targets of the Houthis resistance to this very day, which results in massive civilian casualties, with hundreds of victims being added regularly to the rising death toll.

As a result of continuous attacks carried out by Saudi armed forces schools, hospitals and other vital civil infrastructure are being routinely reduced to the ground, while electricity and drinking water supplies are getting increasingly scarce even in large cities. With the silent approval of Washington and London, the Saudi coalition is taking every effort to make sure that no Yemeni national survives this conflict, using the tactics that can only be described as genocidal.

And the list of war crimes committed by the Saudi coalition is getting large by the day largely due to the ever-growing flow of various weapons sold to Riyadh by the United States, Britain and other Western powers. Today, the British and American arms manufactures receive fabulous profits from their indirect participation in the Yemeni military campaign.

Saudi Arabia alone in recent years received over a hundred billion worth of arms from American military manufacturers, while Donald Trump pledged to carry on the business tactics pursued by his predecessors by signing a deal on the shipment of another 110 billion worth of arms to Riaydh.
The latest annual report issued by the British Committee for Defense and Security shows that in 2016 alone the UK received 6 billion pounds from the sale of arms, with a half of this some coming from to the Middle East, where violent conflicts are raging. For more than 10 consecutive years the UK remains the second largest arms supplier in the world after the United States.

At the same time, London keeps training pilots for the Saudi Air Force, the very people that would bomb Yemeni residential areas. The British Supreme Court, which usually defends “human rights”, did not even want to consider the formal appeal issued by the Campaign Against Arms Trade (CAAT), which had previously urged the kingdom to put an end to the supply of military equipment to Saudi Arabia.

In turn, Amnesty International would accuse the United States and Britain for handing over weapons to Saudi Arabia for it to be able to carry on its aggression against Yemen since March 2015, delivering more than five billion dollars worth of weapons.

The fact that for London any armed conflict is perfect opportunity to sell its weapons is vividly confirmed by the recently declassified documents of the National Archives of the United Kingdom showing, in particular, that the British government considered Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990 to be an “unprecedented opportunity” to obtain super profits from the sale of weapons to the countries of the Persian Gulf . Back in the day UK’s Minister for Defence Procurement, Alan Clarke would use exact same words in his letter to British PM of the time Margaret Thatcher, noting that this was an unprecedented opportunity for DESO (the Department of Defense Export Administration).”

As declassified documents show, “an unprecedented opportunity” for Clark was the expected response of the US and its allies to Iraq’s invasion of Kuwait and the outbreak of military conflict in the region. The fact that wars have always been considered as a chance to sell more arms to other states has recently been confirmed by The Guardian.

Mind you that last May former US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice admitted that the US invasion of Iraq launched in 2003 had nothing in common with establishing democracy in this country, the goal was to overthrow Saddam Hussein and establish a pro-Washington regime in this country . This invasion would then result in a civil war that gave birth to ISIS.

Of the other declassified documents of 1983, it follows that Britain had not interest in stopping Iraqi production of chemical weapons, since British exporters were involved in this trade, according to the documents of the UK Ministry of Foreign Affairs.

So, if for residents of the Middle East wars means death, poverty and grief, Washington and London believe that wars is a perfect opportunity to get even richer at the expense of somebody else’s blood!

Continue to read:
[link to twitter.com (secure)]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 2785235
Switzerland
08/25/2017 12:00 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Trump and Afghanistan: A Hidden Agenda

25.08.2017 Author: James ONeill

If you not sad to see Bannon leave, you must answer yourself a question: Is there any reasonable people left on the team?

On Monday 21 August 2017 US President Trump made his long awaited statement on future US policy in Afghanistan. There was considerable speculation beforehand that as to whether Trump might announce a US withdrawal. The basis for that speculation appeared to be various statements that Trump had made both before and during his candidacy for the presidency.

Even closer to the time of the speech there was further speculation that he would announce an increase of 4000 US troops. The basis for that speculation appeared to be leaks from unspecified sources.

In the event the speech was an anticlimax. Although Trump conceded that his views had changed, there was essentially no change to US policy. Any change would have been a surprise as there are long established continuities as to US foreign policy generally, and in this case to Afghanistan.

The only voice in the administration making a different case was Steve Bannon, and his departure the previous week confirmed not only that there would be no change in policy, but that the takeover of the administration by the generals was now complete. Trumps three closest advisers on national security matters, Kelly, McMaster and Mattis have never shown the least interest in a reduced American military footprint anywhere in the world, much less in Afghanistan.

The figure of 4000 extra troops, although not specified by Trump, nonetheless remains the favoured figure by most commentators. Quite why this number would make any significant difference has never been explained. It is significantly fewer troops than the more than 100,000 the Americans had at the height of their troop engagement, and that number was conspicuously unable to defeat the Taliban or even exercise effective control over more than a small percentage of the country.

Trump’s statement and the mainstream commentaries that have followed have barely mentioned if at all the more than 100,000 mercenaries that are operating in Afghanistan. Perhaps because their role is unencumbered by the normal rules of engagement they enjoy a media silence that is inconsistent with informed debate and discussion about an effective resolution of what is transparently an unwinnable quagmire.

There were two policy elements in Trump’s speech that are worth a further comment. The first was his disclaimer that the United States was engaged in “nation building” but rather was there “to kill terrorists.” Apart from the inherent implausibility of this claim, it creates difficulties for allies such as Australia whose politicians continue to sell this unpopular enterprise on the equally implausible claim that they are there to “train” Afghan troops to a level of self-sufficiency. This claim is maintained in the face of overwhelming evidence that after several years of such “training” the Afghan army remains a byword for corruption, “ghost” soldiers, and a compete inability to sustain any kind of effective military combat.

The second point in Trump’s speech worth noting is that he said that the Rules of engagement would be relaxed. The detail was not specified, but such terminology usually prefaces the commission of war crimes and a war in which civilians are the main casualties. The Afghan civilian population has already suffered years of bombing, drone attacks and being experimental guinea pigs for the first ever use of the so-called ‘mother of all bombs’. The military efficacy of that particular attack has never been revealed.

In short, there was no substantive change at all in Trump’s policy announcement. Nor was there ever likely to be as US policy in Afghanistan is part of a consistent policy being played out around the world. Only some of the details vary to reflect particular local circumstances.

In Afghanistan’s case there are three principal local conditions, an understanding of which is critical to any realistic appraisal of US policy in Afghanistan. Unsurprisingly, none of these conditions have featured in mainstream analysis of Trumps’ speech.

The first of these is the issue of resources. As even the New York Times acknowledged (25 July 2017) a 2014 report estimated that Afghanistan had as much as $1 trillion of untapped mineral deposits. These mineral resources include rare earth minerals that are essential to a range of high-tech products. At present, China has a virtual monopoly of these valuable resources.

A related resource issue is control of the oil and gas pipeline from the enormous reserves of the Caspian basin. It was the US’s failure to secure the contract for this pipeline in July 2001 that was the reason for the October 2001 invasion, not the fictional narrative of hunting for Osama bin Laden.

The second major issue revolves around the long-standing US policy of confronting China, Iran and Russia. Iran and China share a border with Afghanistan, and three former Soviet republics, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan, also border it.

All three of those latter countries have a significant Muslim population, 89%, 79% and 98% respectively. They are therefore prime targets for ISIS and other proxy terrorist groups. It is not a coincidence that ISIS began to play a significant role in Afghanistan at precisely the time when the Taliban were reasserting control over the majority of the country.

The use of terrorist proxy groups in support of US geopolitical objectives in the region date at least from the 1970s when under Operation Cyclone Mujihideen were trained and armed by the Americans for infiltration into Afghanistan, China’s Xinjiang province (also with a significant Muslim population) and the aforementioned former Soviet republics. The Mujihideen el Khalq (MEK) have similarly been used to destabilize Iran.

The third local condition of significance is that Afghanistan supplies 93% of the world’s heroin according to the UN Drug Agency. Opium production, from which heroin is derived, had virtually ceased under the Taliban prior to the invasion in 2001. Production rebounded under American and allied patronage reaching a new record level in 2016.

The use of illegal narcotics to finance CIA and other clandestine operations is well documented (Alfred McCoy The Politics of Heroin 1972, 2003; Peter Dale Scott, Drugs, Oil and War 2003; Scott, American War Machine 2010). Heroin addiction is used as a means of destabilizing target countries, and Russia and Iran have significant addiction problems as a consequence.

Continue to read:
[link to twitter.com (secure)]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 2785235
Switzerland
08/25/2017 12:07 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Post-ISIS (CIA/Mossad/MI6/mercs) Geo-political Spins in the Middle East

25.08.2017 Author: Salman Rafi Sheikh

While it’s true that ISIS is almost out of the door, still there’s new challenges for the region looming on the horizon.

It had become quite obvious, even long before the end-game of ISIS had reached its culmination, that the post-Daesh era would see new geo-political alignments taking place on a scale that would necessitate burying earlier hostilities and forging new alliances. This is perhaps the most striking and defining element of power politics that dynamics of power-tussle are never static, but change across the time and space continuum. No surprises as such happen in power-politics when ‘old enemies’ sit together and decide to confront the ‘new enemies.’ As such, while Daesh has almost been defeated, the cardinal reasons that had led to the germination of Daesh and other groups have still not sunk. Saudi Arabia is as hostile to Iran as it ever was, and to counter Iran’s increasing influence in the post-Daesh scenario, the kingdom has now started to approach, trying to recruit, Shi’ite elements in its bid to counter-balance Iranian influence in Iraq (and Syria). Iran, on the other hand, is also in the middle of strengthening its relations with one of its historical rivals in the region: Turkey.

The House of Saud sowing its own seeds in Iraq

This is happening almost simultaneously with Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, Muhammad bin Salman, meeting Muqtada al-Sadr, leader of Sadr movement who was on first ever visit to Saudia in last 11 years, in Jeddah few weeks ago. Let’s not forget that it was only a year ago when Al-Sadr was involved in protests against the kingdom’s embassy in Baghdad for the execution of a key Shi’ite cleric Nimr al-Nimr in Saudi Arabia. At the same time, when Al-Sadr was protesting the execution, he was also calling for the resignation of Syria’s Assad, indicating his willingness to tap into the Saudi block. It was, therefore, no surprise to see him travelling to UAE few days ago where he met UAE’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Zayed Al Nahyan—someone who is allegedly the main architect of Gulf crisis and Qatar blockade, and is also widely regarded as Muhammad Bin Salman’s mentor and chief ally.

It is quite obvious that Saudi Arabia is cultivating Al-Sadr to penetrate in the “post-war Iraq” through post-war reconstruction funds. Sadr’s office said in the post-meeting statement that Riyadh had agreed to pay Baghdad $10 million purportedly as aid to rebuild Iraq. Members of Al-Sadr’s movement were also awarded special hajj visas for this year.

Within Iraq, Al-Sadr’s political orientations are anti-regime. Al-Sadr is very critical of Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi’s government. It was in March that he had started a sit-in inside Baghdad’s Green Zone to force the government to enact certain “reforms.” It was, therefore, again not a surprise to see him, right after visiting Saudi Arabia, demanding that the Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi had to either “integrate into the army the disciplined members” of the Hashd al-Sha’abi forces or put them under severe government control. Sadr had also called on Iraqi authorities to “seize the arsenal of all armed groups,” without elaborating further. It is not difficult to understand that Saudia Arabia’s is using Al-Sadr to force the Iraqi government to clip Iran’s wings of influence in Iraq, where pro-Iranian forces have played a central role in defeating ISIS.

Besides it, by offering to “strengthen Arab Shiite authority” in Iraq through al-Sadr, the House of Saud seems to be pushing him to become Iraq’s next Prime Minister in the next general elections, due to be held in 2018. Will this happen or not is one thing. What, however, is obvious here is that a Saudi political game is in play and is beginning to leave its impact on Iraq. The objective is obvious: the House of Saud wants to make al-Sadr ‘Saudia’s chosen man’ in Iraq to reverse Iranian influence out of the region. This, however, is unlikely to happen. For one thing, cultivating al-Sadr might not be so easy as it may seem at this point. Secondly, even if this eventually becomes possible, reversing Iran’s influence from the region seems even more unlikely. Iran’s own manoeuvres indicate that the country is not only sensing Riyadh’s games, but also moving towards strengthening its own position by cultivating relations with its historical rival in the region, Turkey, opening new vistas of co-operation and strategic alliance.

Continue to read:
[link to twitter.com (secure)]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 2785235
Switzerland
08/25/2017 12:47 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
NATO-CIA-Pentagon: Junction of the Real Druglords & Warlords

SIBEL EDMONDS | AUGUST 21, 2017

The Casualties of CIA-NATO Afghan Operations Include Heroin-Related Deaths
Are you aware of the heroin epidemic that has been on fire all across America- since 2001? Thanks to the government-corporate media outlets you probably are not.

Between 2002 and 2013, heroin-related overdose deaths in the US quadrupled, with more than 10,000 people dying of heroin overdoses in America in 2014 alone. Afghanistan has been the number one source globally of both opium and heroin:

Heroin from Afghanistan has killed more people than the 55,000 Americans killed in the Vietnam War. An American now gets killed every 32 minutes by Afghan heroin. With US heroin deaths tripling every four years, an American will get killed by heroin every 16 minutes by 2020.

There were 189,000 heroin users in the US in 2001, before the US-NATO invasion of Afghanistan. By 2016 that number went up to 4,500,000 (2.5 million heroin addicts and 2 million casual users).Heroin deaths shot up from 1,779 in 2001 to 10,574 in 2014 as Afghan opium poppy fields metastasized from 7,600 hectares in 2001 (when the US-NATO War in Afghanistan began) to 224,000 hectares in 2016. (One hectare equals approximately 2.5 acres). Ironically, the so-called US eradication operation in Afghanistan has cost an estimated $8.5 billion in American taxpayer funds since the US-NATO-Afghan war started in October 2001.

Interestingly, while the mainstream and pseudo-alternative media outlets keep playing up drugs from Mexico, we hardly hear a peep on the massive amount of Afghan-sourced heroin. To put it in perspective: In 2014, according to the DEA drug threat assessment, Mexico produced an estimated 42 metric tons of heroin. Afghanistan produced 6,400 metric tons of opium that same year. The largest share of US heroin is Afghanistan-sourced. It is coming from US-occupied Afghanistan. There is no other mathematical possibility:
Mexico with 10,500 hectares of opium could not possibly supply even 1/20th of the heroin demand in the US. What has the DEA been doing about the vast majority of heroin which is coming in from Afghanistan?

Looking at facts and figures regarding the heroin epidemic, it becomes obvious that the DEA has been a colossal failure and they refuse to answer most questions asked of them. Perhaps, the DEA would answer questions (or plead the 5th) at Congressional Hearings.

First, ‘the Mexicans did it” which is to say that the 173 tons of raw opium from Latin America (from 10,500 hectares in Mexico and 1,500 hectares in Colombia) were converted into 17.3 tons of heroin and all 17.3 tons were imported into the US, where it would not supply even 5% of the US heroin demand.

If all countries on Earth growing opium, except Afghanistan, were to convert their opium to heroin and send it to the US, it wouldn’t be enough for even half of the current US heroin demand.

Continue to read:
[link to twitter.com (secure)]
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 10628193
Switzerland
08/26/2017 04:46 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
bump
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 72823048
Canada
09/09/2017 04:24 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
red_heart
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 72823048
Canada
09/09/2017 04:24 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
sweet_kiss
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 11410278
Switzerland
09/30/2017 03:03 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
bump
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 59358295
United States
09/30/2017 03:29 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
America now has greater surveillance and less freedom. damned
 Quoting: Bite My Shiney Metal Ass


funny how Putin is doing the very same thing, now you see they are all pushing the Globalist pedophile World while pretending to be enemies, just like the Demonrats hated on Walmarts so we would not see Walmarts connection with Fema ongoing, using diversion tactics. Those running to putin would be falling into the same trap. my opinions on this matter
LTHN.

User ID: 75679991
Canada
11/08/2017 10:35 PM

Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Most interesting thread...
"A wise man listens to the message and uses his logic and discernment to process it, a fool negates the message by prejudging the messenger."

"He whose centre is everywhere and whose circumference is nowhere."
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 27892777
United States
11/08/2017 10:46 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Except we went taken over by the swiss in the 1600s.

And the world bank doest count. Cuz u got everyone now.


So stop with the Freudian hate propaganda. Were not your next evil tool.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 75145930
Switzerland
03/28/2018 04:00 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
bump
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 4618059
Switzerland
05/16/2018 05:46 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
bump
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 13818771
Switzerland
05/19/2018 10:18 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
bump
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 5508035
Switzerland
05/20/2018 05:06 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
bump
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 76336522
Australia
05/20/2018 05:17 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
german eagle is verrrrry different from american eagle!!!!!
Milo Jeeder
User ID: 76580361
United States
05/20/2018 05:56 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Plus when you have someone with extreme narcissism in a position of power and authority it has the potential recipe for disaster, literally. The goal of an extreme narcissist will always be to tear everything down, regardless the state it is in, and then rebuild it, over and over.

And it matters none whether the situation merits needed tore down or not, the situation can be as close to perfect as possible and still the extreme narcissist will tear it completely down.

And once the extreme narcissist has completely torn an item down they will then rebuild it, if they can. And regardless if they are successful or not, much more likely not, then they will tear it down again and rebuild it all over.

Eventually when the extreme narcissist tears something down they can't rebuild, or tears down something and tries to tear it down again even though it is already torn down and obliterated, they will then leave that capacity and onto another arena and do the same thing, or at least try to.

And an extreme narcissist will always take credit for anything that gets accomplished whether they had a hand in it or not and anything they are part of that is a failure they will admit failure regardless any overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
Milo Jeeder
User ID: 76580361
United States
05/20/2018 05:58 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Plus when you have someone with extreme narcissism in a position of power and authority it has the potential recipe for disaster, literally. The goal of an extreme narcissist will always be to tear everything down, regardless the state it is in, and then rebuild it, over and over.

And it matters none whether the situation merits needed tore down or not, the situation can be as close to perfect as possible and still the extreme narcissist will tear it completely down.

And once the extreme narcissist has completely torn an item down they will then rebuild it, if they can. And regardless if they are successful or not, much more likely not, then they will tear it down again and rebuild it all over.

Eventually when the extreme narcissist tears something down they can't rebuild, or tears down something and tries to tear it down again even though it is already torn down and obliterated, they will then leave that capacity and onto another arena and do the same thing, or at least try to.

And an extreme narcissist will always take credit for anything that gets accomplished whether they had a hand in it or not and anything they are part of that is a failure they will admit failure regardless any overwhelming evidence to the contrary.
 Quoting: Milo Jeeder 76580361


Error...they will NEVER admit failure
Wondering Mind

User ID: 73265267
United States
05/20/2018 06:08 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
Related Threads
1 America now is Germany then: Analogies 08/26/11
2 America now is Germany then: Analogies 11/12/08
3 America now is Germany then : Analogies 10/03/08
4 America now is Germany then: Analogies 01/29/09
5 America now is Germany then: Analogies 05/19/07

@ Op, every Year the same Text?
 Quoting: Atom-Boy


Running the same program just like any other propaganda, the dates connect the terms they exploited others by and through.
NWO nuts.
The most precious things are the simple things in life, always present in the simplest of minds.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 73903828
Switzerland
05/25/2018 02:14 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
bump
Uncle Gintel

User ID: 23637172
United States
05/25/2018 02:57 AM

Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
No all the germans thought they were bad ass. Half our losers are ashamed of being great.
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 25945534
Switzerland
05/26/2018 02:38 PM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
bump
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 11670244
Switzerland
05/27/2018 02:21 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
bump
Anonymous Coward
User ID: 76617916
Italy
05/27/2018 02:30 AM
Report Abusive Post
Report Copyright Violation
Re: America now is Germany then: Analogies
America now is Germany then: Analogies

The German people of the late 1930s imagined themselves to be brave. They saw themselves as the heroic Germans depicted by the Wagnerian Operas, the descendants of the fierce Germanic warriors who had hunted wild boar with nothing but spears and who had defeated three of Rome’s mightiest legions in the Tuetenberg Forest.

But in truth, by the 1930s, the German people had become civilized and tamed, culturally obsessed with fine details in both science and society. Their self-image of bravery was both salve and slavery. Germans were required to behave as if they were brave, even when they were not.

It’s easy to look back and realize what happened. But at the time the Hitler administration, with the help of the media, looked pretty good to the German people. Hitler was TIME Magazine’s Man Of The Year in 1938; the German people assumed they were safe from a tyrant. They lived in a Republic, after all, with strict laws regarding what the government could and more importantly could not do. Their leader was a devoutly religious man, and had even sung with the boy’s choir of a monastery in his youth.

The reality was that the German people, as individuals, had lost their courage. The German government preferred it that way as a fearful people are easier to rule than a courageous one. But the German people didn’t wish to lose their self-image of courage. So, when confronted with a situation demanding individual courage, in the form of a government gone wrong, the German people simply pretended that the situation did not exist. And in that simple self-deception lay the ruin of an entire nation and the coming of the second World War.

When the Reichstag burned down, most Germans simply refused to believe suggestions that the fire had been staged by the Hitler administration itself. They were afraid to. But so trapped were the Germans by their belief in their own bravery that they willed themselves to be blind to the evidence before their eyes, so that they could nod in agreement with Der Fuhrer while still imagining themselves to have courage, even as they avoided the one situation which most required real courage: to stand up to governmental lies and deceptions.

When the Hitler administration requested temporary extraordinary powers; powers specifically banned under German law, but powers the government claimed they needed to have to deal with the "terrorists", the German people, having already sold their souls to their self-delusions, agreed. The temporary powers were conferred, and, once conferred, lasted until Germany itself was destroyed.

When the Hitler administration staged a phony invasion by Poland, the vast majority of the German people, their own self-image dependant on continuing blindness to their government’s deceptions, did not question why Poland would have done something so stupid as to attack Germany, and as a result Germans found themselves in a war.

But the German government knew they ruled a nation of cowards, and knew they had to spend the money to make the new war something cowards could fight and win. They decorated their troops with regalia to make them proud of themselves, further trapping them in their self-image. The Hitler administration copied the parade regalia of ancient Rome, to remind the Germans of the defeat of the legions at the Tuetenberg Forest. Talismans were added from orthodox religions and the occult to fill the soldiers with delusions of mystical strengths and an afterlife if they fell in battle.

Knowing that it takes courage to kill the enemy face to face, the Hitler administration spent vast sums of money on wonder weapons, airplanes, submarines, ultra-long range artillery, the world’s first cruise missile and the world’s first guided missile, weapons that could be used to kill at a distance, so that those doing the killing need not have to face the reality of what they were doing.

The German people were lured into WW2 not because they were brave, but because they were cowards who wanted to be seen as brave, and found that shooting long range weapons at people they could not see took less courage than standing up to the government’s lies and deceptions. Sent into battle by that false image of courage, the Germans were dependent on their wonder-weapons. When the wonder-weapons stopped working, the delusion of grandeur faded, the illusion ended, the Germans lost the war.

The American people imagine themselves to be brave. They see themselves as the heroic Americans depicted by Western Movies, the descendants of the fierce patriot warriors who had tamed the frontier and defeated the might of the British Empire.

But in truth, by the dawn of the third millennium, the American people have become civilized and tamed, culturally obsessed with fine details in both science and society. Their self-image of bravery is both salve and slavery. Americans are required to behave as if they are brave, even when they are not.

The American people assume they are safe. They live in a Republic, after all, with strict laws regarding what the government can and more importantly cannot do. Their leader is a devoutly religious man and with the help of the media looks petty good: TIME Magazine’s Man Of The Year 2000 and 2004.

The reality is that the American people, as individuals, have lost their courage. The government prefers it that way as a fearful people are easier to rule than a courageous one. But Americans don’t wish to lose their self-image of courage. So, when confronted with a situation demanding courage, in the form of a government gone wrong, the American people simply pretend that the situation does not exist.

When the World Trade Towers collapsed, most Americans simply refused to believe suggestions that the attacks had been staged by parties working for the US government itself. Americans were afraid to, even as news reports surfaced proving that the US government had announced plans for the invasion of Afghanistan early in the year, plans into which the attacks on the World Trade Towers which angered the American people into support of the already-planned war fit entirely too conveniently.

Now the US government has requested temporary extraordinary powers, powers specifically banned under Constitutional law, but powers the government is claiming they need to have to deal with the "terrorists". The American people, having already sold their souls to their self-delusions, are agreeing. The temporary powers recently conferred will be no more temporary in America than they were in Germany.

The vast majority of the American people, their own self-image dependant on continuing blindness to the government’s deceptions, never question why Afghanistan would have done something so stupid as to attack the United States, and as a result, Americans find themselves in a war.

The US government knows they rule a nation of cowards. The government has had to spend the money to make the new war something cowards can fight. The government has decorated the troops with regalia to make them proud of themselves, further trapping them in their self-image. Talismans are added from orthodox religions and the occult to fill the soldiers with delusions of mystical strengths and an afterlife if they fall in battle.

Knowing that it takes courage to kill the enemy face to face, the United States government has spent vast sums of money on wonder weapons, airplanes, submarines, ultra-long range artillery, cruise missiles, and guided missiles, weapons that kill at a distance, so that those doing the killing need not have to face the reality of what they are doing.

But so trapped are Americans by their belief in their own bravery that they will themselves to be blind to the evidence before their eyes, so that they can nod in agreement with the government while still imagining themselves to have courage, even as they avoid the one situation which most requires real courage; to stand up to the government’s lies and deceptions. When the wonder-weapons stop working, the delusion of grandeur fades, the illusion ends, the Americans will have lost ..... themselves.

[link to www.lawfulpath.com]
 Quoting: Anonymous Coward 1508057


tl:dr kook. The Reich was amazing and Americans are fat.





GLP