Can Adolf Hitler be criticized?
Carolyn takes on a difficult subject and attempts to make the point that Adolf Hitler embodied and worked for all things that were beneficial to the White European people. If we are also committed to what is good for us as White people, we should only praise Hitler and unify behind him as behind a single great idea. If one decides to criticize this or that aspect of his policies and/or decisions to the extent of making him the cause of failure of National-Socialism or the loss of the war, that greatly damages our strength as a unified force. Instead of criticizing Hitler, we should be seeking to understand him because he was smarter than we are! Related topics covered:
- Paul Eisen, the Jewish blogger who claims “I am a Holocaust Denier,” reveals how deep is the hatred of Jews for National Socialism, ergo Adolf Hitler;
- Eisen celebrates the “deep, emotional, spiritual affiliation” Jews have with their Jewishness (while living in non-Jew countries) but doesn’t seem to recognize that Europeans also have the same affiliation for their own historical/ethnic identity;
- According to Eisen, even well-integrated Jews feel it’s normal to feel fear and disdain for their non-Jewish neighbors – because in their minds antisemitism never goes away;
- German Foreign Ministry wants to honor a German communist Ilse Stöbe, who was a Soviet spy asset from 1931 on, calling her a member of the “anti-Nazi Resistance”;
- The People’s Court judgement against White Rose defendants Schmorell, Huber and Graf sheds light on the nature and rationale of a National-Socialist state (especially in time of war).
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Carolyn' site
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I found very little worthwhile here for the general listener.
ReplyDeleteFor the first entire hour, Carolyn Yeager only suggests it's not good to criticize Hitler because doing so diminishes the unity of White People, and I agree, since, like her, I know of no one else, besides Hitler, in modern times who did so many things right for so many people, even though no one can reasonably assert Hitler was perfect or a god.
Her position here was one that can best be understood as one that is already preaching to the choir. You have to be on the side she's on even to follow the logic, which I nonetheless did.
In the second hour, Yeager also suggests one use the word "Jew" and not terms like "kike jew" (as distinguished from so-called "good Jews).
Yeager also focuses on the Jew Paul Eisen's thought. Her exploration proves her suggestion that a Jew is a Jew is a Jew -- and there's no point in labeling some of them "kike Jews."
Other than these main ideas, there was a wonderful musical interlude between the first and second hour consisting of German Swing Music from Die Goldene Sieben.
Great program.
ReplyDeleteHeil Hitler!