After April 30

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April 20, 1932, exactly ninety years ago yesterday, was so much like now — depression and despair.

It was the height of the jew-caused Great Depression, caused by 1) the American Khazars at Goldman Sachs,. and 2) by Eugene Meyer, Chairman of  the Federal Reserve, in Washington DC. (Eugene; BTW; was the father of Katherine Meyer Graham,  owner of the infamous Demoncrat and CIA tool, the Washington Post).

As bad as that period, “the Crash,” had hit the American people, it hit the Germans much harder.

And there was the terrible fear of the rise of the Communist Party of Germany, a puppet controlled by the genocidal Joseph Stalin!

AFTER MY  PARTY, THE COMMUNUIST PARTY WAS NUMBER TWO IN THE GERMAN PARLIAMENT.

But rather than embrace our truths, and our vibrant and growing party, which soared to number-one in the 1932 election, people preferred to commit suicide!

They preferred jew lies, despair and death to the truth, hope and life! And yet just nine months later we National Socialists took power!

I have often said that I will start my NEW movement (this blog is not a movement!) when we again have a wave of white suicides. God knows that earthlings need tragedy, or at least a really good scare, to change

Tragedies we bring on ourselves by inaction!

A  German comrade wrote me, grieving, that a friend and comrade, Andreas Kress, b. on (yes) 20 April, 1955, had “died suddenly” a few days ago.

This fine French comrade, activist and publisher, often persecuted, prosecuted, and fined, Jean-Marie Mollitor, also “died suddenly” in French, he suffered a brusque décès, an “abrupt decease,” a euphemism, of course. He left behind a widow, two grown children and grandchildren.  (In America, if you read in the paper that so-and-so “died suddenly at home,” well, now you know what that means.)

And so now we approach the 30th of April, the end of that life…in the smoking ruins of Berlin, 77 years ago.

It was a good day in this one sense, that I began learning with my guardian angels, by reviewing that life and its high and low points.

The good was obvious:

–National socialism had come to power by infinite sacrifices (with over a thousand SA stormtroopers having been beaten to death, stabbed to death or shot to death, and others did long prison terms). We won the hearts of  the German people.

— Then we changed the entire psyche of  the German people, who can be very stubborn and also quarrelsome, unwilling to admit they are wrong and pursuing pointless arguments to be point of bitter personal antagonisms. All that was bad in the Germans got weaker and all that was wonderful got even stronger!

— As a result of the internal change,  to a heroic, radiant and idealistic world view, soon externally everything got better, too. Joblessness, hunger, evictions, foreclosures, and freezing in cold apartments were gone.  In fact, the economy was booming!

— And the country literally grew, too! We added (or got back) the Saarland, the Rhineland, beautiful Austria, the Sudetenland, the Memelland (seized by Lithuania), and later, during the war, West Prussia, Alsace and Lorraine (Franco-German areas I had renounced but which we had to take for the manpower, especially after Stalingrad).

The bad:

— Had I created a religion, I could have molded people into more noble beings as much or more without being seen as an enemy of political freedom.  Look how Christianity overcome the Roman Empire and even savage repression! In a religion, people absolutely accept Do’s and Don’ts, commandments and doctrines, but in politics, if you issue instructions, and stop squabbling, suddenly you are a “dictator”!

—  My Russian policy was disastrous. We  lost the war there.

In this life, I have learned the good lessons of 1933-41, but also the painful lessons of 1942-1945.

I had a delightful encounter last week with a young Frenchman, here in Ontonagon, and it means a lot to me to have  former bitter enemies — Brits, French and Russians — as friends. He was an officer in the French army and is a brilliant fellow, a Corsican, actually. He made quite an impression wearing his beret in Ontonagon! 😉

Trying a pasty a meat pie, and cole slaw.  

 

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