8 Comments

  1. Mr. de Nugent,

    I’m commenting here because the above post is currently your most recent article and I wish to ask a few questions (though my comment will seem rather off- topic).

    I’ve had an interest in past lives for a while and I created a Discord channel a while ago for people who remember them. It’s no longer active, partially due to the never-ending political flamewars that overtook it. Many of them involved people who claim to recall past lives in NS Germany. I’m pro-White and very politically incorrect when it comes to certain topics, however, I was not a National-Socialist or even a German in my pl [previous life].

    I have also never been one of those WNs who has a grudge against Germans or NS. I’d even go so far as to say that the German men I’ve known have been some of the most honest and decent men around. (I don’t really ‘get’ German women; they seem a bit quirky to me).

    When I created the Discord channel, I was surprised to find that many past-life Nazis have hyper-polarized viewpoints. Some seem to have come back with a form of PTSD which manifests as Antifascism. (No joke — I have chatted with a few of those and they were obsessed with Fascist aesthetics, yet lashed out at any form of genuine Nationalism).

    Other supposed Nazi past-lifers are hyper-redpilled, and these ones were extremely excited to talk about what they remembered in a non-judgemental environment.

    Many would go on and on about how ‘we could have won the war if XYZ had happened.’

    It was also fascinating for me to see that White Americans who are not ethnic Germans and who recall past lives as Nazis often unknowingly engage in certain ‘Germanisms.’ They’re orderly, stubborn, honest, and a bit inflexible. They almost always have a distinctive sense of humor.

    Have you ever noticed this dichotomy? Do you think some Antifas were NS Germans in their past life who were so scarred by their deaths / experiences / de-Nazification process that they’re now afraid of any resurgence of NS because they think it will end the same way?

    • Very interesting comment and questions, and thank you!

      In a nutshell, yes, to everything you wrote.

      The famous James Leininger case shows clearly that one can have PTSD from a horrible death in another life, especially if one does not avail oneself in the interlife of spiritual ways of healing. The boy was racked with nightmares for years from being shot down by the Japanese. and slowly drowning in 1945 when he could not get his cockpit open.

      https://johndenugent.com/?s=james+leininger

      The sad thing is that the temporary heaven we go to does not straighten people out, because they are just as free there as here to mope and be angry about their unfair fate if they so desire — a fate which is not unfair at all. We shot Japs down; they shot us down. We firebombed their cities and used flame-throwers on them; they horribly tortured and killed our captured white American Marines and soldiers (plus Brits and Aussies).

      Why stay traumatized over something that is over?

      The problem with NS then is it was purely political, economic. military and,of course, highly emotional and idealistic.

      It did not make people enlightened.

      My own Margi, I am convinced, died horribly in East Prussia in 1944-45. She has huge phobias about certain things. And, yes, she acts very German, rigid and conscientious, not at all like the laid-back Appalachian girl she was raised to be like. I saw Margi chatting on Zoom with relatives the other day — they are so unlike her.

      https://johndenugent.com/margi-update-everything-happens-for-you-not-to-you/

      The coming Aryan religion will heal people from terrible mental suffering, horrible memories, and pointless rehashing of the tragedies of the past.

      We will be facing anyway the new tragedies of the present, and we must be incredibly strong then, and determined to win at all costs, not go to pieces with everything at stake!

      We will learn from our suffering, which we as a race have brought on ourselves, and not wallow in it!

      • Thanks for sharing your thoughts & the article and I hope your wife continues to recover from her cancer battle. Keep moving forwards and upwards!

  2. Obviously most who recall past lives as Nazi guys are guys in their current life. As long as we’re on the topic though, I have encountered a few women who claim to remember being soldiers & whatnot. Strangely enough, the ones who claim to remember past lives as Nazis were often traitors in that life.

    There is a woman who says she remembers being Hans Marseille (the anti-Nazi ace pilot guy who ran away in Italy with a mistress) and there is a woman who claims to remember being part of Operation Valkyrie. There is also a gay man who claims to have been an SS traitor. I don’t know whether their past- life claims are justifications for their current gender-noncomforming behavior or vice versa, but there is a definite pattern of homos and lesbians claiming they were infiltrators and subverters. I do find that interesting.

  3. What great (though off topic) replies! Many years ago, my sister had a surprising conversation with an elderly German man in Milwaukee. For some reason he opened up to her about having been a Hitler Youth at the end of the war. He said that as a young teenager he was handed a weapon and told to stop the Soviets. However, his courage collapsed and he ran away. After 50 years, he was still walking around with this guilt and decided to open up about with MY sister of all people. She tried to soothe his feelings about it, but it seemed as though it was something he was still going to carry to the grave.

    We all have our coulda, woulda, shouldas. Counter-productive as they are.

  4. As far as I remember Hans-Joachim Marseille was killed when he bailed out of a damaged plane and was hit by the rudder or aileron in North Africa.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.


*