Hitler’s Experience in the Trenches of the Great War; why the jews WANTED this bloodbath; the married Wilson’s married mistress

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Hitler’s Experience in the Trenches of the Great War

An obscure would-be artist named Adolf Hitler was changed forever by his horrific experiences in the German trenches of World War I.

This article appears in: August 2009

By Kirk A. Freeman

[source. https://warfarehistorynetwork.com/article/hitler-dictator-and-artist/ ( I deleted a few de rigeur Hitler-bashing remarks in this otherwise rather fair and accurate article.)

In the months before the outbreak of World War I, 25-year-old Adolf Hitler was living the starving artist’s life in the Bavarian city of Munich, selling his paintings door-to-door and in the city’s numerous beer halls. Hitler had fled to Munich from Vienna in 1913 to avoid being drafted into the Austrian Army, which he felt allowed too many mixed bloods and different cultures into the ranks. Austrian authorities caught up with him six months before the start of the war and forced him to take a physical exam to see if he was fit to serve. Ironically, Hitler was deemed “too weak for armed or auxiliary service, unfit to bear arms.” [skinny from malnutrition, partly from spending money on art supplies, books, and opera tickets in the cheap standing gallery]

Hitler Enlists for the First World War

Hitler learned of the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand when his landlady, Frau Popp, burst into his room in hysterics and shouted, “The Austrian heir to the throne has just been murdered!”

*** This was a vicious murder of the HEIR to the THRONE! Franz-Ferdinand, along with his wife, a Czech, was pro-Slavic. But the jews WANTED Austria-Hungary to disintegrate. The Serbian government was 100% behind the murder and celebrated the assassin as a hero. It was a clear casus belli.

 

What made it turn into WWI was when Russia pointlessly declared war on Austria (which was Germany’s ally). Then Judeo-Masonic France, Russia’s ally, declared war on Germany. Then Britain jumped in to help its ally, France. Then the US jumped in because the jewish lawyer Samuel Untermyer had purchased x-rated letters which the married President Wilson had written to his mistress. (I am not joking.) The entire war was insane, except for the jews. (See much further below.)

***

According to Hitler, he dropped to his knees and thanked heaven for letting him be there during a time when Germany would be fighting to save itself. He then rushed out into the street to blend into the quickly gathering crowd in the Odeonsplatz. A photograph taken at the time shows a jubilant, sallow-faced Hitler in the crowd celebrating the coming war. [JdN: What an idiotic remark; it was love of country.]

Hitler tried to enlist in the 1st Bavarian Infantry on August 5, but he was sent away because the Army had more volunteers than it needed. A fortnight later he was summoned to report to Recruiting Depot VI in Munich and enlisted as private No. 148 in the 1st Company, 16th Bavarian Reserve Infantry Regiment. Also enlisted in the regiment was Lieutenant Rudolf Hess, later to become deputy führer of Nazi Germany, and Sgt. Maj. Max Amann, later in charge of the NS press. [The NS leadership was overwhelmingly war veterans.]

Hitler, circled, was among the crowd of patriotic zealots in Vienna celebrating the beginning of World War in August 1914.
Hitler, circled, was among the crowd of patriotic zealots in Vienna celebrating the beginning of World War in August 1914.

Between August 16 and October 8, Hitler and his comrades were stationed at Oberwiesenfeld Barracks for training in weapons and marching. A comrade named Hans Mend later wrote that when Hitler was issued his rifle “he looked at it with delight, as a woman looks at her jewelry, which made me laugh.” The regiment had heart and spunk, but not much more. Lieutenant Fritz Wiedemann, a professional soldier, noted that the regimental commander had not been on active service in years and that most of the company commanders were former reservists without any combat experience. Weidemann also noted that the training was quick and inadequate, that the regiment had few machine guns, and that none of the soldiers had an iron helmet; instead they wore oilcloth caps [JdN: made of close-woven cotton duck or linen cloth with a coating of boiled linseed oil to make it waterproof] in 19th-century Napoleonic style.

On October 9, the regiment marched out of Munich for the trip to Camp Lechfeld, 70 miles to the west. In full combat gear, the men marched in a continuous rain for 11 hours. In a letter to Frau Popp, Hitler reported that his company was put up in a barn for the night, but that no one could sleep because they were soaked through and shivering from the cold. Late the next day the regiment arrived at its destination. On October 21, the regiment boarded railcars for transport to the front. The men sang “The Watch on the Rhine” and broke into cheers when they finally saw the great river—the first time that most of them (including Hitler) had ever seen the Rhine.

The next day the men disembarked from the train and, after reorganizing, marched to Lille, Belgium, which had been recaptured by the Germans from the British. On the 23rd, the regiment marched through the desolate town. Hitler became nervous when British shells began to land, since the town was full of ammunition carts and soldiers. The shelling did not last long, and the men bedded down on the wet and cold flagstones of the town’s streets.

Hitler’s First Battle: The Battle of Ypres

On October 25, at 3 am, the regiment entered its first battle, arriving just in time to join the German assault during the first phase of the Battle of Ypres. The regiment’s objective was to take a farmhouse and the edge of the woods beyond the house, about half a mile from the German lines. A heavy fog had risen, forcing a delay in the attack timetable while others rounded up the lost battalions. At dawn the attack began, but a few steps out the regiment came under intense fire from the right. In the fog and confusion, the regimental hats that Weidemann had complained about brought trouble. A regiment of Württemburg troops on the regiment’s right thought the Bavarians were British and opened fire, inflicting heavy casualities. Hitler and his friend Ernst Schmidt threw their caps away instantly and ran to the rear headquarters to report the situation and stop the slaughter. The first hour the regiment spent in combat, it lost many valuable men, including the regimental commander, named List, to friendly fire.

One of Hitler’s student paintings. Scholars have judged the future fuehrer’s work pedestrian and uninspired.
One of Hitler’s student paintings.

After this incident the attack proper began, with the British dropping artillery shells into the assaulting columns. The men crawled into shallow dugouts and shell holes to escape the flying shrapnel, before racing to a small farmhouse in the middle of the field and crawling into a ditch. During this assault, Hitler’s platoon leader was killed, as were most of the noncommissioned officers. In all, it took five bloody assaults to take the edge of the forest. The final assault ended in hand-to-hand combat, and Hitler was surprised when he jumped into the British trench and made a soft landing—he had landed on a British corpse.

A Decorated Soldier

This was the only battle in which Hitler fought as a true frontline soldier. For his bravery and soldierly conduct, the new regimental commander, Lt. Col. Philipp Engelhardt, recommended Hitler as a dispatch runner (Meldegänger) to serve at regimental headquarters. Someone also recommended Hitler and Schmidt for the Iron Cross, although neither received the decoration. Of the 3,600 men who marched out of camp with the regiment, 373 men were killed in the first three weeks of fighting. Hitler’s uncanny luck began in his first battle. At one point, a shell exploded near him; it killed another soldier, but Hitler only had a sleeve ripped away.

On November 3, Hitler and his friends Ernst Schmidt and Ignaz Westenkirchner were officially assigned as dispatch runners (eight runners were needed per regiment). This was not a cushy job but a highly dangerous responsibility. Early in the war, dispatch runners traveled in pairs, armed only with pistols and carrying a leather wallet attached to their belts marked XXX for urgent, XX for quick, and X for “in your own time.” A runner ran hunched forward through trenches and dove into shell holes, then sprang up between artillery salvos and sprinted to the next trench, all the while hoping he had properly calculated the timing between shells. On Hitler’s first run during the Battle of Messines, six miles southwest of Ypres, three runners were killed and one wounded of the eight on staff. On the second day, the regimental commander was wounded near Hitler and Schmidt; under heavy fire, Hitler and Westenkirchner carried their wounded commander to an aid station. Hitler was promoted to corporal for bravery.

A few days later, Engelhardt went to inspect the British position and took Hitler and Hitler’s friend Balthasar Brandymayer with him. At the edge of a wood, Engelhardt stepped out to see the British trenches better and instantly drew fire. Hitler and Brandymayer stepped in front to protect Englehardt from harm, before dragging their commander to a nearby ditch. The next day, Hitler and several others were called to headquarters and told that they had been recommended for the Iron Cross. It was Hitler’s second nomination in two months. When four more company commanders arrived, Hitler and the others left to give the officers room. Five minutes later a British shell hit the tent, killing most of the men inside and severely wounding Engelhardt.

Dead German soldiers litter the battlefield at the Somme. Hitler was wounded twice but miraculously escaped a similar fate.

On December 2, Hitler was decorated with the Iron Cross 2nd Class. Later, he called it “the happiest day of my life.” His self-esteem had received its first real boost. The regiment was pulled back from the front for rest and refitting just after Christmas. It was during this pause that men began to notice Hitler’s eccentric behavior.

[Okay, here it comes,  the “eccentric behavior” 😉 ]

During lulls in combat, he was either reading philosophical works or sketching and painting with a box of watercolors he always carried. Hitler was considered odd because he never drank, smoked, or showed any interest in women. When others talked of the French women, Hitler would leave the group in disgust. If he saw a soldier flirting with a French woman, he would reprimand the soldier for hours about the sins of the flesh. At the same time, comrades noted Hitler for being kind to enemy captives and civilians, even attending funeral services for downed enemy airmen to pay his respects.

[Nonsense; he had a child with a French woman!]

Life in the Regiment

Hitler rarely received mail or wrote any letters himself. During a lull in the fighting and for refitting from the front in late 1914, Hitler received a parcel filled with treats and breads from a baker he knew in Munich. He quickly wrote the baker to thank him, but instructed him never to write him again. When comrades asked Hitler about his home, his response was always the same, that the regiment was his home.

On February 11, 1915, Hitler was sitting in a dugout when an enemy shell struck. Several men were killed and wounded, but Hitler escaped with only a small scratch to his face. This was the third time that Hitler’s luck held for him. Hitler’s only true friend was a small dog that had wandered in from the English side and fell into the German trenches. Hitler named the dog “Foxy” [Füchsl], and for the next few years it was his closest companion.

In March, the regiment was sent into the trenches near Fromelles, France, to defend a two-mile trench line against the British and French. In May, the Allies launched an attack and the Germans counterattacked. Hitler was in the thick of the fighting. He took on extra duties that put him near the front, close enough that he personally captured three French prisoners by July. The extra duties took their toll on Hitler, but he never shirked from danger. When the British broke through the lines one day, Hitler was the only volunteer to take a message to the front. No one expected to see him alive again, and everyone was surprised when he returned with a message from the frontline command.

Once again, Hitler’s uncanny luck held out. He was eating with some men in a dugout when he heard a voice telling him to move to another dugout. Five minutes later a shell exploded in the dugout, killing everyone in it.

The regiment remained near Fromelles for most of 1916 and was involved in the spring and summer offensives. In July, Hitler dragged a fellow runner back to the trenches during a heavy artillery barrage. On September 27, the regiment was pulled out of the lines in Flanders and sent to the Somme. The area was a living hell. At 5 am on October 5, Hitler was caught out in the open under a British rolling barrage and severely wounded in the thigh by shrapnel. He lay there for hours until a few comrades went to find him and brought him in.

A battle-hardened Hitler on convalescent leave in Berlin in October 1916. It was during this period that he developed a pathological hatred of Jews.
A battle-hardened Hitler on convalescent leave in Berlin in October 1916. It was during this period that he developed a pathological hatred of Jews.

Hitler begged Lieutenant Fritz Wiedemann to let him stay with the regiment, but by the 9th, Hitler was on a hospital train back to Germany. This was the first time he had been away from the front in two years, and the civilian world shocked him. When Hitler was being removed from the train to an aid station, the first thing he heard was a German woman’s voice. This astounded him—he had not heard a German-speaking woman in two years. When aid workers placed Hitler on clean sheets, he was afraid of getting them dirty and had trouble sleeping in a bed after so many months at the front.

When he toured Berlin, he was appalled at the grumbling and griping of the civilians and noted—so he claimed—that “every clerk was a Jew and every Jew a clerk.” He accused the Jews of shirking from duty.

After he had recovered enough to walk, Hitler was assigned light duty in the 2nd Bavarian Infantry Regiment. It was there that Hitler grew his distinctive [toothbrush] moustache, which was popular among English soldiers. [Actually, it was a working-class fad that started in America.]

Hitler wrote continuously to Wiedemann, begging for his help to get back to the front. Wiedemann came through in March 1917, and Hitler gladly returned to the regiment. When Hitler returned, Foxy began to jump around excitedly. Hitler was in great spirits; a few soldiers even saw him laughing while playing with the dog. That night Hitler, armed with a flashlight and bayonet, was heard stabbing rats late into the night [rats were a dangerous source of disease and also ate the soldiers’ food!] until someone chucked a boot at him.

On March 4, the regiment returned to the front lines a few miles north of Vimy. Heavy rains had turned the shell holes into deep ponds and quagmires of mud that could suck a man under.

***Scene from “1917” — giant craters  and rotting bodies

***

In the trenches, soldiers forced their way through mud and cold water that rose past their knees. At the beginning of June, the regiment was sent to Flanders to help repulse a British offensive near Ypres.

In August, the regiment was pulled from the line and sent to Alsace to regroup. On the train ride, a French railroad official offered Hitler 200 marks for his dog. Hitler refused, saying that the dog was worth more to him than 200,000 marks. When he got off the train, Hitler could not find Foxy and began to hunt everywhere for his pet. He never found him. While he was hunting, someone pilfered his knapsack and stole his painting supplies and sketchbook. Hitler never painted again. Of the missing Foxy, he wrote later, “The swine who took him from me doesn’t know what he did to me.”

An increasingly distraught Hitler began to show some of the qualities that people would attribute to him later. Up to then, he had never said anything negative about the Jews to his comrades, but now he began to make increasingly inflammatory remarks. To tease him, the men would bemoan the war and gleefully watch Hitler fume about how the Germans could not afford to lose.

In September, Hitler was decorated a second time with the Cross of Merit 3rd Class with Swords for valorous service. At the end of September, he took an 18-day leave and went to Berlin, staying with a comrade’s parents. According to his postcards, he enjoyed the sights and hoped to return to Berlin after the war.

Corporal Hitler, far left, poses with a group of fellow soldiers and their mascot, Foxy, at the front.
Corporal Hitler, far left, poses with a group of fellow soldiers and their mascot, Foxy, at the front.

In March 1918, the Germans launched their last great offensive of the war and morale was high. [One reason: The Russians were out of the war.]

Hitler’s regiment took part in the Second Battle of the Marne and sustained heavy losses; this action went on until Allied counterattacks halted the German offensive after 800,000 German casualties in four months. During this time, Hitler overheard a new recruit spewing derogatory statements. He confronted the recruit and a vicious fistfight broke out, with Hitler emerging victorious.

*** I also jumped up on stage and socked a Bavarian separatist politician in the mouth who was in the pay of France — and got 30 days for it 😉

***

In July, while running a dispatch, Hitler came upon the commander of 9th Company, who had been wounded by an American shell. He half carried, half dragged the officer to the rear. Later that month, the regiment’s 1st Battalion suffered under an intense bombardment and was raked by heavy machine-gun fire. The battalion had advanced so far that their own artillery was shelling their position. The battalion commander, Hugo Gutmann, promised Hitler the Iron Cross 1st Class if he could get a message to the artillery to quit shelling the forward positions. Hitler miraculously made it through and Gutmann kept his word.

On August 4, 1918, Hitler received the Iron Cross 1st Class, a decoration that few non-officers ever received. This was the last decoration that Hitler received during the war. Nine days later, near La Montagne, the regiment was hit hard by a chlorine gas attack that seeped into many of the men’s gas masks. Hitler was blinded by the gas and stumbled back in a “blind-line” in which each man held onto the coat of the man in front of him as they walked single-file to the rear. While Hitler lay in the hospital recovering, a local minister came into the ward on November 10 to announce that the war was ending the next day at 11 am. The Kaiser, he said, had fled Germany. Hitler was so shocked that he buried his head in a pillow and went into psychosomatic blindness for a week.

The Man He Became

Throughout the rest of his life, Hitler remained proud of his military record and mentioned it frequently. He would not tolerate any opinion that might smudge his military career or personal image.

During World War I, Hitler rose from an insignificant, unknown, struggling artist to a decorated, angry veteran.

During 45 months and 36 major battles, he developed the personality characteristics that later the world would see. His regiment suffered 3,754 casualties, including several of Hitler’s friends. There is no record of Hitler ever killing a man in combat. He was more frequently remembered as a nice chap, one who wrote poetry, read, sketched, and painted in his off hours. Serving in the army gave Hitler a self-confidence he never had before.

*** Oh boy

I had some when I was an Austrian field marshal in the life before….(Margi gasped when she saw this)

….and recipient of the Order of Maria Theresapient of

..and the Order of the Bath

Self-confidence comes from many lives as a soldier

 

***

Using his self-assurance, he began to rally his countrymen. It all began with Hitler’s grueling experiences in World War I.

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.

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…….Jews wanted First World War to defeat Turkey and get Palestine; to overthrow antisemitic Aryan emperors in Berlin, Vienna and St. Petersburg; to bleed a defeated Germany mercilessly for cash; to kill off 10 million of the best goyim; and to install the Bolsheviks in a war-weakened Russia

 

 

Theodor Herzl, an early leader of modern Zionism, was furious when the sultan of Turkey rejected his demand that the jews get Palestine. 

 

And the Jews most certainly did cause World War I.

They got the Ottoman Empire of Turkey into a war with Russia, England, France and the United States of America — because the sultan refused repeatedly to hand over Palestine, which was 78% muslim and 20% Christian, to Ashkenazi Jews from Europe.

The Jews’ goal then became to break up this Ottoman Turkish empire — and then take this piece of it, this land of Palestine, AND EXPEL ITS PEOPLE off it.

As Laurent Guyenot states on p166 of his “From Yahweh to Zion“:

Like [the Jewish prime minister of England, Benjamin] Disraeli,

[Theodor] Herzl [an early leader of modern Zionism], first turned to the Ottoman Empire for help:

“If His Majesty the Sultan were to give us Palestine, we could in return undertake to regulate the whole finances of Turkey.”240

Herzl approached Sultan Abdul Hamid (photo) with this offer through emissaries (as reported in his journal, June 9, 1896):

“Let the Sultan give us that piece of land, and in return we shall set his house in order, straighten out his finances, and influence public opinion all over the world in his favor.”

In other words, he promised to devote to the service of Ottoman Turkey the two Jewish weapons par excellence: the bank and the press.

The Sultan categorically and repeatedly rejected all offers, saying, as reported in Herzl’s journal, June 19:

“I cannot sell even a foot of land, for it does not belong to me, but to my people. […] Let the Jews save their billions. […] If my Empire is partitioned, they might get Palestine for nothing.

But only our corpse will be divided. I will not agree to vivisection.”

As he had already done at the Berlin Congress [of 1878], the Sultan opposed any Jewish mass immigration to Palestine. Four years later, after many more attempts, Herzl concluded (June 4, 1900):

“At present I can see only one more plan: See to it that Turkey’s difficulties increase; wage a personal campaign against the Sultan, possibly seek contact with the exiled princes and the Young Turks; and, at the same time, by intensifying Jewish socialist activities, stir up the desire among the European governments to exert pressure on Turkey to take in the Jews.”
241

(pp170-71)

According to a report of the Palestine Royal Commission of 1937, Lloyd George explained the deal in those terms:

“Zionist leaders gave us a definite promise that, if the Allies committed themselves to giving facilities for the establishment of a national home for the Jews in Palestine, they would do their best to rally Jewish sentiment and support throughout the world to the Allied cause. They kept their word.” 251

Winston Churchill himself declared during the House of Commons debate on the Palestine Mandate, on July 4, 1922:

Canadian PM Robert Borden and Churchill

“Pledges and promises were made during the War, and they were made not only on the merits, though I think the merits are considerable.

They were made because it was considered they would be of value to us in our struggle to win the War.

It was considered that the support which the Jews [p170] could give us all over the world, and particularly in the United States, and also in Russia, would be a definite, palpable advantage.”

When on March 12, 1937, Churchill was called before the Palestine Royal Commission, he repeated the argument:

“I insist upon loyalty and upon the good faith of England to the Jews, to which I attach the most enormous importance, because we gained great advantages in the War.

We did not adopt Zionism entirely out of altruistic love of starting a Zionist colony: It was a matter of great importance to this country.

It was a potent factor on public opinion in America [….]”

So basically the Jews caused World War One, which killed twenty million Gentiles,

.. and wounded or crippled millions more….

so 1) they could get Palestine as their operations headquarters, not to mention 2) “kill off the best Gentiles,” a specific Talmudic command, and 3) get even richer off selling guns, ships and other products to the military.

Of course, they had to smash the Turkish Empire first to get their Palestine.

But since Turkey was allied with mighty Germany, first they had to try to smash Germany.

They did this by agitating Russia, France, England and America to attack Germany, spending millions of their own gentile lives and trillions of their hard-earned dollars for the secret benefit of the Jews.

Then Turkey would fall, its empire dismembered. Britain would get Palestine, and in the end the Jews would get Palestine from the Brits, ignoring the rights of the native Palestinians. In 1947 they violently drove most of them out, and made  life wretched and miserable for those who stayed in their own land, now an intolerant, jewish-ruled hell.

.

…See also

Wilson lied, people died; his savage mistreatment of Cong. Lindbergh, Sr. who defended the hard-working, honest, law-abiding, valuable white immigrants from Germany

 

……The x-rated Wilson letters

Wilson, behind the ivy-covered walls of Princeton University, had had an affair with the wife of his next-door neighbor, Professor Peck…..

The Blackmailing Of Woodrow Wilson And The Rise Of Louis Brandeis

source: https://ironink.org/?p=3454

All American Presidents come to the office with a past. This was no less true of Woodrow Wilson as it was of Warren Harding, Jack Kennedy, or Bill Clinton. Wilson, like those just mentioned was rumored to have been a womanizer and this womanizing came back to bite him during his Presidency.

Those that put the bite on Wilson came to him through a close knit constituency that had supported Wilson in his candidacy for President. This constituency was the Jewish presence in America. Leading American Industrialists noted this tight knit relationship with the Jewish vote by writing, “The Jews made much of Woodrow Wilson, far too much for his own good. They formed a solid ring around him.” One of those Jewish leaders in Wilson’s inner circle was New York attorney Samuel Untermyer.

This same Untermyer was retained as a lawyer by one of Wilson’s former flames in order to try and discreetly take care of a potential breach of promise action against Wilson by this former Wilson mistress. Untermyer had been a supporter of the Wilson campaign and a contributor to boot. Untermyer came to Wilson hoping that the case could be taken care of discreetly without public embarrassment to the President.

The problem was that Wilson’s former paramour, who had remarried since the previous dalliance, had a step-son whom she was fond of who was in hock to the tune of 40K. The damsel, through Untermyer, was hopeful that the President would have access to the funds to help her step-son get out of debt and in return she would surrender Wilson’s steamy love letters, which were now in Untermyer’s possession.

President Wilson conveyed his gratitude that the “lady” in question was trying to discreetly take care of this situation as opposed to going to a Republican lawyer who would make political hay out of Wilson’s indiscretion. Wilson, however had a couple problems. First of all he didn’t have 40 thousand dollars [$800,000  today; laborers earned a dollar a day back then,  $7 a week] laying around. Secondly, hone didn’t think it wise to publish his need for that money to supporters given the questions that would naturally arise. (We must keep in mind that 40K in the early 20th century was a large sum of money in today’as dollars.)

Untermyer offered a solution to Wilson that would satisfy all parties. Untermyer offer that,

1.) Untermyer himself would, out of his own pocket, provide the needed 40K
2.) Untermyer assured Wilson that the breach of promise lawsuit would never see the light of day
3.) Untermyer promised Wilson that he would place the love letters in a safe place where no one would ever see them

The only quid pro quo that Untermyer asked was that Wilson would consider Untermyer’s counsel when the next Supreme Court Justice opening required Wilson’s appointment. That vacancy soon did occur and Untermyer suggested that the jurist Louis Brandeis be named the first Jewish Justice to the Supreme court. Untermyer’s suggestion became President Woodrow Wilson’s appointment.

Sources,

Lundberg, Ferdinand, America’s Sixty Families (New York: Vanguard Press, 1937).
Murphy, Bruce Allen. The Brandeis/ Frankfurter Connection.
Viereck, George Sylvester, The Strangest Friendship in History (New York: Liveright, Inc., 1932).
Wise, Jennings, Woodrow Wilson: Disciple of Revolution (New York: Paisley Press, 1938).
Freedman, Benjamin, Facts are Facts
Coleman, John, One World Order

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Author: jetbrane

I am a Pastor of a small Church in Mid-Michigan who delights in my family, my congregation and my calling.

6 Comments

  1. David Icke behauptet, dass Hitler ein Rothschild war. Das ist längst widerlegt. Man stützt sich dabei auf die Großmutter Hitlers, die bei einem Juden namens Frankenberger gearbeitet haben soll. Es gibt keinen Beweis, dass dieser Jude Hitlers Oma schwängerte.

    Dennoch heißt es bis heute, Hitler sei ein Rothschild gewesen.
    D

    • Es gibt nicht nur keinerlei Beweise FÜR diese verleumderische These, sondern den aktiven Gegenbeweis. Den Juden war es VERBOTEN, sich in der Steiermark niederzulassen, wo Frankenberger angeblich wohnte.

      Die Juden nutzen bei Leichtgläubigen und Tratschsüchtigen aus, dass Hitler dunkle Haare hatte und ein Genie war, und behaupten offen, so ein Genie kann unmöglich aus einem oberöstereichischen Bauerngeschlecht kommen, also muss er Jude gewesen sein! Welch ein Dünkel bei diesen arroganten Juden!

  2. Immer erneut sehr schön anzuhören, wie Adolf Hitler den Verrat von Paulus und Co. offenlegt – die Rede gibt gottlob wieder, im welchen Umfang die Verräter leider Gottes ihr Täuschungsmanöver aufrecht erhalten konnten.

    Adolf Hitler – Stalingrad Speech at the Löwenbräukeller in Munich, November 8, 1942

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RALwH79Qqxk

    • Danke, aber “Verrat”? Paulus war der geniale Planer des brillianten Polenfeldzuges….aber am Schreibtisch sitzend.

      Hitler setzte ihn als Befehlshaber der Sechsten Armee ein.

      Sein Problem — er war kein Rommel.

      Natürlich ist es eine traurige Tatsache, dass er danach zu den Sowjets überging, als er in den Krallen des NKWD stand und Kriegsgefangener war.

      Aber am 9. November 1942 bei der Führer-Rede gab es doch noch Optimismus über Stalingrad.

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