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Jan 22, 2011
01/11
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there were many arab nazis. when i say and arab nazi i am not talking about a guy running around with a swastika armband. i am talking about it for use in arab lands. i mean 100,000 young jews -- who went to germany and brought the concept that can organize on the german bases and considered themselves action will not cease. the second most popular name for a young child was hitler. today you see some people on the internet whose name is hitler. i will give you an example. a man buys the name of hitler, he is just an ordinary civil servant in egypt in charge of the efficiency. his name is hitler. he was not born in austria, his real name was mohammad, he was a little e. egyptian boy who visited all the mosques of egypt and he was the new savior of the arab people. the posters in the marketplace, your master is ala and on earth your master is adolf hitler. in 1981 and june, just before june 1st, they were told to go into their homes, shush their homes. kissel stay off the phone and turn off the radio and pack the
there were many arab nazis. when i say and arab nazi i am not talking about a guy running around with a swastika armband. i am talking about it for use in arab lands. i mean 100,000 young jews -- who went to germany and brought the concept that can organize on the german bases and considered themselves action will not cease. the second most popular name for a young child was hitler. today you see some people on the internet whose name is hitler. i will give you an example. a man buys the name...
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Jan 23, 2011
01/11
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well, the nazis did not get that oil. eventually they will stop because someone had the courage any iraqi government, changing form minute to minute, to call off guard and to oppressed the education. thereafter, the arabs change their tactics and said we will no longer work with just urban riots and mass mayhem in the city. we will help hitler do what he wants to do, cross the mountains, comrades and exterminate the jews of palestine. how? well, first of all we will make common cause with the iranians. what is the word iran mean? the word iran means that are the true, the name was changed from persia in 1935 to invoke the ancient name of iran as a salute to a massive not see dominated iranian infrastructure. after the british took over, the oil wells, secure them, that they had from decades, in iraq for years, not decades, they then moved into iran, expelled of the shock, brought in the mandate you know as the shah of iran, and kicked out 2000 not g8 agitators and military men and advance units that were creating railroad
well, the nazis did not get that oil. eventually they will stop because someone had the courage any iraqi government, changing form minute to minute, to call off guard and to oppressed the education. thereafter, the arabs change their tactics and said we will no longer work with just urban riots and mass mayhem in the city. we will help hitler do what he wants to do, cross the mountains, comrades and exterminate the jews of palestine. how? well, first of all we will make common cause with the...
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Jan 23, 2011
01/11
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they're not just fascist leaning, they're actual nazis. they petition to join the nazi party. they in various cities -- i don't want you to think this occurred just in palestine, in jerusalem. this occurred in this baghdad, cairo, this occurred in beirut, this occurred in syria. they ran, they translated "mein kampf". they redacted and changed the translation to take away the word "semite "and turn it into just anti-jew hatred instead of anti-semitic hatred so it would not have an impact on the arabs. they wore armbands. there's a place in the book where the arabs are with a huge nazi flag. the syrian national socialist party, national socialists just like german national socialists with the nazi party with a swastika. you can still see this right now on the internet. their flag has not changed, it still has a swastika. pardon me? >> [inaudible] >> syrian. syrian national -- syrian national socialist party. and the nazis said, we don't want you. you're semites. on top of that -- we're talking the myanmar republic here, excuse me, we're talking about the post-myanmar republic,
they're not just fascist leaning, they're actual nazis. they petition to join the nazi party. they in various cities -- i don't want you to think this occurred just in palestine, in jerusalem. this occurred in this baghdad, cairo, this occurred in beirut, this occurred in syria. they ran, they translated "mein kampf". they redacted and changed the translation to take away the word "semite "and turn it into just anti-jew hatred instead of anti-semitic hatred so it would not...
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Jan 22, 2011
01/11
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we reviewed the yiddish press, the german press, the arabic press, the nazi press, the nazi diplomatic papers, the arab diplomatic papers and we tried to do as thorough a job and some of people who helped me provide the book to you are in the audience today. with that, i'll start reading. and i'd like to get copy of the book. can we have a copy brought up? so when did the hatred for the jews begin in the museum world? -- muslim world? and why did it last as long as it did? and the history shows us -- the history shows us, just a moment -- the history shows us that the beginning of the arab hatred and the muslim hatred for the jews began in 627, when the jews of medina were exterminated by mohammed. you've heard of mecca and medina. medina was largely a jewish city. in fact, the word comes from hebrew. there was no, in fact, arabic at the time of the koran. it was written in a combination of hebrew and syriac. >> the original prayers, bough down were to jerusalem. and after the the jews of medina refused to convert, they turned to mecca they had their heads severed. then came the islami
we reviewed the yiddish press, the german press, the arabic press, the nazi press, the nazi diplomatic papers, the arab diplomatic papers and we tried to do as thorough a job and some of people who helped me provide the book to you are in the audience today. with that, i'll start reading. and i'd like to get copy of the book. can we have a copy brought up? so when did the hatred for the jews begin in the museum world? -- muslim world? and why did it last as long as it did? and the history shows...
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Jan 8, 2011
01/11
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this is also a photo taken from the vantage point of nazis. this is a racist--initial interpretation, a racist photo. that should be very clear. >> when did this become -- etc.. >> how it became iconic is something i plan to address and an article i am writing. this is a work in progress. hy will say a few words about that. the photo to be more accurate, the report was presented in the nuremberg trials by chief justice jackson. jackson, the american prosecutor, i am not sure -- this was not aired. that turned the album -- brought the album spotlights and from there, the jewish survivors who saw the revolt at the time as the one important achievement against the nazis, took photos from there and many of the iconic photos we know from the holocaust come from that report. that is the historical explanation but there are some explanations with in the photo. this is a sanitized version of the holocaust. the jews themselves are not as malnutrition as you see in later photos. they look relatively good in comparison to what comes later. beyond being a
this is also a photo taken from the vantage point of nazis. this is a racist--initial interpretation, a racist photo. that should be very clear. >> when did this become -- etc.. >> how it became iconic is something i plan to address and an article i am writing. this is a work in progress. hy will say a few words about that. the photo to be more accurate, the report was presented in the nuremberg trials by chief justice jackson. jackson, the american prosecutor, i am not sure -- this...
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Jan 24, 2011
01/11
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and finally, within the nazis, i will still talk about the jews, the third nazi i want to mengin here notorious ss general. he was a veteran of world war i. here he is pictured with his colleagues in the department of the government detmold. i actually visited his home and he was -- he would love to become an officer. due to the structures of the social structures of the german society after world war i, he was unable to become an officer, and his opportunity comes in 1930 to when he joins the ss and he is pushed up the ranks very quickly to become a high-ranking ss officer. and on april 17th, 1943, she is ordered to warsaw to oversee the liquidation of the ghetto. stroop arrives and promises to wipe out the ghetto within three days. and as we all know, this took him over for weeks. at the end of these four weeks come in may of 1943, he submits three copies of a secret report by what leader get into the hands of iceland, a report entitled "there are no more jews in the warsaw ghetto." what is in this report, stroop has basically two goals: the first of them is to elevate his own statu
and finally, within the nazis, i will still talk about the jews, the third nazi i want to mengin here notorious ss general. he was a veteran of world war i. here he is pictured with his colleagues in the department of the government detmold. i actually visited his home and he was -- he would love to become an officer. due to the structures of the social structures of the german society after world war i, he was unable to become an officer, and his opportunity comes in 1930 to when he joins the...
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Jan 23, 2011
01/11
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the same holds for nazi germany. the vision of destruction was a vision of colonization, racial colonization, therefore, it's highly ideological, and also a vision of colonization, new kind of empire. the ideology could not have worked out the economics, and economics could not have worked without the ideology. likewise, i try to emphasize that ideology cannot be understood would politics. the politics that one can only study by seeing the advance in retreat that i'm talking about. the politics between the encounters, and which is evident when groups resists germans and soviets, and hitly and -- hitler and stalin have to decide what to do. all of that is politics. the tender and controversial, to use a word i don't like, kind of politics is the politics of the interaction between the soviet union and nazi german. this would involve competition and military alliance, or it could involve war. but i would stress that even when it involved war, the two regimes made each other worse. so, for example, why did so many priso
the same holds for nazi germany. the vision of destruction was a vision of colonization, racial colonization, therefore, it's highly ideological, and also a vision of colonization, new kind of empire. the ideology could not have worked out the economics, and economics could not have worked without the ideology. likewise, i try to emphasize that ideology cannot be understood would politics. the politics that one can only study by seeing the advance in retreat that i'm talking about. the politics...
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Jan 22, 2011
01/11
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if we wanted to have an idea of nazi german policy was, in the 1939 to 1945 in the nazi german policy, where the germans did most of their killing. so a surprised, to say say result, of communism, and the history of nazi germany. why has this book not been written? believe me, this is not a book i would have wanted to write. had someone else written it, i would have said very good and moved on to a more pleasant subject. i wrote it out a sense of obligation once i realized it wasn't written. then had a stronger worrying feeling it wouldn't be written. in any event, i think the reasons are essentially three. they have to do with certain weaknesses in three otherwise very impressive schools of historical writing. the first of these to start with the may cope pa is east europe. i'm an eastern european historian. almost all that we have learned. the russians and hungarians, almost all of it has been framed. the enormous tragedies that i'm discussing or will discuss can only be seen from a certain point of view. one can only catch part. probably the country to which this would apply the le
if we wanted to have an idea of nazi german policy was, in the 1939 to 1945 in the nazi german policy, where the germans did most of their killing. so a surprised, to say say result, of communism, and the history of nazi germany. why has this book not been written? believe me, this is not a book i would have wanted to write. had someone else written it, i would have said very good and moved on to a more pleasant subject. i wrote it out a sense of obligation once i realized it wasn't written....
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Jan 8, 2011
01/11
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he was in jail, the nazi party supported his family. it was the one who also offered him a job when he came out of prison as a road constructer. and at that point he joins the ss, becomes an administrative officer and in his local ss department in austria. he arrives in the ghetto after being on the eastern front -- sorry about that. he arrives this the ghetto after being on the eastern front in 1942 and be becomes in charge of of the authority in the tibet toe in -- ghetto in charge of collecting the property left behind by the je, with s. on the right-hand side of the photo is probably some type of property that was taken from the homes or the businesses of jews and would be transferred into konrad's warehouses. within these warehouses he had an amazing collection. he had a room with 200 grand pianos, and he reports about this in 1945 when he's arrested by the americans. he has a room full of art, of very mere and the like. he has a room full of clothes buttons worth 100,000 rife mark, he has a room with 50,000 toys that he took from
he was in jail, the nazi party supported his family. it was the one who also offered him a job when he came out of prison as a road constructer. and at that point he joins the ss, becomes an administrative officer and in his local ss department in austria. he arrives in the ghetto after being on the eastern front -- sorry about that. he arrives this the ghetto after being on the eastern front in 1942 and be becomes in charge of of the authority in the tibet toe in -- ghetto in charge of...
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Jan 24, 2011
01/11
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so, i would say to you cannot compare the soviet union and nazi germany.the only logical content of that is i have already made the comparison, and i would very much like for you not to do so. it has no other meaning. the word incomparable is a comparative judgment. you cannot say to things are incomparable unless you already looked at them and made some kind of comparison. so the comparison taboo is essentially a power play. it just means i have the microphone. it does not have any stronger meaning than that. the second thing about comparison is that if we really want to know, if we want to disband the differences between the soviet union and nazi germany, and i think the differences are very, very significant, by the way, but if one wants to defend the differences, one has to make the comparison first. if you want to say nazi germany as special as i believe it was, you have to actually make the comparison and if you do make the comparison on the basis, for civil skilling policies, which is what i do in my book, you find some interesting things. you find,
so, i would say to you cannot compare the soviet union and nazi germany.the only logical content of that is i have already made the comparison, and i would very much like for you not to do so. it has no other meaning. the word incomparable is a comparative judgment. you cannot say to things are incomparable unless you already looked at them and made some kind of comparison. so the comparison taboo is essentially a power play. it just means i have the microphone. it does not have any stronger...
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Jan 31, 2011
01/11
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. >> reporter: today, people are called grammar nazis, even breast-feefding nazis. given the nature of politics these days, no one expects the use of the word to disappear any time soon. >>> and coming up here on "world news," the latest from egypt, and with another major storm set to hit a huge part of the country, why some people are actually saying "let it snow." i'm not just someone who's quitting with chantix and support... our kids go to school together. -we work together. -i'm in your cooking class. we play ball together. [ male announcer ] chantix is a non-nicotine pill proven to help people quit smoking. it reduces the urge to smoke. and you can even smoke during the first week. quitting on my own never seemed to be enough. this time it was different. this time i was ready. ready to take control. ready to talk to my doctor. [ male announcer ] some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. if you notice any of these symptoms or behaviors, sto
. >> reporter: today, people are called grammar nazis, even breast-feefding nazis. given the nature of politics these days, no one expects the use of the word to disappear any time soon. >>> and coming up here on "world news," the latest from egypt, and with another major storm set to hit a huge part of the country, why some people are actually saying "let it snow." i'm not just someone who's quitting with chantix and support... our kids go to school together....
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Jan 9, 2011
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they begin to nazi the doctrines of the church. few people like bonhoeffer understood immediately what was happening. bonn hof is very quickly a vocal leading critic of what is happening to the german church. it becomes most pointed a few months into 1933 when the nazis start making their laws and saying if you have jewish blood, you cannot serve in government posts. well, this now extends to the church because if you are a pastor who has jewish blood, your father is jewish or your grandfather is jewish or your whole family is et nickically jewish but you converted two or three generations before, the nazis are not interested in what you believe, but your blood. they see everything through a racial lens. bonn hof ear -- bonhoeffer's best friend was a brilliant lutheran minister, so now the nazis are saying you cannot be a member of the state church if ethnically you're jewish. we don't care what's in your mind, just your vains. bonhoeffer is probably the number one person who sees what this means, and he writes an essay about this
they begin to nazi the doctrines of the church. few people like bonhoeffer understood immediately what was happening. bonn hof is very quickly a vocal leading critic of what is happening to the german church. it becomes most pointed a few months into 1933 when the nazis start making their laws and saying if you have jewish blood, you cannot serve in government posts. well, this now extends to the church because if you are a pastor who has jewish blood, your father is jewish or your grandfather...
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it's a story that's driven completely by the nazi scholar for with some collusion on the part of the local population throughout the. you you think they did what they did just the local population because they feared for their lives and they thought if they didn't at some point ps i know a peace is a kind of a dirty word but appease the occupiers that they would be they would see the reaction come against them. i don't think this is a good explanation it seems to me that they said it isn't was a fairly well ingrained element of people's world outlook at the time and the now see move to say first of all the jews are. evil and they should be isolated and things should be taken away from them this was this was a kind of a set of slogans which local people have accepted with. some interest so to speak and then slowly they were drawn into assisting in various ways in the process of around up and occasionally unfortunately also in direct assaults and even killings there were especially in the east. there were several tens some. even a two or three hundred thousand members in the. sort of.
it's a story that's driven completely by the nazi scholar for with some collusion on the part of the local population throughout the. you you think they did what they did just the local population because they feared for their lives and they thought if they didn't at some point ps i know a peace is a kind of a dirty word but appease the occupiers that they would be they would see the reaction come against them. i don't think this is a good explanation it seems to me that they said it isn't was...
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regime in europe even today some questions remain unanswered over what exactly to place during the nazi occupation of poland as history professor john gross explains . what's happened however all over occupied europe in the territories that the germans have invaded is that the local population was as jews were being persecuted local population go drawn into that process of persecution and the benefit it materially from it and. was reluctant to give shelter to jews who were trying to avoid the german network but seems to me that and i said it isn't was a very well ingrained element of people's world outlook at the time and the nazi move to say first of all the jews. evil and they should be isolated and things should be taken away from them this was this was a kind of a set of slogans which local people have accepted with. some interest so to speak and then slowly they were drawn into assisting in various ways in the process of of round up and occasionally unfortunately also in direct souls and even killings there were especially in the east there was actually a directive of the nazi poli
regime in europe even today some questions remain unanswered over what exactly to place during the nazi occupation of poland as history professor john gross explains . what's happened however all over occupied europe in the territories that the germans have invaded is that the local population was as jews were being persecuted local population go drawn into that process of persecution and the benefit it materially from it and. was reluctant to give shelter to jews who were trying to avoid the...
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israel's national holocaust museum and the search giant google have announced a joint project a nazi era archives more than one hundred thousand photos and documents from the museum will now be available online this comes as the world marks international holocaust remembrance day on the twenty seventh of january and on this day nine hundred forty five the largest of the nazi concentration camps auschwitz birkenau was liberated by the soviet army it's estimated around six million jews were murdered by the nazi regime in europe even today some questions remain unanswered over what exactly took place during the nazi occupation of poland as history professor young groves explains. what's happened however all over occupied europe in the territories that the germans have invaded is that the local population was as the jews were being the security of local population got drawn into that process of persecution in the benefit but clearly from it and. was that act on it to give shelter to jews who were trying to avoid that. and that would that but seems to me that they said that isn't was a fa
israel's national holocaust museum and the search giant google have announced a joint project a nazi era archives more than one hundred thousand photos and documents from the museum will now be available online this comes as the world marks international holocaust remembrance day on the twenty seventh of january and on this day nine hundred forty five the largest of the nazi concentration camps auschwitz birkenau was liberated by the soviet army it's estimated around six million jews were...
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where you have the liberation of the nazis largest death camp a joint effort by google. aims to educate the masses on the atrocities of the holocaust. and we'll look at why ordinary people in america don't share the optimism your president sought to instill. terror threats preventing manmade disaster is on the weekend leaks revelations the first day of the world economic forum in davos a stake in an unexpected course after the russian president's opening speech argues lower and it has the details from switzerland. today is the first full day of. the economic forum but the tone for the rest of the meeting was really set by the keynote speech made last night by russian president dmitri medvedev he was introduced by the head of the forum klaus schwab who asked the audience to stand and observe a minute's silence in memory of the victims of monday's bomb blast at domodedovo airport understandably president medvedev then started his speech by talking about that bomb blast he talked about the way that it had shaken society and created indignation throughout the world and he th
where you have the liberation of the nazis largest death camp a joint effort by google. aims to educate the masses on the atrocities of the holocaust. and we'll look at why ordinary people in america don't share the optimism your president sought to instill. terror threats preventing manmade disaster is on the weekend leaks revelations the first day of the world economic forum in davos a stake in an unexpected course after the russian president's opening speech argues lower and it has the...
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Jan 23, 2011
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the organization searches for nazi war criminals still at large.he well-known historian and nazi hunter says he is surprised at finding kepiro, who was an officer at the time of the massacre. he believes kepiro was instrumental in selecting people for execution. >> he was in charge of the roundups of hundreds of civilians living in the section of the city and who were then marched to the danube where they were murderere >> he was tried and convicted for his part in the massacre in 1944. the germans occupied hong greek shortly thereafter and the sentence was never carried out. -- the germans occupied hungary shortly thereafter and the sentence was never cried out. >> they searched long and hard for a living member of the gendarmie and found me. they came up with slanderous stories that were easy to refute. >> kepiro does not deny he was present for the massacre. he says he did not kill anyone himself and is not guilty. some call his denial an insult to the victims. she survived as a small girl. >> the snow was soaked in blood. bodies were everywhere
the organization searches for nazi war criminals still at large.he well-known historian and nazi hunter says he is surprised at finding kepiro, who was an officer at the time of the massacre. he believes kepiro was instrumental in selecting people for execution. >> he was in charge of the roundups of hundreds of civilians living in the section of the city and who were then marched to the danube where they were murderere >> he was tried and convicted for his part in the massacre in...
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attack that they're still working to try and identify who the person who the party of the bomber is a nazi said this attack having received international condemnation we've heard president vader saying that. it was the attacks happen that now needs an international response and international community unite against what now looks like a threat. well yes or let's not talk more about the response from in public as well as political to the tragedy. we saw yesterday the day of mourning lots and lots of people turning up to. pay tribute to days he fell victim to the attack we need today commemorative. in the hearts of must be held at four thirty pm at the exact time the blast happened and he was able to attend and of course as we said in the international reaction international condemnation of this attack and the investigation is now going to continue and we've already seen the strong words from president of a different prime minister putin when this attack happened already being put into action we've had a number of firings of top officials within the interior ministry working in the area of t
attack that they're still working to try and identify who the person who the party of the bomber is a nazi said this attack having received international condemnation we've heard president vader saying that. it was the attacks happen that now needs an international response and international community unite against what now looks like a threat. well yes or let's not talk more about the response from in public as well as political to the tragedy. we saw yesterday the day of mourning lots and...
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day on january the twenty seventh on this day in one thousand nine hundred five the largest of the nazi concentration camps. was liberated by the soviet army it's estimated around six million jews were murdered by the nazi regime all across europe even today some questions remain unanswered over what exactly took place during the nazi occupation of poland as history professor john gross explains. what's happened however all over europe in that is that the germans have made it is that the local population was. being the security. local population got drawn into that process of persecution and the benefit it materially from it and. was reluctant to give shelter to jews who were trying to avoid the german network network but seems to me that and they said it is more a fairly well ingrained element of people's world outlook at the time and the nazi move to say first of all that jews are. evil and they should be isolated and things should be taken away from them this was this was a kind of a set of slogans which local people have accepted with. some interest so to speak and then slowly they
day on january the twenty seventh on this day in one thousand nine hundred five the largest of the nazi concentration camps. was liberated by the soviet army it's estimated around six million jews were murdered by the nazi regime all across europe even today some questions remain unanswered over what exactly took place during the nazi occupation of poland as history professor john gross explains. what's happened however all over europe in that is that the germans have made it is that the local...
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well i would first answer if you don't mind is the first question about mrs le pen she didn't say nazi occupation she said patient that the occupies the streets and she mentioned that it was without without guns i would say that is a progress cvs colonise ation which is quite natural if we have not enough french people and people from a. rude and mainly of the matter of fact from muslim africa trying to get a better life in our country than they have in their home country i can understand that but i think we have the right to to change its policy and to to keep. millions of people abroad in to try to help them in their own country and to remain the masters of our destiny for mr mr medvedev i would not like to teach mr president medvedev award to russian nation e's perfectly agrees that there should be no discrimination according to to race or to to nor to reaching that is quite clear but it seems to me that there is a reason russian culture which. like very much which is mainly how to say a slavek culture which is mainly christian culture. and this is this russian culture says russian
well i would first answer if you don't mind is the first question about mrs le pen she didn't say nazi occupation she said patient that the occupies the streets and she mentioned that it was without without guns i would say that is a progress cvs colonise ation which is quite natural if we have not enough french people and people from a. rude and mainly of the matter of fact from muslim africa trying to get a better life in our country than they have in their home country i can understand that...
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Jan 2, 2011
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over the years he rarely mentioned the excess of the nazis. the night of the shattered glass and brass since of deeply shocked by what was up to then, have a source program. they shared with their fellow americans the tendency to project un to politicians the beliefs and attitudes they wanted and to have. we see some of this today. besides -- there was tangible evidence of a presence of high regard for jews and the number of jews that the new deal brought to washington. this was a big change in past years. there had not been many jewish appointments and to washington. roosevelt recruited an unprecedented influx of jews. so many that anti-semites began to call the administration did you deal. but for all that the jews could shrug off such influences because they felt they had friends at court. having the presence choose in the white house or near the white house or the access to the white house give them hope credit time when they knew of the faced the worst threat some things are. canso -- and so the president's jews were not in the inner circ
over the years he rarely mentioned the excess of the nazis. the night of the shattered glass and brass since of deeply shocked by what was up to then, have a source program. they shared with their fellow americans the tendency to project un to politicians the beliefs and attitudes they wanted and to have. we see some of this today. besides -- there was tangible evidence of a presence of high regard for jews and the number of jews that the new deal brought to washington. this was a big change in...
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Jan 10, 2011
01/11
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henry was still convinced the nazis were just a passing phase until the night 40,000 ordinary citizens luted libraries and homes and tossed armload of books into a huge bonfire facing the berlin opera house. costs -- meanwhile as the world turned totally dark henry became more deeply involved in the wyss passion for music and attended concerts three times per week and were great fans of the opera. of the social circle grew to include such ordinaries as toscanini, and the distinguished violinist and when ending the first concert at carnegie hall telling the youngster was plain and abroad instrument, he decided on the spot to make the best even better in presented the boy with a stradivarius. just weeks after black friday when most three suffer the great collapse but henry's resources had not been significantly affected. thinks to hers at -- his conservative investment philosophy. my friends commented on the magnanimity and responded i'd like to make money but i like even more to see that money used to be a better place. not until 1932 when it was his last visit to germany that he realiz
henry was still convinced the nazis were just a passing phase until the night 40,000 ordinary citizens luted libraries and homes and tossed armload of books into a huge bonfire facing the berlin opera house. costs -- meanwhile as the world turned totally dark henry became more deeply involved in the wyss passion for music and attended concerts three times per week and were great fans of the opera. of the social circle grew to include such ordinaries as toscanini, and the distinguished violinist...
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they said it is more a fairly well ingrained element of people's world outlook at the time and the nazi move to say first of all the jews. evil and they should be isolated and things should be taken away from them this was this was a kind of a set of slogans which local people have accepted with. some interest so to speak and then slowly they were drawn into assisting in in various ways in the process of of round up and occasionally unfortunately also in direct solves and even killings there were especially in the east there was actually a directive of the. police chief at the time. to invite the local population to be active in acts of programs and killings of the jews and unfortunately there was quite a response at that time. let's get to some other headlines from around the world this hour and the former head of the un's nuclear agency and nobel prize winner mohamed el baradei has announced he's returning to egypt following the unprecedented protests of the past two days he's offered to lead egypt's opposition activists prepare for a massive rally in cairo the government has drastica
they said it is more a fairly well ingrained element of people's world outlook at the time and the nazi move to say first of all the jews. evil and they should be isolated and things should be taken away from them this was this was a kind of a set of slogans which local people have accepted with. some interest so to speak and then slowly they were drawn into assisting in in various ways in the process of of round up and occasionally unfortunately also in direct solves and even killings there...
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i was i was charged because it is usual for rick to assimulate patry arts to two to nazis and as you have been a common use rule for seventy years you know that better better than i do it is the usual wrestler weeks of. our our open ends to wrongly simulate patriotism. defending national interest was a kind of. of being complacent to due to fascism and nazism which is of an obvious lie and i seems quite clear now for for for ninety percent of people in france now it's also happened in our country i think there's a very thin line between patriotism and nationalism and near not isn't even perhaps sell many people who want to use it to their advantage will do so how how does one prevent how do you keep the lying that we are it is quite clear we just defend our national identity our patriotism or even actually it's with you one has nothing to do with aggression to any other country nor to any of your people and i would go even further by defending all national identity against the global leeson we perfectly understand people who would do the same and many of them include not only in euro
i was i was charged because it is usual for rick to assimulate patry arts to two to nazis and as you have been a common use rule for seventy years you know that better better than i do it is the usual wrestler weeks of. our our open ends to wrongly simulate patriotism. defending national interest was a kind of. of being complacent to due to fascism and nazism which is of an obvious lie and i seems quite clear now for for for ninety percent of people in france now it's also happened in our...
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to you one is from your party may not in the park muslim prayer in french streets is comparable to nazi occupation and another as said by our president russia has come to be a strong state with the largest territory and a powerful economy soley due to the unity and solidarity of its multinational people hence our reaction to any ethnic intolerance will be absolutely unique quality in equivocal and do you believe the president and his vision for russia's identity is flawed in some way well i would first censors you if you don't mind as a first question about mrs le pen she didn't say nazi occupation she said occupation that the occupies the streets and she mentioned that it was without the guns obviously i would i would say that is progress leave colonise ation which is quite natural if we have not enough french people and people from of the. rude and mainly of the matter of fact from muslim africa trying to get a better life in country than they have in their home country i can understand that but i think we have the right to to change its policy and to to keep. millions of people abroa
to you one is from your party may not in the park muslim prayer in french streets is comparable to nazi occupation and another as said by our president russia has come to be a strong state with the largest territory and a powerful economy soley due to the unity and solidarity of its multinational people hence our reaction to any ethnic intolerance will be absolutely unique quality in equivocal and do you believe the president and his vision for russia's identity is flawed in some way well i...
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Jan 23, 2011
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however it was also incredibly important to understand the history of nazi germany. why is that? very simple. the germans carried out almost all of their killings on the territory that immediately after the war fell behind -- behind the iron curtain. the line behind which they killed is the same line that marked off the post war empire. of the wise to have an idea of nazi german policy 193-93-1945 1/2 to have archives that concern those territories where the germans did most of the killing. a surprise result of the end of communism now have a stronger basis on which to talk about not only the history of communism but also nazi germany. why hasn't this book been written by someone else? because this is not a book i particularly wanted to write i would have tipped my cap to say very good but i wrote it out of a sense of obligation when i realized it had not been written then a more worrying feeling that perhaps it never would be. put the reasons why these have not been written in is because they have to do research and weaknesses very impressive schools of impressive rating and i a
however it was also incredibly important to understand the history of nazi germany. why is that? very simple. the germans carried out almost all of their killings on the territory that immediately after the war fell behind -- behind the iron curtain. the line behind which they killed is the same line that marked off the post war empire. of the wise to have an idea of nazi german policy 193-93-1945 1/2 to have archives that concern those territories where the germans did most of the killing. a...
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Jan 9, 2011
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before and after world war i and the philanthropist who rescued many intellectuals and jewish from nazi germany and the 1930s. remarkably, many of the achievements for which he was notable occurred while he was losing his sight. henry was 28 when he was invited to join goldman sachs. 10 years have passed since his father marcus dropped out of harvard due to his failing eyesight and hired his sister louisa's husband sam sacks as his assistant. marcus' father a schoolmaster had been friends since their school days in germany and this was the second marriage which had taken place between sons and daughters of the two families. henry had undoubtedly anticipated if anyone were to be offered the job, it would be he. hurt and disappointed he decided to accept an offer to join a firm as a salesman. as it turned out the experience provides him with an education far beyond what he might have attained at harvard. for the first time since he was a traveling salesman, he was able to see the mom-and-pop stores, the small-town banks, the little machine shops that that.the countryside and perhaps even
before and after world war i and the philanthropist who rescued many intellectuals and jewish from nazi germany and the 1930s. remarkably, many of the achievements for which he was notable occurred while he was losing his sight. henry was 28 when he was invited to join goldman sachs. 10 years have passed since his father marcus dropped out of harvard due to his failing eyesight and hired his sister louisa's husband sam sacks as his assistant. marcus' father a schoolmaster had been friends since...
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Jan 10, 2011
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and a philanthropist who rescued many jews and intellectuals from nazi germany in the 1930s. remarkably, many of the achievements occurred while he was losing his sight. henry was 28 when he was invited to join goldman sack. -- goldman sachs. ten years had passed since his father, marcus, had shunted him aside after he dropped out of harvard due to failing eyesight and hired his sister's husband as his father. marcus' father was the second marriage which had taken place between sons and daughters of the two families. henry had undoubtedly anticipated that if anyone were to be offered the job, it would be he. hurt and disappointed, he decided to accept an offer to join a soft good firm as a salesman. as it turned out, the experience provided him with an education far beyond what he might have attained at harvard. for the first time, since he was a traveling salesman, he was able to see the mom and pop tores, the small town banks and perhaps even then to visualize a financial structure that would transform them into the building blocks of the economy. a year and a half later ma
and a philanthropist who rescued many jews and intellectuals from nazi germany in the 1930s. remarkably, many of the achievements occurred while he was losing his sight. henry was 28 when he was invited to join goldman sack. -- goldman sachs. ten years had passed since his father, marcus, had shunted him aside after he dropped out of harvard due to failing eyesight and hired his sister's husband as his father. marcus' father was the second marriage which had taken place between sons and...
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Jan 18, 2011
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his new book is called "and the show went on: cultural life in nazi-occupied paris." i am pleased to have him on this program for the first time. welcome what did you finally conclude about how you define collaboration and how you define resistance? >> well, in the world of culture it was very difficult in a sense to resist. you have the choice of saying "i will do nothing. i will not publish, i will not perform, i will not create, i will simply boycott" shall we say. the problem was that a lot of people unless you were lucky you have no leave the country and continue working a lot of... surrealists came to new york, many of them, and they were able to continue somewhat here. but unless you were able to get out of the country you actually had to work. in many cases faurp dancer or a violinist in an orchestra you had to find a way of surviving so if you were called on... say a play was going to be put on again, you go and perform it. so it was that collaboration. i think that was more of a form of survival. i think the area of where collaboration becomes clearer is whe
his new book is called "and the show went on: cultural life in nazi-occupied paris." i am pleased to have him on this program for the first time. welcome what did you finally conclude about how you define collaboration and how you define resistance? >> well, in the world of culture it was very difficult in a sense to resist. you have the choice of saying "i will do nothing. i will not publish, i will not perform, i will not create, i will simply boycott" shall we say....
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Jan 22, 2011
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from the nazi point of view, and i wished i'd talked more about this in the talk. what the nazis mean to do is to use the collective farm, to keep the collective farm, but to use it to divert food to germany and western europe and just to let the bell rue sans and ukrainian city dwellers starve. that is their plan. so for both of them ukraine is at the center of things. and ukraine is at the center of hitler's vision of an eastern empire. and it is part of his, part of his view of how this is going to happen is that he's going to destroy the soviet state by killing lots of leading jews because, in his view, the soviet union is a jewish state. so the plan of conquest to control ukraine involves this terror and mass murder of jews, again, from the nazi point of view. and in that sense the two events, in that sort of underlying sense where both regimes see ukraine as the key to an economic transformation which by it nature is going to cost many millions of lives. in that sense the two events are related. but that's a kind of structural argument which i have to develop
from the nazi point of view, and i wished i'd talked more about this in the talk. what the nazis mean to do is to use the collective farm, to keep the collective farm, but to use it to divert food to germany and western europe and just to let the bell rue sans and ukrainian city dwellers starve. that is their plan. so for both of them ukraine is at the center of things. and ukraine is at the center of hitler's vision of an eastern empire. and it is part of his, part of his view of how this is...
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nazi police chief at the time. to invite the local population to be active in acts of programs and killings of the jews and unfortunately there was quite a sponsor at that time. well that was john krause a polish american historian and in a few minutes we'll bring you president medvedev interview with bloomberg television that's after recap of our top stories this sunday here on r.t. . the official ulti up location to i phone the i pod touch from the. job teach life on the go. video on demand on tease my old costs and ulrich says feed now in the palm of your. question on the dot com wealthy british scientists it's time to experiment the money go.
nazi police chief at the time. to invite the local population to be active in acts of programs and killings of the jews and unfortunately there was quite a sponsor at that time. well that was john krause a polish american historian and in a few minutes we'll bring you president medvedev interview with bloomberg television that's after recap of our top stories this sunday here on r.t. . the official ulti up location to i phone the i pod touch from the. job teach life on the go. video on demand...
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many positive things i think the united states played it for example a great role in the defeat of nazi germany and we can all be very glad that said but i'll give you a very good example i was on a raid you discussion as it happens a while ago when i made the point that while the united states played a very important part in defeating nazi germany so too did the british empire which most americans violent violently disapproved of and so too did the said that union of which even more americans disagreed with the american academic told him just simply thought i was talking nonsense he was a completely new idea to that that the british britain or the you need played any role in fighting nazi germany that's what i mean by exceptional i think you should tax the united states for every stupid thing that an academic says he. well stupid thing well i mean i think it's. a very good point exactly. being a very good point because that's how long and how policy is formed i mean godfrey brings up an excellent point here i mean the number how many people actually know the role in the united states t
many positive things i think the united states played it for example a great role in the defeat of nazi germany and we can all be very glad that said but i'll give you a very good example i was on a raid you discussion as it happens a while ago when i made the point that while the united states played a very important part in defeating nazi germany so too did the british empire which most americans violent violently disapproved of and so too did the said that union of which even more americans...
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Jan 30, 2011
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but she's actually the woman who saved and hid anne frank's family from the nazis and here the nazis come rushing in and they raid her house and at that moment miep can say i didn't know they were there and never apologize and see she tries to bribe the nazis and don't take the people away and the nazis tear up her place and they rummage her stuff and the one thing they discard and forget about this one red checked book. miep is the woman that history doesn't really know about. she actually died last year and basically she's the one who saved the diary. she's the one who preserved it and when otto frank came back and said, you know, my daughter is dead, she never read the book. she kept it for anne frank. she handed it to her father and this is your daughter's legacy to you. and that's the reason that we have anne frank's diaries because this you know known woman saved it. >> and very quickly before this next panel starts, brad, how much research, political research, goes into your thrillers? >> listen, i wish we didn't live in a world where we don't get our news from comedians and w
but she's actually the woman who saved and hid anne frank's family from the nazis and here the nazis come rushing in and they raid her house and at that moment miep can say i didn't know they were there and never apologize and see she tries to bribe the nazis and don't take the people away and the nazis tear up her place and they rummage her stuff and the one thing they discard and forget about this one red checked book. miep is the woman that history doesn't really know about. she actually...
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Jan 30, 2011
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we had to elevate to fighting is a new nazi. they were the nazi in the eyes of the american planners, but it was a sunni. the army was majority shiites. they imimposed the identities on geographic regions. you had the shiite south and you had to think of yourself as you previously hadn't. prejudice exists in every culture and see it in america more and more these days, people who look like me these days are harassed in the streets as well, but obviously racism between blacks and whites exist. blacks are still bitter about the prejudice they feel, but you don't see my militia warfare or violent activity. like wise in iraq though before the war, identity was very complex. you had urban and rural divides, middle class and poor, wealth, people in the government, out of the government, north and south, people who were religious, and people who were secular. how you felt about yourself as a sunni or shiites and you might really hate the regime because they cracked down. if you were in the middle class, you really wouldn't feel as pers
we had to elevate to fighting is a new nazi. they were the nazi in the eyes of the american planners, but it was a sunni. the army was majority shiites. they imimposed the identities on geographic regions. you had the shiite south and you had to think of yourself as you previously hadn't. prejudice exists in every culture and see it in america more and more these days, people who look like me these days are harassed in the streets as well, but obviously racism between blacks and whites exist....
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. >> the nazis invaded, he left and the art stayed. >> jewelry in the back and money and passports andwere on their way. they were on their way to one of the last boats out. >> on the boat, he fell through an uncovered hatch and was killed but his wife was able to row cover a book that showed every painting in the collection. after the war, allies returned paintings to holland, the widow tried to get them back but was rejected by the dutch government. 50 years later, his heirs resumed the request for the art. >> they were hanging in 17 museums. >> after years of legal batt his daughter-in-law reclaimed 200 works but nearly 1200 are still missing. search goes on worldwide. sometimes owners get it back but other times it winds up in court. >> while this is a success story about restitution, there are estimates that are hundred thousand pieces of nazi looted art out there still waiting to be recovered. >> this is why they wanted to share their story. >>> i'm kristen sze, thanks so much for joining us. much for joining us. >>> a sudden shakeup in the government of san francisco. doctors ar
. >> the nazis invaded, he left and the art stayed. >> jewelry in the back and money and passports andwere on their way. they were on their way to one of the last boats out. >> on the boat, he fell through an uncovered hatch and was killed but his wife was able to row cover a book that showed every painting in the collection. after the war, allies returned paintings to holland, the widow tried to get them back but was rejected by the dutch government. 50 years later, his heirs...
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hello and welcome to the spoils of day here nazi thanks for watching and here is what's coming up in the next ten minutes. liverpool manager roy hodgson leaves the glove with former red star dalglish replacing him at anfield until the end of the season. federer's star season in style edging out of a damn go in because our open final to claim his first title of the year. and also russia's junior hockey team are it's as though when they are twenty world championships and the u.s. . will begin with hockey as the newly crowned junior well champions are finally back home after spending a couple of days a buffalo airport the youngsters booted all of their fast fly due to what was described as unruly behavior russia claimed the other twenty well title for the first time since two thousand and three the junior red machine boasting a series of stunning comebacks which saw them beat the london and swindon on their way to the final wedding faced bitter rivals the russians were trailing by three goals at the start of the size of period but full back in style scoring five without supplies for a f
hello and welcome to the spoils of day here nazi thanks for watching and here is what's coming up in the next ten minutes. liverpool manager roy hodgson leaves the glove with former red star dalglish replacing him at anfield until the end of the season. federer's star season in style edging out of a damn go in because our open final to claim his first title of the year. and also russia's junior hockey team are it's as though when they are twenty world championships and the u.s. . will begin...
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to quote to you one is from your party made up our muslim prayer in french streets is comparable to nazi occupation and another as said by our president russia has come to be a strong state with the largest territory and a powerful economy solely due to the unity and solidarity of its multinational people hence our reaction to any ethnic intolerance will be as. silly you qualify even quizzical and do you believe that president take a vision for russia's identity is flawed in some way well i would first censors you if you don't mind as a first question about mrs le pen of a competitor not not not not not an opponent but we are our competitors for a succession of a pen our leader no no she didn't she didn't say patients that she said occupation that the occupiers are streets and she mentioned that it was without the road guns obviously i would say that it's a progress cvs colonise ation which is quite natural if we have nothing our french people and people from abroad and mainly of the matter of fact from muslim africa are trying to get a better life in our country than they have in their
to quote to you one is from your party made up our muslim prayer in french streets is comparable to nazi occupation and another as said by our president russia has come to be a strong state with the largest territory and a powerful economy solely due to the unity and solidarity of its multinational people hence our reaction to any ethnic intolerance will be as. silly you qualify even quizzical and do you believe that president take a vision for russia's identity is flawed in some way well i...
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Jan 29, 2011
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[laughter] >> even the nazis. well, you know, it's interesting when you look at it how incredibly careful they were in how they planned everything. they knew france in the '30s was absolutely filled with anti-semites and right-wingers and people who were fascists themselves. so they had a read-made role deck of people to put in charge of the movies and the press and so on. and they did. they put them all in immediately, and in many cases the collaborationists, more than the collaborationists, the fascist felt the travelers were even worse than the nazi occupiers were. i just finished reading alan riding's new book on france during the occupation, and he among many others, you know, points out how remarkable it is that the country was that vicious in if its dealings with jews. and, of course, america wasn't that much better in those days which is why so few jewish immigrants were allowed to come here before and during the war. but the french really were a case at that time. >> and just before we go across the atlan
[laughter] >> even the nazis. well, you know, it's interesting when you look at it how incredibly careful they were in how they planned everything. they knew france in the '30s was absolutely filled with anti-semites and right-wingers and people who were fascists themselves. so they had a read-made role deck of people to put in charge of the movies and the press and so on. and they did. they put them all in immediately, and in many cases the collaborationists, more than the...
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also our concentration camp was liberated it's estimated that six million jews were murdered by the nazi regime in europe historian john ross says the local population played a role in writing those dark pages of the continent's history. what's happened however all over occupied europe in the territories that the germans have invaded is that the local population was as jews were being persecuted local population good drawn into that process of persecution in the benefit but clearly from it and . was a reluctant to give shelter to jews who were trying to avoid the german network but seems to me that it isn't was a fairly well ingrained element of people's world outlook at the time and see. to say first of all that jews are. evil and they should be isolated and things should be taken away from them this was this was a kind of a set of slogans which local people have accepted. the interest so to speak and then slowly they were drawn into assisting in various ways in the process of. and up in the case of the unfortunate he also did act. and even killings where especially in the east that was
also our concentration camp was liberated it's estimated that six million jews were murdered by the nazi regime in europe historian john ross says the local population played a role in writing those dark pages of the continent's history. what's happened however all over occupied europe in the territories that the germans have invaded is that the local population was as jews were being persecuted local population good drawn into that process of persecution in the benefit but clearly from it and...
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fifth of non elderly americans are uninsured but this is the equivalent of the final solution and nazi germany they creamed a member of the agreement toryism burnt america is going to cut him off from the health supply and all kinds of excommunicating from the digital money supply and they'll die in the street this is america's version of the final solution thanks obama a frickin nazi it's the american population itself because i witnessed with my own eyes massive anger against even the notion that we should ever extend health care to those twenty percent of americans non elderly americans that have no health insurance there was huge anger and murder those people we saw images of people being kicked on the ground who were paraplegic and said go you know here's a dollar go go get out of my face so you can say all you want you can attack obama all you want but he is just. a man in head of a nation who are themselves rejecting these twenty percent of the population so that takes me to this next headline the u.s. government can't account for billions spent in afghanistan so while those ame
fifth of non elderly americans are uninsured but this is the equivalent of the final solution and nazi germany they creamed a member of the agreement toryism burnt america is going to cut him off from the health supply and all kinds of excommunicating from the digital money supply and they'll die in the street this is america's version of the final solution thanks obama a frickin nazi it's the american population itself because i witnessed with my own eyes massive anger against even the notion...