Adolf Hitler
11:58
Added: 1 month ago
From: DemocraticEmpire
Views: 154
Sort by time | Sort by thread (beta)

Link to this comment:

Share to:

All Comments (27)

Sign In or Sign Up now to post a comment!
  • how do you explain your belief that the vatican tells the bankers what to do when the pope who tried to reform banking, i think in the 60's, got killed. my logic would tell me that if the vatican and the pope are more powerful than the jewish bankers, then he would have easily cleaned up the finances of the vatican with no trouble at all. the rothschilds are the remnants of assimilating the violent khazars, as the spiritual jews new thugs to do there dirtywork.

  • A very cool documentary entitled The Nazis: A Warning From History covers the aspect of the oligarchy (namely Papen and Hindenburg cabinet) that ushered in Hitler and the death cult. 33 strategies of War by Robert Greene emphasized secrecy and indirect maneuvers: we see this in real life, only it's beyond awful when a death cult tries to take over the world. Transportation of minorities was only the beginning: they were going to invent global slavery.

  • The joy of blocking John is fun.

  • @WILDLEGHORN Actually, many people view my husband's videos. He doesn't have millions of fans, though, probably because he doesn't dress like a clown, screaming rubbish in front of the camera. But why sell out? Most people aren't interested in intellectual topics, it seems. Have you seen the types of users that dominate popularity on YouTube?

  • @rosenoirex I would hardly call 50 views "many people."

  • The central banks didn't give a crap about the Jews, half-Jews, activists, intelligentsia, and homosexuals dying in gas chambers and death marches. A lot of it was more about money and business deals which you seem to imply. It's interesting how IBM (a U.S. corporation) designed the punch-cards that helped send Jews, Half-Jews, gays, and activists to their gruesome deaths.

  • @dutytocareforothers

    The affairs of puppets are less important than the men behind the scenes, because Hitler was set up to do the bidding of corporate interest; the interest of corporate bidding shifted whence Adolf Hitler understood the age old principle of currency: "Those who control the money supply of any empire, control the empire; the ability to issue and control a nations wealth, can allow a puppet of government to rid the need of others who seek control." It is amoral; godly.

  • Although, I hate math with a passion I'd appreciate it if the average citizen was more cognizant about how world history and politics plays a role in our current lives: many want to pontificate dates and historical details to win favored attention as the "wise one" but those fake wise-men aren't examining the lessons of history nor will they respond wisely to life when the wolves are ready to eat the pompous pontificator for dinner. It's the lessons that matter.

  • What in the hell ?????

    Why the hell did you remove all those comments ??

  • @WILDLEGHORN

    I do not tolerate misinformed individuals who insult blindly.

  • @DemocraticEmpire That user had some valid points rebutting rosex's comments, specifically about Robert E. Lee.

  • @WILDLEGHORN That particular user whose comments my husband removed has been trolling us for no reason, and he always creates new user accounts for the purpose of trolling. Sometimes people have nothing better to do than to troll. Lol. There are even threads on the Internet asking for advice on how to be a good troll, and somebody even admitted that it is one of the most satisfying online activities. To each their own, lol, but not at our expense.

  • @WILDLEGHORN It is one thing to face disagreement if you know who you're talking to. But if it's a random person who disagrees with everyone as a hobby, it's a waste of time.

  • @rosenoirex Regardless of whether or not it's their hobby, if they raise valid concerns, why not address them? It makes you seem like, well, a stuck up dick, if you don't, and it also makes you look like you have something to hide.

  • @WILDLEGHORN Because he's afraid of anyone who disagrees with them, and criticizes them. He doesn't believe in free speech and, as is evident in this video, loves fascism and totalitarianism. They are simply intellectually puny, and don't like it when people point this out to them.

  • Any historical figure can be demonized or glorified. It is up to us to do our homework and analyze both sides of the story.

  • @rosenoirex There are many chapters to everything ... and Hitler was also a product of cultural hegemony and the wishes of other oligarchs that preferred eugenics over humanism.

  • @dutytocareforothers It just fascinates me to study things from a different vantage point other than the mainstream one, because I feel that is the best way to escape the lies and biases of those who get to write the history books simply because they won. I see the misdeeds by Hitler, we were taught so our whole lives. But as DE says, there is more to it than just some random evil guy who sought to take over the world. He was a bully, no doubt, but no nearly as much in control.

  • I didn't know about Hitler's economic policies. So you say that he was against the Central Bank and created his own fiat currency? Why, that explains it! How reminiscent of Andrew Jackson who held the same ideals and was also accused of racism because he killed indians. And that is all they want history readers to focus on. He killed indians bc they were at war. If you fight against Norway, you are going to kill a bunch of blue-eyed blondies.

  • What I DO know about Hitler is that he was a painter as a young man, and wasn't accepted into art school. I always believed that he chose the military as a last resort, and that this is why he was so angry. However, he was so passionate about his role I think that was also his calling. After all, as Don Quixote once said, "The sword never blunted the pen, nor the pen the sword." He was the hero and protagonist in HIS story, fighting against his antagonists, like every man & woman in the world.

  • I need to study more about Hitler. I never really did delve into the subject any deeper than what we were taught in school because the subject of defending Hitler is so taboo. It is one of those things that earns one automatic ostracism before even discussing matters. I do not approve of killing masses of people, but isn't that what all men do in war? Those we consider heroes killed just as many, yet they are heroes simply because they won.

  • @rosenoirex The glaring predicament is that Hitler killed citizens of his own country (definitely cowardly). So in a way he waged a secretive civil war against his own people who really couldn't fight back because they weren't citizen militias who own tanks and machine guns: which is typical of a cowardly bully, someone who does not fight fair ever. Also, I'm wondering how much Hitler profited off the deaths of those citizens: someone was surely getting richer off of mass-death.

  • @dutytocareforothers Why do you "hate math with a passion?" Have you ever studied real math? Or just what's taught in school through high school and even some basic college courses? Because I can assure you, that's not math, it's rote and drill mechanistic arithmetic. Real math doesn't even use many numbers, and consists mainly of formal logic.

  • @virginjohn Yes I'm talking about the whimsical math taught in high school and college.

Loading...
Alert icon
0 / 00Unsaved Playlist Return to active list
    1. Your queue is empty. Add videos to your queue using this button:
      or sign in to load a different list.
    Loading...Loading...Saving...
    • Clear all videos from this list
    • Learn more