Street Juice
Platinum Member
" on the other subject of Stalin, he got satisfaction from the suffering of others. Trotsky only killed during WW1, certainly much less than Stalin had murdered. "not really...WTF is "inverse empathy"? Hitler was a reaction against the truly depraved monsters who were the Bolsheviks. Trotsky is probably the most monstrous, contemptible, murderous criminal who ever lived. Certainly responsible for the most innocent human lives taken.The difference between Hitler and Stalin is that Hitler killed because of his bigotry and racism. But Stalin killed because somebody became a potential threat to his power, and perhaps Stalin had a sort of inverse empathy for the suffering of others. Hitler was opposed to communism and marxism in every fiber of his being; there was nothing collectivist about Hitler.I agree with your sentiments, but get it right: the Democrats are Bolsheviks, not Nazis. Much much worse.
The difference between Nazis and Bolsheviks was one of leadership.
Hitler vs. Stalin. Beyond that they are virtually identical.
Brutal totalitarian collectivist regimes dedicated to world domination and the crushing of individuals where all power is to the state and supreme rulers.
I identify the democrats as Nazis because of their use of a scapegoat.
Hitler is famous for his genocidal scapegoating of Jews. democrats do exactly as Hitler did, but substitute white devils (sometime pronounced supremacists) for Jews. Take any speech by Hitler and substitute the word "white" for every instance of the word "Jew" and you have virtually any speech by any democrat today.
According to Hitler, Marxism was a Jewish strategy to subjugate Germany and the world and saw Marxism as a mental and political form of slavery. From Hitler's vantage point, Bolsheviks existed to serve "Jewish international finance".
on the other subject of Stalin, he got satisfaction from the suffering of others. Trotsky only killed during WW1, certainly much less than Stalin had murdered.
Trotsky was in power from 1917 to, if I'm not mistaken, 1929. A favorite response of his when subordinates asked what to do with this or that group of prisoners or hostages: "Treat mercilessly."