2aguy
Diamond Member
- Jul 19, 2014
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If retards have an agenda and an ingrained frame of mind, then they will pick one or two bits about the Nazis out to satisfy their binary thinking. If you look at the whole picture, the Nazi party was syncretic. I know it pisses you off, and it pisses 2aguy off too, but you need to live with it. Yes, you want to attack each other that Nazis' are Left Wing, they're Right Wing etc.. but they weren't. They stole ideas from both sides of the fence and are classed as syncretic.
Sorry to have pissed on your bonfire, but twine like fuck, I can't change reality. But by all means carry on claiming the Nazis' are Left/Right Wing, but the educated will read that and think, "What a numpty".
The national socialists were socialists....you guys don't want to admit that, because if you can't make people forget that fact, then all of the worst mass murder in history since 1917 was committed by socialists...... everyone ignores the Russian and Chinese mass murder, even though it was worse, and affected far more countries...but the national socialists lost a war and were exposed in court, while Russia and China hid their mass murder....so you geniuses think you can lie about the national socialists to hide the crimes of socialism....
Read A Pile Of Top Nazis Talking About How They Love Leftist Marxism
The Nazis were leftists.
This statement is blasphemy to the academic-media complex, since everyone knows the Nazis were degenerate right-wingers fueled by toxic capitalism and racism. But evidence Adolf Hitlerās gang were men of the left, while debatable, is compelling.
The dispute on Nazi origins resurfaced through the confluence of brawling alt-right and antifa fringe movements and recent alternative histories by Dinesh DāSouza and others. The vitriol and lack of candor it produces from supposedly fact-driven academics and media is disturbing, if unsurprising. They stifle dissent on touchy subjects to maintain their narrative and enforce cultural hegemony.
However uncomfortable to opinion shapers, alternative views of the Third Reich exist and were written by the finest minds of their time. Opinions from the period perhaps carry more weight because they are unburdened by the aftermath of the uniquely heinous Nazi crimes.
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Also, Adolf Hitler Loved Karl Marx
It wasnāt only theoretical. Hitler repeatedly praised Marx privately, stating he had ālearned a great deal from Marxism.ā The trouble with the Weimar Republic, he said, was that its politicians āhad never even read Marx.ā He also stated his differences with communists were that they were intellectual types passing out pamphlets, whereas āI have put into practice what these peddlers and pen pushers have timidly begun.ā
It wasnāt just privately that Hitlerās fealty for Marx surfaced. In āMein Kampf,ā he states that without his racial insights National Socialism āwould really do nothing more than compete with Marxism on its own ground.ā Nor did Hitler eschew this sentiment once reaching power. As late as 1941, with the war in bloom, he stated ābasically National Socialism and Marxism are the sameā in a speech published by the Royal Institute of International Affairs.
Nazi propaganda minister and resident intellectual Joseph Goebbels wrote in his diary that the Nazis would install āreal socialismā after Russiaās defeat in the East. And Hitler favorite Albert Speer, the Nazi armaments minister whose memoir became an international bestseller, wrote that Hitler viewed Joseph Stalin as a kindred spirit, ensuring his prisoner of war son received good treatment, and even talked of keeping Stalin in power in a puppet government after Germanyās eventual triumph. His views on Great Britainās Winston Churchill and the United Statesās Franklin Delano Roosevelt were decidedly less kind.
Nazi and Communist Hatred of Each Other Was Brotherly
Despite this, thereās a persistent claim that Nazis and communists hated each other, and mention that the Nazis persecuted socialists and oppressed trade unions. These things are true, but prove little. The campsā hatred stemmed from familiarity. It was internecine, the nastiest kind.
The Nazis and communists were not only in a struggle for street-war supremacy, but also recruits. These recruits were easily turned, because both sides were fighting for the same men. Hayek recalls