Pour
ce septième épisode de la "Marche du Monde" Youssef Hindi interrogé par
Ian Purdom, analyse en détail l'attelage que constitue le régime
Kievien: politiques et oligarques juifs pilotant des bataillons de
néo-nazis. Soutenus par Israel et la communauté juive internationale, il
constitue le nouveau fer de lance du nouvel ordre mondial dans sa lutte
contre la Russie de Vladimir Poutine.
Cette alliance qui apparait au
premier abord contre nature s'explique pour peu qu'on sorte du
prêt-à-penser "nuremberguien", du conformisme "shoatique" et qu'on
s'intéresse de près sur ce que fut le projet hitlérien et plus
particulièrement ses origines et influences. Le judaisme par ses textes
fondateurs ainsi que de grands intellectuels juifs ayant bien avant
l'Allemagne nazi développés les idées et concepts nécessaires à la
constitution d'un état raciste, impérial, à l'eschatologie millénariste
se revendiquant d'un territoire. Le sionisme avec son application
concrète en Israel aujourd'hui en constitue la meilleure preuve.
Un sujet polémique voir explosif, incontournable cependant pour
comprendre les forces véritables qui meuvent le monde et dont l'Ukraine,
après la Syrie, constitue le nouveau théâtre d'opposition.
IAN,
IL NE FAUT PAS MÉLANGER LES SAOUDIENS (CRYPTO-JUIFS) AVEC LES MUSULMANS
OU L’ISLAM CAR LE WAHABISME EST UNE HÉRÉSIE, ET LES MERCENAIRES AU
SERVICE DES OCCIDENTAUX ET D’ISRAEL DE L’APARTHEID AUX MUSULMANS ET À
L’ISLAM.
CESSEZ DE RÉPÉTER LES SLOGANS DES MÉDIAS JUDÉO-SIONISTES !
L'ARABIE EST SOUS OCCUPATION OCCIDENTALE!
BAFS
YOUSSEF,
Eustace Mullins (Moulin), descendant des Survivants de l’holocauste des
Huguenots de France, nous a révélé que les Nationaux Socialistes
allemands avaient fait une Alliance avec les Sionistes en 1923,
renouvelée en 1933 avec l’Accord de Transfert de Juifs non assimilés en
Palestine ou ailleurs (Haavarah). Ile ne faut pas mélanger Mein Kampf
avec le IIIème Reich.
Le « nazisme » est un terme péjoratif créé par les Sionistes tout comme Al-Qaeda ou Terroriste voulant dire Musulman.
L’Allemagne avait un problème économique et non racial ! Hitler n’a pas
inventé le racisme des occidentaux qui se voulait une race blanche
supérieure depuis la création du Catholicisme romain, et bien avant.
BAFS FILS ADOPTIF d’ADOLPHE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zM2fXTkjU2E
Prof. Leibowitz: There are Judeo-Nazis. Israel Represents the Darkness of a State Body.
"The State of Israel represents the darkness of a state body, where a creature of a human form who was the president of the Supreme Court decides that the use of torture is permitted in the interest of the state."
Prof. Leibowitz discusses the existence of Judeo-Nazis and of a Nazi-like mentality which is dominant in the Israel.
ETYMOLOGY: Nazi
1930, noun and adjective, from German Nazi, abbreviation of German pronunciation of Nationalsozialist (based on earlier German sozi, popular abbreviation of "socialist"), from Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei "National Socialist German Workers' Party," led by Hitler from 1920.
The 24th edition of Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen Sprache (2002) says the word Nazi was favored in southern Germany (supposedly from c. 1924) among opponents of National Socialism because the nickname Nazi, Naczi (from the masc. proper name Ignatz, German form of Ignatius) was used colloquially to mean "a foolish person, clumsy or awkward person."Ignatz was a popular name in Catholic Austria, and according to one source in World War I Nazi was a generic name in the German Empire for the soldiers of Austria-Hungary.
An older use of Nazi for national-sozial
is attested in German from 1903, but EWdS does not think it contributed
to the word as applied to Hitler and his followers. The NSDAP for a
time attempted to adopt the Nazi
designation as what the Germans call a "despite-word," but they gave
this up, and the NSDAP is said to have generally avoided the term.
Before 1930, party members had been called in English National Socialists, which dates from 1923. The use of Nazi Germany, Nazi regime,
etc., was popularized by German exiles abroad. From them, it spread
into other languages, and eventually was brought back to Germany, after
the war. In the USSR, the terms national socialist and Nazi were said to have been forbidden after 1932, presumably to avoid any taint to the good word socialist. Soviet literature refers to fascists.
Everyone Knows The Word “Nazi” But How Did The Term Come Into Being?
Everyone knows the word “Nazi” and the evil it entails.
World War II is a huge part of our history, with Hitler’s Nazi
Germany being remembered as the villains. As such, it is not surprising
that the word “Nazi” would still be around years later.
Indeed, “Nazi” has become a word that continually drags us back to the years that held the largest conflict in history.
It’s been several decades since WWII, but people both consciously and
subconsciously still use the term Nazi when referring to Germans in
general.
Everyone knows the word “Nazi” and the evil it entails.But how did
the term come into being? Was it created by Hitler, or by his opponents?
And what did the Nazis themselves think of the term?
During the years that led to WWII, the word “Nazi” was used as a derogatory term against the Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei or NSDAP, translated in English as National Socialist German Worker’s Party.
Headed by Adolf Hitler, the NSDAP was a party which rode to power on
the wings of far-right politics. During the 1920s, when the party was
not much of a threat, political opponents referred to the party
dismissively as “Nazi.”
Originally, the term was used in Germany before the rise of NSDAP as a
colloquial and derogatory word referring to an awkward, backward, and
clumsy peasant. It would go on to be used as a mockery of the name Ignatz—a German variation of Ignatius.
Indeed, Ignatz was a name common in Bavaria, the region from
which the NSDAP emerged. This came to haunt them as opponents tried to
draw parallels between the widely mocked name and the party.
Opponents of NSDAP also used the word “Sozi” prior to “Nazi” as a derogative representation of the word Sozialist or “Socialist” in English.
In the 1920s, in a bid to associate the NSDAP with the contemptuous
colloquial term “Sozi” and the name “Ignatz,” opponents of national
socialism tweaked the first part of the party’s name, (Na)tionalSo(zi)alistische, to coin the term “Nazi” for the socialist party.
Clearly, this awkward sobriquet was not something Hitler and his National Socialists had signed up for.
In the 1930s, when the NSDAP would eventually rise in power, the term
became more widely spread by exiles who used it to refer not just to
the party, but to everything associated with it.
This brought about the terms “Nazi Germany,” “Nazi Regime,” and “Nazism” among others.
However, neither the term nor any of its derivatives were used within
Germany. Anyone doing so might face serious consequences. But the
exiles ended up spreading the term across Europe and beyond.
Seeing that the term had become widely used across German borders in place of the rather tedious Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei or its acronym, the NSDAP tried reappropriating the term.
Interestingly, the “National” in Nationalsozialist was pronounced /ˌnatsi̯oˈnaːl/ in German, and approximately pronounced as [ˈnäːtsi], so this could have been one of the reasons why the NSDAP decided to reappropriate the term.
However, because of the unbearably bad taste it left, they quickly
dropped the idea and generally avoided using the term while still in
power.
Hitler never used the word in his conversations. Herman Goering also
avoided including the term in any of his speeches. The same could be
said of over 550 members of the NSDAP who were interviewed by Professor
Theodore Abel of Columbia University in 1933.
A book entitled Account Rendered was published in 1963 as an
account of the experiences of Hitler Youth leader Melita Maschmann. In
her book, Maschmann never used the word “Nazi.” They all preferred to be
called National Socialists and referred to their movement as National
Socialism.
The words “Nazi” and “Nazism” were clearly terms used by enemies of
Germany. They would eventually be used within the borders of Germany,
but only after the war ended, when the NSDAP was powerless once again.
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