Posted on 11/05/2012 3:46:09 PM PST by markomalley
Edited on 11/05/2012 4:15:45 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]
the question is not how many people stalin murdered, that is a known fact.
what we need to know is how many thousands of young minds did this lying POS supposed professor poison down through the years?
blessings, bobo
Stalin never killed anyone; he was only giving orders!
PS- Is the < /sarc > tag really necessary?
And I suppose the Gulag system was just a means to provide the people a working vacation in the fresh arctic air?
This moron has to be addressed. This is why Obama got elected. And we will get another Obama if we don’t address this university institutionalized Marxism that exists.
Obama being president should not alarm us as much as the people who voted for him.
Another Obama style presidency will happen again if we don’t attack this failed ideology.
De fund the bastards. Give to Hillsdale College and similar.
Like all liberals the world only exists if they can see it.
Now that you've met Professor Grover Furr of Montclair State University, it should be easy to understand how and where journalism school graduates get their indoctrination into their art.
...and Obama is not responsible for trillion+ dollar deficits.
Walter Duranty (1884-1957) was a correspondent for the New York Times who, working as a paid propagandist for Stalin's Soviet regime, sent pro-Soviet stories home. Duranty pretended that all was well in the Soviet Union, even as Russia starved 6 million Ukrainians to death. He was a awarded a Pulitzer Prize in 1932 for telling these lies. Professor Furr is merely copying the trail blazed by Duranty. To this very day, the New York Times will not find fault with Duranty’s reporting. Instead the NYT is on record as defending Duranty and his bogus Pulitzer.
My father saw Dachau a few weeks after it was liberated. He spent that winter near Munich.
He never talks about it, but his service in Europe during WWII forever changed him. He is 87.
I also had a prof in college that became a mentor. He taught poetry and classical lit. He joined the Marines when he was 17 and “got” to go fight the Japanese in WWII. He talked about it to me. Quite a bit. He NEEDED that talking. He NEEDED me to understand. So did I.
Thank your father for his service, from ALL of my family.
My father and I talk about it. But he has never opened the subject without being asked about it. I was grown before I had a clue how close he was to it.
My grandmother’s closest childhood friend was a nurse. She was in Manila before WWII, she went to Corregidor when Manila fell, then Batan and a POW camp. She retired a Lt. Colnel. She wrote a book about it called “To the Angels” (about the nurses she served with there). I have an autographed copy that I cherish.
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