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Remembering Terri Schiavo: A Five-Year Anniversary Marked By Cruel Bigotry
Townhall ^ | 3/31/10 | Bobby Schindler

Posted on 03/31/2010 5:10:34 AM PDT by wagglebee

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To: wagglebee

bttt


221 posted on 09/07/2010 7:11:22 AM PDT by Dante3
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To: Salvation; Ohioan from Florida; Goodgirlinred; Miss Behave; cyn; AlwaysFree; amdgmary; ...
40 Days for Life will start again next week.

Thread by Salvation.

40 Days for Life starts September 22 in 238 locations [ September 22-October 31]

40 Days for Life starts September 22 in 238 locations

 40 Days for Life location map

Teams in a record 238 locations in the US, Canada, Australia, England, Northern Ireland and Denmark are now preparing for 40 Days for Life campaigns from September 22 to October 31.

Now's the time to be thinking -- and praying -- about how you can be a part of this effort.

Check the full list of participating 40 Days for Life communities and find the location where YOU can help make a difference.

40 Days for Life depends on committed volunteers taking a leap of faith -- and being willing to sacrifice through prayer and fasting ... peaceful vigil ... and pro-life community outreach.

If you haven't already done so, please use the box at the upper right to sign up for campaign updates ... which will include daily devotionals and inspiring stories from local 40 Days for Life groups throughout the campaign. Facebook member? Then please join our 40 Days for Life group.

 

What 40 Days for Life has witnessed (so far!)

 40 Days for Life in Riverside, California

There have now been six coordinated 40 Days for Life campaigns since 2007.

These efforts have mobilized people of faith and conscience in 307 cities across all 50 of the United States plus six Canadian provinces, three Australian states, and communities in Northern Ireland and Denmark.

During these unified efforts, participants witnessed countless blessings from God:

  • More than 350,000 have joined together in an historic display of unity to pray and fast for an end to abortion
  • More than 11,500 church congregations have participated in the 40 Days for Life campaigns
  • Reports document 2,811 lives that have been spared from abortion — and those are just the ones we know about
  • 35 abortion workers have quit their jobs and walked away from the abortion industry
  • Six abortion facilities completely shut down following local 40 Days for Life campaigns
  • Hundreds of women and men have been spared from the tragic effects of abortion, including a lifetime of regrets
  • More than 850 news stories have been featured in newspapers, magazines, radio shows and TV programs from coast to coast ... and overseas
  • Many people with past abortion experiences have stepped forward to begin post-abortion healing and recovery

After so many years of legalized abortion, many people of faith are experiencing a renewed sense of HOPE!

 

40 Days for Life brings hope in time of crisis

This video highlights 40 Days for Life national director David Bereit's presentation at the "Keep God in America" rally in Jacksonville, marking the end of the 40 Days for Life campaign. "It's a small way for me to say THANK YOU for all you've done to make this 40 Days for Life the most successful spring campaign yet," he said.

 

snip -- video at the site.  http://www.40daysforlife.com/

Listen to 40 Days for Life on Focus on the Family programs!

 Shawn Carney and Abby Johnson

The 40 Days for Life mission – and the life-changing decision made by Abby Johnson – are featured in a two-part edition of the Focus on the Family radio program. Abby is the former director of the Planned Parenthood abortion clinic in Bryan/College Station, Texas ... the community where 40 Days for Life began.

During the 40 Days for Life campaign in the fall of 2009, Abby witnessed an ultrasound-guided abortion. She quit her job at Planned Parenthood, as she realized she could no longer be involved in the abortion industry.

You can listen to her amazing story online. Go to these pages, then click on "listen now":


222 posted on 09/12/2010 11:42:12 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: Eurotwit; Ohioan from Florida; Goodgirlinred; Miss Behave; cyn; AlwaysFree; amdgmary; ...
In one of mankind's darkest moments the White Rose shown brightly!

Thread by Eurotwit.

The White Rose: An Interview with Mrs. Susanne Zeller- Hirzel (Surviving member talks about islam)

Background

The White Rose was a civilian resistance organization that actively opposed Adolf Hitler in Nazi Germany during WWII. It was composed of students from the University of Munich and their philosophy professor, Kurt Huber. The group became known for an anonymous leaflet campaign, lasting from June 1942 until February 1943, calling for active resistance to the Third Reich. Upwards of 9,000 copies of the White Rose leaflets were distributed across Germany leading to an investigation by the Gestapo. Six members of the group were arrested; endured show trials conducted by Nazi Judge Roland Freisler and were executed by decapitation in 1943. The story of the valiant White Rose resistance group has been the subject of a film Sophie Scholl – Die letzten Tage (Sophie Scholl: The Final Days), Weisse Rose (White Rose) a chamber opera by Udo Zimmerman that debuted in Hamburg in 1986 to international acclaim and many books, most recently: Sophie Scholl and the White Rose in 2006.

The first leaflet from the White Rose read:

Isn’t it true that every honest German is ashamed of his government these days? Who among us has any conception of the dimensions of shame that will befall us and our children when one day the veil has fallen from our eyes and the most horrible of crimes - crimes that infinitely outdistance every human measure - reach the light of day?

The second leaflet read:

Since the conquest of Poland three hundred thousand Jews have been murdered in this country in the most bestial way … The German people slumber on in their dull, stupid sleep and encourage these fascist criminals … Each man wants to be exonerated of a guilt of this kind, each one continues on his way with the most placid, the calmest conscience. But he cannot be exonerated; he is guilty, guilty, guilty! (see another here)

The sixth leaflet from the White Rose resistance group was about the disaster at Stalingrad. It was smuggled out of Nazi Germany to Scandinavia. Re-titled as “The Manifesto of the Students of Munich” thousands of copies were dropped over Germany from allied aircraft.

Mrs. Suzanne Zeller – Hirzel is one of only two survivors of the White Rose Society. She is a member of the Peoples Movement PAX EUROPA” (BPE) that opposes the Islamization of Germany and Europe. Mrs. Zeller – Hirzel is the author of a memoir of her experiences during the Hitler era in Germany: Susanne Hirzel: [From Yes to No. A Schwabian Youth. 1933 to 1945] Vom Ja zum Nein. Eine schwäbische Jugend 1933 bis 1945. Silberburg-Verlag, 2000.

This interview was conducted by D.L. Adams, a co-founder of the group Stop Islamization of America (SIOA).

The following interview was translated from the German.

Adams: During the war, you and Sophie Scholl were members of the League of German Girls (BDM) prior to the formation of the White Rose; was there a particular event that caused you to turn away from Nazism and take an active position against it?

Zeller – Hirzel: I got to know Sophie Scholl when she was my group leader in the BDM. I admired her because of her eloquence and her behavior and she quickly became my very best friend. I often stayed at Sophie's parents' home and got to know her brother Hans and her sister Inge. The BDM was a scouting organization for girls. Political indoctrination was only one aspect among many others and I even became a troop leader(Scharführerin). Sophie's father Robert Scholl was a determined Catholic pacifist and a sincere Christian. He told us about his experiences and that influenced my thinking. At that time, we jointly decided that we should do something against Hitler.

Adams: What component(s) of character did all the members of the White Rose group share in common?

Zeller – Hirzel: We all were oppositional patriots, but with a Christian understanding. Although the Scholls were Catholic and I was Protestant (my father was a Lutheran parish priest), we shared almost everything in common.

Adams: I understand that Sophie's brother was an enlisted soldier in the Werhmacht. Was Hans involved in a silent movement within the Werhmacht against Hitlerism? If such a movement existed can you tell us about it? In addition, was there a feeling among Germans against Hitlerism that you felt the White Rose could encourage?

Zeller – Hirzel: Yes, there were within the armed forces an anti-Nazi underground movement (Count Claus von Stauffenberg, etc.). Mainly officers were involved. My brother Hans was only an ordinary soldier. Soldiers were rarely drawn into their confidence by officers. So Hans had no contact with them. There was no support among the population since the prevailing erroneous opinion was: "As long as our sons at the front are fighting for their country, resistance would be a betrayal." Another fellow who was looking for contact with the White Rose sympathizers in Berlin, Falk Harnack, was also forced into the armed forces. He failed to make contact with the underground resistance. He was surprisingly acquitted on April 19, 1943 by Freisler’s People’s Court. Harnack benefitted from his profession; he was a theatrical arts director. During the trial Freisler's assessment of me as a young naive girl enabled me to get off lightly, although I feared a death sentence from my prison cell.

Adams: It is known that Hitler had a deep fascination and affection for Islam. Hitler once said that he would have preferred if Germany had been an Islamic culture as he thought the German people would then have been more brutal fighters. Hitler also understood that Jews were despised by Mohammed. The oppression and killing of Jews is a common thread between Nazism and Islamic doctrine. Were you aware of this linkage during the White Rose times? Were there Muslims in Munich? Did Professor Huber or any other White Rose members ever discuss the linkage between Islam and Nazism with the group?

Zeller – Hirzel: Islam and Muslims in general at that time were not an issue with us. I was not aware that there were any Muslims in Germany. Hitler's collaboration with Haj Amin al-Husseini, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem was not known even though Hitler invited him to reside in Berlin from 1941 to war’s end and the Grand Mufti recruited SS divisions of Bosnian Muslims. All this was unknown to us.

Adams: There is a documentary film about one of Hitler's personal secretaries, Traudl Junge. The film is called "Blind Spot". It is an excellent film and shows how an otherwise decent person can make excuses and be silent in the face of the cruelties and brutalities of dictators and totalitarian systems. Do you have any comment on ordinary Germans like Trudle Junge who went along with the Nazi Party and Hitler but may have felt that what they were supporting was wrong? We know that dictatorships and totalitarian systems only can work when decent people remain silent.

Zeller – Hirzel: I know the film and the book, “Until the Final Hour.” Mrs. Junge was probably a young woman with a nice nature, but was otherwise fairly simple. Hitler preferred to be accompanied by that kind of women. Why did millions follow the Nazis? Well, there was poverty in many parts of the population. In addition, the majority felt the "shame of Versailles," which culminated in accusations of treason against the politicians of the Weimar Republic. Hitler gave them back, at least emotionally, a sense of national self-respect. I was very angry and disappointed to see my teachers, professors and the rector voluntarily wearing brown shirts (the Nazi dress code) in school and in University; they said they want to give the Nazis “a helping hand." These were people who previously had served me as role models. I think today, it would be the same teachers and professors describing themselves as Islamophiles, multiculturalists and “helping hands” for Muslim associations as they did at that time for the Nazis. However, I must say that the Classical scholars were the most courageous and distant among the teachers.

Adams: You are now involved in the “Peoples Movement PAX EUROPA” (BPE) in Germany. We understand this to be one of the more important anti-Jihad organizations in Germany. What prompted you to get involved in the anti-Islamist movement?

Zeller – Hirzel: I read many, many books on the subject; especially the books by Mark Gabriel (see “Islam and Terrorism”). So I realized that one must not simply accept these things passively but also do something about it. One must support this cause by necessity.

Adams: Do you see similarities between Islam and Nazism? If so, what are these similarities?

Zeller – Hirzel: The fanaticism, the absolute claim of possessing the only truth and the spiritual simplicity are very similar between Islam and the Nazism.

Adams: Do you view opposing Islamization as the same battle you were fighting when the White Rose fought Nazism?

Zeller – Hirzel: Not quite yet. Critics of the Nazi ideology were then immediately arrested. We have not yet reached that point. But if we do nothing, it will come back to that. Then they might lock up the critics of Islam.

Adams: In your view why is it so difficult to explain the threat of Islamization to the public? What is stopping us from getting our message across to the public? What can we do better?

Zeller – Hirzel: The general indifference to religious matters make it difficult. The public believes we to have to be "fair" to everyone. That is counterproductive. Additionally, there is general prosperity with a relatively high standard of living that makes people lazy. I say: Only education can help. Education can aid.

Adams: What is the best way to approach a person who knows nothing about Islam? How do we build a base of support among people so that we are never in the desperate position that entrapped you, Sophie and the heroes of the White Rose resistance group?

Zeller – Hirzel: As I said before: Education! We need to conduct neighborhood meetings, community and church events. The distress in the population is indeed there, but apparently not big enough. "Hitler is the scourge of God," once said Robert Scholl, Sophie's father. But he was then promptly convicted.

Adams: When you and your colleagues of the White Rose were leafleting in Munich and elsewhere, did you believe that the population could be converted to anti-Hitlerism?

Zeller – Hirzel: Yes, we really believed that. We actually thought we could move public opinion. Even if it happened to be in vain, we tried it before history. And yet we were afraid. The very few supporters we had were scared. We were afraid of death sentences, meted out by Freisler’s People’s Court, afraid of his screaming. But screaming is also a weakness.

Adams: We know that the memory of Sophie Scholl, you and your colleagues is held in great esteem across the world by lovers of freedom and justice. How best do we motivate people today to fight against the Islamization of Europe and the West?

Zeller – Hirzel: I think something terrible needs to happen before Germans awaken. 9/11 was too far away from the German people. The churches fail miserably in the task of informing people about Islamic ideology. That can only happen through grassroots activism, education and instruction. Even if in Europe the churches play an increasingly smaller social role, the people ought to be agitating in church institutions, in the parishes and so forth.

Adams: What words of encouragement can you give us to help in our fight against the enemy of freedom, and humanity?

Zeller – Hirzel: Strive for Unity. It makes resistance powerful and courageous!

Adams: Thank you, Mrs. Zeller- Hirzel, for your thoughts and comments. It is an honor to interview you. You, Sophie, Hans and Kurt and all of your colleagues are heroes to us and to all who love life and liberty and oppose barbarism, totalitarianism, and hatred.

Zeller – Hirzel: I also thank Mr. Adams and our American friends of SIOA and wish them the very best success in their fight for the preservation of freedom and human rights.

Adams: Thank you, Mrs. Susanne Zeller- Hirzel; you are a model for us in this struggle against Islamization.


223 posted on 09/12/2010 11:46:18 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: wagglebee

I will never forget Terri and what they did to her.


224 posted on 09/12/2010 11:48:44 AM PDT by Saundra Duffy (For victory & freedom!!!)
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To: Ohioan from Florida; Goodgirlinred; Miss Behave; cyn; AlwaysFree; amdgmary; angelwings49; ...
All this nonsense about "Godwin's Law" aside, there are monsters out there who actually are Nazis.

Thread by me.

Wesley J. Smith: Is the Dutch Gronningen Infanticide Protocol Akin to The Nazi Doctors?

There is an interesting discussion underway in the thread from a previous post between two valued SHS commenters, as to whether the Dutch infanticide that has flowed illegally, but generally undisturbed. from the country’s euthanasia permissiveness, can be fairly compared to the infanticide of disabled infants during the medical Holocaust in Germany during World War II.  One commenter said, appropriately, that we should be very careful before drawing such analogies. The other, who is reading Robert Jay Lifton’s magnificently researched The Nazi Doctors, sees striking similarities and is disturbed.

I think both are right.  There are some similarities between what is happening in the Netherlands now, and what happened in Germany then.  But there are also pronounced  differences.  In fact, I spent quite a bit of time on this subject in both Forced Exit and Culture of Death.

First, let’s start with the significant differences:

But these real and substantial differences should not make us sanguine.  I strongly recommend all who are interested in this topic read The Nazi Doctors by Lifton and Death and Deliverance by Burleigh, the two best books on this topic.  If you do, you will see that:

And then there is this: The history of the first baby killed in the medical Holocaust, is eerily similar to what happens in the Netherlands–and what bioethicists like Peter Singer advocate.  From my book Culture of Death:

The first known German government-approved infanticide, the killing of Baby Knauer, occurred in early 1939.  The baby was blind and had a leg and an arm missing.  Baby Knauer’s father was distraught at having a disabled child.  So, he wrote to Chancellor Hitler requesting permission to have the infant “put to sleep.”  Hitler had been receiving many such requests from German parents of disabled babies over several years and had been waiting for just the right opportunity to launch his euthanasia plans.  The Knauer case seemed the perfect test case.  He sent one of his personal physicians, Karl Rudolph Brandt, to investigate.  Brandt’s instructions were to verify the facts, and if the child was disabled as described in the father’s letter, he was to assure the infant’s doctors that they could kill the child without legal consequence.  With the Fuhrer’s assurance, Baby Knauer’s doctors willingly murdered their patient at the request of his father.  Brandt witnessed the baby’s killing and reported back to Hitler who was pleased all went as planned.  Based on this case of requested infanticide, Hitler signed the order permitting doctors to kill disabled infants.[i]


[i] Lifton, Nazi Doctors, Supra., p. 51.

So, while the Nazi analogy should be used with great restraint, and differences should be noted, the charge that Dutch infanticide has certain very disturbing similarities cannot be rejected out of hand. Indeed, in the concept of the life deemed so compromised that it justifies killing, we see disturbing echoes from history that should give us all great pause.


225 posted on 09/12/2010 11:49:36 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: Ohioan from Florida; Goodgirlinred; Miss Behave; cyn; AlwaysFree; amdgmary; angelwings49; ...
As the Canadians debate euthanasia and assisted suicide the battle for life is heating up.

Two threads by me.

Euthanasia brings culture of death

There's an all-party panel of Quebec politicians travelling across that province to gather public opinion on the legalization of euthanasia and assisted suicide. The hearings are aptly titled "Dying with Dignity," but since the right-to-kill crowd long ago co-opted that phrase to mean the individual right to choose the time and means of one's own death, there's little doubt which side of life the hearings will be biased toward.

After just one day of testimony, the press gave front-page coverage to the story of Laurent Rouleau. He was wheelchair bound and had lived for 15 years with multiple sclerosis. One day last June, he took out a hunting rifle and ended his life. It's a shocking story, made even more emotional as his wife told the committee that her husband "had to find a way to die before he was a complete prisoner of his body."

Such stories touch our hearts, but they also tend to push us into the erroneous belief that if we could be in complete control until the end, death would come in a sweet, neat package.

But tucked into the back pages of the papers is another story of a 48-year-old Ontario minister whose medical treatment -- or lack of it -- has been at the centre of controversy. In April, he suffered a heart attack that left him deprived of oxygen and brain damaged. Despite visible signs of progress, the hospital made the decision to withdraw nutrition from him in June. The family appealed the decision and the nutrition was returned to him.

But a capacity and consent board refused to acknowledge a family member as his substitute decision maker (SDM) and instead appointed a family friend. However, the board made the appointment contingent on his agreement that the nutrition tubes be removed. That is, 'you can be his SDM as long as you make the decisions we want.'

No news on why such a board is allowed to make these kind of demands a condition of being appointed as a SDM. But the tubes were removed and the minister died this week.

If the pressure from the board was strong enough to remove life support from a patient -- against the family's wishes -- in an age when euthanasia is illegal, it's frightening to think how strong that pressure would be if euthanasia was a legal option. It can easily be argued that the above are extreme examples -- because they are. The problem is, extreme cases become the basis of bad laws.

So the Quebec panel would do well to dispense with hearing the individual cases that evoke an emotional response and focus on the facts that relate to euthanasia. Thanks to a laissez-faire commitment to life in the Netherlands over the past 30 years, we have plenty of them.

While individual stories emphasize that we have the right to self-determination and the state has an obligation to respect my right to autonomy, a 1999 article in the Journal of Medical Ethics reported that almost 20 per cent of all euthanasia deaths in the Netherlands occurred without the patient's explicit request. So much for autonomy and choice.

While individual stories emphasize that uncontrollable pain is a main reason for legalizing euthanasia, this journal reported that pain is rarely the cause for the request. Instead it is a vague fear of a loss of dignity.

Individual stories will also emphasize that this is "my body" and this decision only affects me. But it becomes a public act when killing is legislated and when it involves the assistance of another. It would diminish the measure of trust that is required for any healthy physician/ patient relationship and that would impact all of us.

Stories emphasize individuals whose choices will not impact society, but the facts from the Netherlands show that, once started, a culture of death can't be controlled. The Netherlands started with euthanasia for competent adults who were terminally ill. Just two decades later, the law covers depressed adults (with no physical illness), incompetent adults whom others believe probably want to die and disabled babies. Those over 16 can obtain euthanasia without parental consent and the latest move is to grant a final exit to those over 70 who simply want to end their lives. In short, there's plenty to think about the next time the news promotes an emotional story about suicide.

____________________________________________________

(Canadian) Euthanasia debate straying off course: group

Quebec's public hearings into assisted suicide continued in Montreal Wednesday, with an appearance by the president of the Right to Die With Dignity Association, among others.

Hélène Bolduc told the all-party panel of MNAs leading the hearing that the debate is being sidetracked by calls for better palliative care, more hospital beds and better pain management.

Bolduc said she's surprised by the opposition to euthanasia from doctors working in palliative care.

"We seem like radicals now," Bolduc said of her association, which has 310 members. "I am not a radical."

Bolduc said she finds it hard to be on the opposite side of the debate from palliative care doctors given that those are the professionals currently caring for her terminally ill sister.

"I don't want to be against palliative care," Bolduc said. "But I have to say: there is a limit.

"It's not because I don't believe in this type of care, but palliative care shouldn't be practised with dogged determination."

She likened the palliative care community to the church, with doctors acting as "apostles of redemption."

Bolduc said she's seen palliative care units in which health professionals try to delay an individual's death as long as possible for the sake of the family, who want to see the patient resigned and serene. But they're not serene, Bolduc said; they're simply drugged to ease the pain.

The association wants individuals to have the right to decide when to die, and Bolduc said she hopes Quebec will at the very least stop prosecuting doctors who assist in a terminally ill person's death.

The commission also heard from Sara Raphals, 89, a retired school teacher and cancer survivor.

Raphals told the panel that there is little dignity in the way the elderly are treated and that suicide should be a basic human right.

"I know many people [in institutions] who are absolutely miserable," Raphals said.

"For the few of my peers who are still left, the first greeting is, 'I hope I go to sleep tonight and don't wake up in the morning'."

Raphals said she hoped Quebec will consider legalizing assisted-suicide, but she doesn't believe someone other than the ailing individual should dictate the terms of that person's death.

The public hearing, dubbed Dying With Dignity, will visit 11 communities across the province this fall to hear what individuals and groups think about assisted suicide.


226 posted on 09/12/2010 11:53:33 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: Ohioan from Florida; Goodgirlinred; Miss Behave; cyn; AlwaysFree; amdgmary; angelwings49; ...
Rest in Peace Pastor Joshua.

Thread by me.

Joshua (Kulendran Mayandy) [Rest in Peace]

Yesterday afternoon (September 6), Pastor Joshua (Kulendran Mayandy) passed away at the Brampton (Ontario) Civic Hospital.

We mourn his death, yet his death was not in vain.

The death of Joshua Mayandy represents a wake up call for everyone who believes in the equality and dignity of all human life.

Joshua had fluids and nutrition withheld from him based on a cognitive disability that was caused by a heart attack, where he stopped breathing for several minutes.

Joshua was left without IV fluids, nutrition and medication from August 17 until the SDM agreed to have him fed orally on August 28 by a nurse from his Church. At that time, Joshua was not otherwise dying.

Last week Joshua had a seizure, making it impossible to continue feeding him orally.

You need to protect yourself.

The Euthanasia Prevention Coalition has distributed several thousand copies of the Life-Protecting Power of Attorney for Personal Care to protect people from these situations. This is a document that is designed to protect you from being dehydrated to death or denied basic care. You can obtain a copy at: http://www.euthanasiaprevention.on.ca/lifeprotectingpowerattorney/index.htm.

We thank everyone who wrote letters or did anything to attempt to bring justice for Joshua.

We attempted to intervene and had some success. We will be discussing this case and other related cases in order to establish further response.


227 posted on 09/12/2010 11:57:50 AM PDT by wagglebee ("A political party cannot be all things to all people." -- Ronald Reagan, 3/1/75)
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To: wagglebee

Thanks for the ping!


228 posted on 09/12/2010 1:04:55 PM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: wagglebee

A friend of mine was born in Holland. nazi protocols established during the Holocaust permeated the region and remained after the war was over. Hitler is winning there at the moment.


229 posted on 09/13/2010 6:35:55 AM PDT by floriduh voter (Obama still America bashing - wants to be more like China!)
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To: wagglebee

Thanks for posting the link. Many do not have acces to the kind of information that you provide ehre.


230 posted on 09/13/2010 10:50:55 AM PDT by Dante3
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