To: moneyrunner
A lot of what you said is true. But then how do you explain that most of those people during WW2 that collaborated with Hitler, I am talking people from the Allied countries, those that turned against their own people because of their strong anti-communist beliefs, where say saw in Hitler the lesser evil then in communism. And the fact that the Roman Catholic church mostly collaborated as well, also because of anti-communism. That does not really support the theory that Hitler was a communist or of such beliefs. There's a bit of confusion here I admit because of the National Socialist things. National(ist) being a right-wing term and socialist a left wing. So maybe there was some of both. All in the most extreme and negative way as we all agree, is that not so? :(
14 posted on
04/26/2002 5:08:35 AM PDT by
bluester
To: bluester
No Bluester...you're buying into the big media left wing lie. Convenient that they've managed to paint the horror of the nazi's into a right wing crime. The first thing the nazi's did was to throw out the conservatives, at first a power sharing arrangement was to have been worked out. Hitler was combating the communists...think of this as the democrats fighting with the Green party....one is just a bit more left than the other. BTW, the Green Party originates within the Nazi movement.
During the era of the Soviet Union, much of their policy and thinking was clearly fascist and nationalistic. In fact after WWII, the Russians were so enamoured with the various Hitler youth songs, they simply translated them into russian and changed the color of the armbands their youth troops wore. You can't have a centrally controlled means of production and be right wing..full stop.
16 posted on
04/26/2002 5:24:34 AM PDT by
Katya
To: bluester
"Nationalism" was a tool used by Hitler to unite his people against a common enemy. If he gave a damn about the fate of Germany, he would have surrendered earlier.
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