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![]() The Black Monk wrote: Instead, of course, Hitler's war was a crusade only for his grotesque and evil ideology, as bad as if not worse than the Bolshevism he fought. There is simply no comparison between the explicit genocide promulgated by the Nazi ideology and the de facto repressive implementation of "communism" in the USSR. All this talk about "famine holocausts" is nothing but revisionist and Nazi apologist drivel especially considering that it originates from areas that never suffered through any Soviet famine and which actively supported Hitler during WWII. |
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kirill wrote in message ...
The Black Monk wrote: Instead, of course, Hitler's war was a crusade only for his grotesque and evil ideology, as bad as if not worse than the Bolshevism he fought. There is simply no comparison between the explicit genocide promulgated by the Nazi ideology and the de facto repressive implementation of "communism" in the USSR. Well, the Nazis were at least honest about their brutality. For the millions who were sacrificed for the purpose of building the worker's paradise it is small consolation that some of their murderers thought that they were building a better world rather than just destroying subhumans. All this talk about "famine holocausts" is nothing but revisionist and Nazi apologist drivel especially considering that it originates from areas that never suffered through any Soviet famine and which actively supported Hitler during WWII. I dispute the latter statements. OF course talk of the famine was greatest in areas not under soviet control, where news was suppressed. My grandfather and a few others - a small minority of people from "velyka ukrainia" within the diaspora lived through the Famine, had family that died during it. While obviously the post-Stalin USSR could not be compared to Nazi Germany (though it was still worse than, for example, Franco's Spain), Stalinism, and Pol Pot's communism were not much different. respectfully, BM |
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![]() "Fred J. McCall" wrote in message ... Owe Jessen wrote: :Am 21 Oct 2003 16:09:53 -0700, schrieb (The :Black Monk) : : :Unfortunately, rather than statesmen Germany was led by madmen. :Hitler's racial theories prevented him from making Germany a leader of :Europe in the manner that America would later be. As Spengler :predicted in 1936, Hitler's sick reich didn't last 10 years. : :If Germany would have been lead by statesmen and not madmen it would :not have waged war, me thinks. And if Germany had been fairly treated by the victors of WWI, rather than robbed blind, and hadn't had such sensible options as Anshluss foreclosed, she might have been led by statesmen rather than madmen. I think the meth-amphetamines would have still done their paranoid schizoprenic work on the minds of the people. Adolph was a very charismatic man. |
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Comments in no particular order:
1) From my readings I gained the information that the Japanese Army wanted to go south (ie, not fight the Russians) and the Japanese navy wanted to go north (ie, not fight the US and the UK.) The Army won. (ASIR the minister of war was army.) 2) The 30-40 (ISTR?) Russian Army divisions facing the Japanese in Siberia/Mongolia were released to the Western front after Sorge informed the Stavka the Japanese were not going to attack Russia. This really turned the tide after the attack on Moscow had failed and fresh winter-hardened SovArmy troops attacked. 3) As I recall Yamamoto had said (more or less) "I can run wild for six months - after that I can give no guarantee." His experience in the US included a large amount of travel including the Texas oil fields and the various manufacturing plants. 4) Had Hitler not begun exterminating the Ukrainians the Soviet Army would have had a much tougher time. As it was the behind-the-lines forces, regular and guerrilla, gave the road-bound German supply lines fits. With the Ukrainian populace with him, as they were at the very first few days, that wouldn't have been nearly so severe a problem. The country 'ocean' would have been 'anti-fish', to paraphrase Mao. Walt BJ Walt BJ |
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"Tarver Engineering" wrote:
:"Fred J. McCall" wrote in message .. . : Owe Jessen wrote: : : :Am 21 Oct 2003 16:09:53 -0700, schrieb (The : :Black Monk) : : : : :Unfortunately, rather than statesmen Germany was led by madmen. : :Hitler's racial theories prevented him from making Germany a leader of : :Europe in the manner that America would later be. As Spengler : :predicted in 1936, Hitler's sick reich didn't last 10 years. : : : :If Germany would have been lead by statesmen and not madmen it would : :not have waged war, me thinks. : : And if Germany had been fairly treated by the victors of WWI, rather : than robbed blind, and hadn't had such sensible options as Anshluss : foreclosed, she might have been led by statesmen rather than madmen. : :I think the meth-amphetamines would have still done their paranoid :schizoprenic work on the minds of the people. Adolph was a very charismatic :man. Then you should stop using the meth. |
#10
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In article ,
Fred J. McCall writes: Owe Jessen wrote: :Am 21 Oct 2003 16:09:53 -0700, schrieb (The :Black Monk) : : :Unfortunately, rather than statesmen Germany was led by madmen. :Hitler's racial theories prevented him from making Germany a leader of :Europe in the manner that America would later be. As Spengler :predicted in 1936, Hitler's sick reich didn't last 10 years. : :If Germany would have been lead by statesmen and not madmen it would :not have waged war, me thinks. And if Germany had been fairly treated by the victors of WWI, rather than robbed blind, and hadn't had such sensible options as Anshluss foreclosed, she might have been led by statesmen rather than madmen. I really don't think that that was the case. The near-simultaneous collapse of the two phases of Imperial German society in late 1918 - the defeat of the Army's Kaiserschlacht in France, and the collapse of the Home Front or civilian ability to support the war, due to a combination of lack of resources due to the British (and later, Anglo-American) blockade of all German shipping, and the rise of the various Communist and Anarchist rebellions in late 1918, left Germany without a clear r sense that they had, in fact, lost the war. The Front-Line veterans, and the Army General Staff (Who'd been running the shpw by fair means or foul since just before the outbreak of the First World War) felt that they'd been stabbed in the back by the surrender by the REMFs in Berlin. As far as they were concerned, they may of suffered some setbacks, but they hadn't lost. The Home Front felt that they'd been let down by the Army, which surrendered after s relatively small seris of setbacks. After all, the Army was still deep within French terretory, wasn't it? This wasn't really true - the Kaiser's Government had it right, and Germany had reached the point ot total exhaustion - but we're dealing with emotions here, and not fact. This general feeling that they hadn't really lost, and that if they only tried a little harder next time, they'd win, pervaded most aspects of German society in the 1920s and 1930s. That was one of the motivations behind the "Unconditional Surrender" demands of the Allies in the Second World War. They wanted the Germans to be in no doubt that they'd lost, by losing in that manner, it put out most of the smouldering embers, if you will, of resentment that gave Hitler such a receptive audience. That's not to say that Germany wasn't treated with excessive harshness at Versailles. But when you balance the Treaty mandated reparations against the forgiveness of those debts by the British and American governments, and the loans and loan guarantees provided to teh Weimar Republic, it's not really a serious issue. -- Pete Stickney A strong conviction that something must be done is the parent of many bad measures. -- Daniel Webster |
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