NAZI Word Origin
NAZI Word Origin
NAZI Word Origin
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Kissinger Sold Out USA - Adolf Hitler, speech of April 12th, 1922 in Munich.
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The word itself derives from the German word for National Socialism: "Nationalsozialismus". It was coined for its negative sound and connection, as the word
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"sozi" had previously been used to refer to Marxists in Germany, particularly those of the Social Democratic Party of Germany - "Sozialdemokratische Partei
Rahm Emanuel Traitor Deutschlands". It is also a political pun similar to an Austro-Bavarian word for "simpleton".[2] It was then popularised abroad by various individuals, including
TALMUD REVEALED Heiden himself, who fled the country after the NSDAP gained power.
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TRANSFER AGREEMENT The NSDAP briefly adopted the word in attempt to give it a more positive sense but soon gave up this effort and generally avoided it while in power.[2] A rare
HOLOCAUST DENIAL example of its usage by a NSDAP member can be taken from a 1931 work by Joseph Goebbels called The Nazi-Sozi: Questions and Answers for National
Unz HOLOCAUST DENIAL Socialists.
THE HOLOCAUST LIES
HOLOCAUST LIES Sites In the Soviet Union, the terms National Socialist and Nazi were said to have been forbidden after 1932, presumably to avoid any taint to the word "socialist".
ANNE FRANK FRAUD Soviet literature instead referred to fascists.[2]
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George Lincoln Rockwell reluctantly adopted the use of word in 1959 when he founded the American Nazi Party. He chose to use it for its publicity and
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As an example of popular political correctness and political bias compare the usage of the term "Soviet Union" with "Commie Russia", cheap name calling.
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CODOH Debate Despite this, using "Nazi" or "Nazism" instead of "National Socialist" or "National Socialism" is extremely common. For example Wikipedia routinely uses
Remember Ernst Zundel "Nazi" despite not using "Commie".
Meet Fred Leuchter
Meet David Irving Today the term is widely used as ad hominem against a wide variety of politically incorrect individuals who are not National Socialists.
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Konrad Heiden
Meet The Rizolis
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Cromwell and the JEWS After leaving university he became a journalist and worked for Frankfurter Zeitung and the Vossischen Zeitung. He was also a member of the German Social
NOAHIDE LAWS Democrat Party (SDP) and remained an active opponent of Hitler. In 1932 he published History of National Socialism. In the book he claimed that Henry
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Ford gave money to the NSDAP. In the book he recorded he first time he met Hitler. "He came... in a very decent blue suit and with an extravagantly large
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bouquet of roses, which he presented to his hostess as he kissed her hand. While he was being introduced, he wore the expression of a public prosecutor at
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an execution. I remember being struck by his voice when he thanked the lady of the house for tea or cakes, of which, incidentally, he ate an amazing
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quantity. It was a remarkably emotional voice, and yet it made no impression of conviviality or intimacy but rather of harshness. However, he said hardly
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On the morning of Saturday, 19th September, 1931, Geli Raubal, the niece of Adolf Hitler, was found on the floor of her room in the flat. She had been killed
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German American Bund Heiden was forced to flee from Nazi Germany after Hitler gained power. While he was in exile in Switzerland he published Birth of the Third Reich (1934) and
German Villiany Myth book Hitler: A Biography (1936). In his book, One Man Against Europe (1937) Heiden argued: "He (Hitler) is a mirror of our time, for his strange personality, with
Nur für Deutsche its contradictions of pathos and unbridled passion, revolt and submission, greatness and depression, is the extreme type of modern man; technically, highly
Der Sturmer developed; and socially, profoundly unsatisfied."
Germany Must Perish book
WORLD WAR II TRUTH to be an academic account of the life of Hitler. It has about it an extraordinary literary power, reflected with exemplary success in the translation. Few
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accounts of Hitler can match the vivid imagination and metaphorical richness of Heiden's text."
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The Nameless War book Konrad Heiden died in New York City on 18th June, 1966.
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Finland used the swastika before the Nazis. Why do they still?
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The symbols we choose to represent ourselves are always laden with meaning. But when a symbol we legitimately see as virtuous is fairly viewed by
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everyone else as villainous, should we make a change?
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Jyväskylä, Finland
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When guests, particularly foreigners, enter the soaring hangar of the Finnish Air Force Museum and find themselves confronted by a menagerie of aircraft
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adorned with swastikas, they are often taken aback.
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Jews Killed Gen. Patton “We hasten to explain to visitors, our swastika has nothing to do with the Nazi swastika,” says Kai Mecklin, museum director and a former pilot in the Finnish
WEBSITES OF INTEREST Air Force (FAF). “The Finnish Air Force adopted the swastika as its logo long before Hitler and the Nazis did.”
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Dr. David Duke Site And while the FAF’s practice of putting swastikas on its aircraft ended decades ago, it is still easy enough to find swastikas on FAF shoulder badges and at
LASHA DARKMOON Site the Finnish Air Force Academy.
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For Mr. Mecklin, like many Finns, that is as it should be. “To us the swastika is a symbol of freedom and independence,” he says. But some see the
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persistence of the swastika in Finnish culture as problematic, particularly with Finland situated between two regions for whom the swastika symbolizes not
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freedom, but its Nazi opposite. And as Finland’s far right becomes increasingly restive, it could force Finns to change the way they consider the symbol’s
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place in their modern society.
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Finland’s adoption of the swastika predates its association with National Socialism. Mecklin tells the tale of how in 1918, the Swedish count Eric von Rosen
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had a swastika painted on the wings of an aircraft which he donated to the Finnish White Army, which was then fighting against Soviet-backed Red Guards
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to establish an independent Finland – a battle which the Whites ultimately won.
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The swastika became the official symbol of the Finnish Air Force, and remained so until Finland and the Soviet Union – which had just fought a successful
A Pilot's Memoirs war with the United States to eradicate Nazidom – signed a postwar armistice. As part of the new relationship it was understood that Finnish military aircraft
would no longer carry the swastika.
But the swastika can still be found in the emblem of the FAF and at least one Finnish army unit today. And Teivo Teivainen, a professor at the University
of Helsinki who often finds himself explaining the numerous swastikas on wartime monuments around the Finnish capital to baffled foreign students, argues
that needs to change.
What particularly bothers Professor Teivainen is how the armed forces’ continued use of the swastika could create difficulties for Finland if and when a war
breaks out with Russia, and Finland is forced to turn to their NATO partners. “How do you think people in the German parliament or French cabinet or the
Dutch general public, for whom the swastika means only one thing, might feel?” he asks.
“Let’s say a decision needs to be made very quickly in, say, a Dutch cabinet meeting, and someone flashes a picture of the swastika as the official Air Force
symbol of Finland, would this be likely to increase the Netherlands’ kinship with us?” says Teivainen. “There’s always the chance it will send the wrong
signal.”
The question of when, where, and how the swastika should be seen in public has become more sensitive with the rise of a small, but increasingly vociferous,
right-wing movement in Finland.
Spearheaded by the so-called Finnish Resistance Movement, which the government is currently seeking to ban, the Finnish far right does not use the
swastika as its logo. But there’s always the chance that a swastika pops up at a movement rally. If that happens, the question of the Finnish armed forces’
use of the same symbol as Hitler’s Nazis – even if the Germans adopted it later, in the 1920s – could become an explosive one.
Finnish aviation historian Carl-Fredrik Geust writes that such concerns are overblown. “The reason why we still have our FINNISH swastikas in use – and
very limited use, mind you – is due to our unique respect for historical traditions and memories – and not just our own.” He points out that even though Finns
in general have no love lost for Russia, Russian tourists are still astonished to find a statue of Czar Alexander II in Helsinki’s Senate Square.
“Tradition means something to us,” writes Mr. Geust.
He also points out that the swastika has been used as an ornament and magical symbol since ancient times, and that many Western countries used it as a
symbol of good luck during the beginning of the 20th century. It was for that reason that von Rosen, who many consider the godfather of the Finnish Air
Force, decided to paint the swastika on the plane he gave to the Finns.
(While von Rosen’s introduction of the swastika to Finland had no relation to National Socialism, van Rosen himself in later years did. In 1923, his sister
married Hermann Göring, and he had ties to Swedish national socialist parties in the 1930s.)
Whether the swastika brings the Finnish Air Force, which celebrated its centenary this year, good luck or controversy remains to be seen.
In the meantime, as far as Finnish authorities are concerned, the question is a closed one. “At present time the Ministry of Defense has no plans to restrict or
review the use of the swastika,” says Kristian Vakkuri, the ministry spokesperson.
The same, it would seem, goes for the Finnish people. “If they think about it, or are asked about the swastika, it’s perceived as different: a different symbol
from that which was used by the Nazis, a different history and a different meaning,” says Eddy Hawkins, an American journalist who has studied the subject.
“But most people don’t think about it.”
Maybe they ought to, says Teivainen.
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