Saturday, February 16, 2013

Hail to German Neo-Nazi's! Down with Jews!

From the NSP News Service: The article below takes the expected "politically correct" approach to alleged neo-Nazi activity amongst German sports fans and other members of the German population. But, for a moment, let's take a serious look at this supposed neo-Nazi activity, and the alleged growth in neo-Nazi numbers, particularly in eastern Germany, which had suffered communist oppression until about 1990, when Germany reunified into one (great) state.

First, Germany (particularly the eastern sections) is full (unfortunately) of all sorts of immigrants, many illegals, from opportunity-seekers in the Near East, particularly Turkey. Why would anybody who is German want this riff-raff to be stealing their jobs and perverting their culture? The situation is akin to, but worse than, the issue of illegal immigrants who flood into the United States and then receive all sorts of entitlements and privileges from the Obama regime -- entitlements which deserving Americans find very difficult to get. Also, eastern Germany, victimized by Soviet overlordship for almost 50 years after WW 2, tends toward some National Socialist views and actions as a reaction against decades of Soviet cruelty.

Second, "antisemitism" is practically a cultural commonplace in many European nations. That, in and of itself, gives "antisemitism" there a form of moral prerogative and even a form of legal precedent. Fear and hatred of Jews goes back many centuries in most European nations. Jews there have always caused many severe economic problems, and always remain an exclusive and xenophobic "culture" which shuns the parent communities hosting them. They are, hence, parasitic. The Third Reich ridded much of Europe of at least a portion of the Jewish population -- who would want them back? Let them go to Israel.

Third, to suggest that the much-exaggerated "Holocaust" and concomitant "hatred" of Jews can be chalked up to Adolf Hitler's programs is ludicrous. It is time now to understand Hitler for what he actually was -- a political and cultural visionary forced into war by very bad advice and "cornering" by economic and military interests. Most harms befalling Jews during the 1930's and 1940's were sponsored by national governments of nations "allied" with Third Reich Germany. Most "crimes" against Jews were perpetrated by local non-German populations. Just take a look at the pogroms against Jews in Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia and Poland. Take a look at the Ukraine. Whatever "Holocaust" took place was largely a local phenomenon, and based on long periods of local populations suffering under persecution led by Jews! Many Soviet political commissars, communist to the core and advocates of communist tyranny, were Jews, also!

As for "hatred" generally, recall that the Soviet Union under Stalin executed more Jews than Germany ever could have. Occupying Soviet forces after the War raped German women at warp speed, carried off hundreds of thousands of Germen soldiers to a squalid death in Siberian work camps. They brutally forced "ethnic Germans" living in areas outside of Germany yet culturally German, out of their homes, off their land, and into ghastly refugee camps in Germany proper, that is, if they survived the "trip" to Germany, often on foot in freezing winter weather! One recent study indicated that in 1979 there were still about 72,000 Germans "detained" in various parts of the Soviet Union! The NSP believes that a handful of hardy German souls are still there today, never to see their homeland again.

And the leaders of the "Allied" forces occupying Germany just after World War Two showed a hatred for Germans. This hatred led many Germans, whether POW's or civilians, to perish under the weight of very difficult persecution. The American General Eisenhower (a half-Jew himself, and known as such in his student days at West Point) wanted to "starve Germany." The American Secretary of the Treasury, Henry Morgenthau (himself a Jew) wanted Germany to be whittled down to a nation surviving on "subsistence agriculture" with practically no modern industry at all. The American General George Patton stated in 1945 that he "wanted to piss in the Rhine River." And any German civilians who attempted to deliver food to starving German POW's kept in open-air camps in the horrid winters of 1945-46 and 1946-47 were subject to capital punishment!

Finally, the "Holocaust" is a historical event which occurred almost 70 years ago. It is time to let it rest in the past, and even slowly "die out" along with other historical inaccuracies and quasi-mythical events. Any neo-Nazi's in Germany today, along with neo-Nazi the world over, are part of a contemporary movement of unhappiness with degenerate Western culture.
Organizations like The Simon Wiesenthal Center exist simply to perpetuate notions which will, through guilt manipulation, bring sympathy and cash to hungry Jewish opportunists. Why, the late Wiesenthal himself was a fraud who practically invented post-War Nazi's to hunt down, and he was not anything near the "Holocaust survivor" he claimed to be. Any and all branches of the Simon Wiesenthal Center should be shut down immediately. Today, led by Ephraim Zuroff, the Center "hunts" the few 90 near old men and women who, through clever manipulation of false evidence, are classed as "original Nazi's" and are themselves fiercely persecuted. This nonsense gives Zuroff a job!

The NSP applauds any efforts anywhere to reintroduce National Socialism into a nation's political, cultural, and economic life. National Socialism is one of the few bulwarks holding together an otherwise collapsing Western civilization.

Ed. Note: The article below is, of course, "politically correct." Take it with a grain of salt -- a large one. See the body of the article text in the "comments" section.

FULL STORY ON NEXT POST!
 
Seven decades after Holocaust, neo-Nazis use soccer to preach Hitler's hate
NBCNews.com

Nearly seven decades after the Holocaust, young soccer fans in Germany have become targets of neo-Nazis who preach the hatred of Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich.
“Again and again we see neo-Nazi presence in [sports] fan clubs and my office asks that action be taken against them,” said Winfriede Schreiber, head of the Brandenburg branch of the German government’s intelligence service. “For example, we see the fan club in [the German city] Cottbus consisting of a lot of neo-Nazis. We asked the football club to do something about this.”
At her office in Brandenburg, a state in eastern Germany, Schreiber monitors extremism and reports evidence of hate crimes to prosecutors.
“The neo-Nazis now look like everyone else,” Schreiber said. “Gone are the jackboots and black leather jackets that used to make it easy to expose them. Now they blend into the local population.”
According to Schreiber, the neo-Nazis subscribe to Hitler’s views and extol his one-time deputy, Rudolf Hess.
“The danger the neo-Nazis pose is that they are against democracy and they work to alienate young people from democracy,” she said. “They have made ‘Juden’ [Jews] a curse word even if there are no Jews playing on the soccer field.”
Jens Teschke, a spokesman for Germany's interior ministry, which is responsible for domestic security, said neo-Nazi activities are visible throughout Germany, but strongest in the country's east.
“Neo-Nazis take young soccer fans to homes built in the Nazi times as holiday retreats for elite members of Hitler’s party,” Teschke said. “They laud the Nazi era and the legacy of this era.”
According to Teschke, the German government launched programs in January 2011 to make soccer coaches more aware of neo-Nazi tactics.
The problem is not limited to Germany.
In England, fans of London-based Tottenham Hotspur -- which boasts a strong Jewish following -- have been subjected to anti-Semitic abuse for many years. In November, supporters of West Ham United "hissed on several occasions, mocking the mass execution of Jews during the Second World War," the U.K.'s Telegraph newspaper reported. "While the hissing, shamefully, is nothing new, Tottenham fans were also subjected to a chant of 'Adolf Hitler, he's coming for you.'"
Only days earlier, an American college student suffered a foot-long stab wound and a punctured lung when a mob of up to 50 masked men armed with knives and baseball bats attacked Tottenham Hotspur fans before a Europa League match in Rome.
Witnesses told local media that the attackers shouted "Jews, Jews" as they laid siege to the bar.
"The coordinated attack ... appears to have been motivated at least in part by anti-Semitism," the Telegraph reported.
The Simon Wiesenthal Center also recently highlighted the issue's growth. "The problem of anti-Semitic abuse at soccer matches which until recently has been limited to Eastern Europe, has been revived in Western Europe," it said in a report.
Prime targets of anti-Semitism on the soccer field are the Makkabi teams, Jewish athletic clubs located in 15 German cities.
“Every Makkabi team in Germany is confronted with anti-Semitism, as are teams with Jewish roots,” said Deidre Berger, director of the American Jewish Committee (AJC) in Berlin, an advocacy group.
Soccer coach Claudio Oppenberg, who is Jewish, said his team also faced anti-Semitism from Muslim immigrants.
According to Oppenberg, who’s coached Tus Makkabi Berlin for seven years, only two members of the current team are Jewish. The rest are from North Africa and Turkey.
During a game last March, Oppenberg said members of a Turkish team shouted at fellow Turks on the Makkabi team: “How can you play for these damned Jews?”
The Turkish team beat the Makkabis 1-0. Oppenberg said the Turkish coach confronted him after the game and said: “We f---d you Jews.”
Oppenberg filed charges with the German Football Federation and the Turkish coach was suspended for a year.
“If you have racism and anti-Semitism in society, then you will have it in football too,” said Alex Feuerherdt, a soccer referee and freelance writer.

Seven decades after Holocaust, neo-Nazis use soccer to preach Hitler's hate
NBCNews.com

Alex Grimm / Bongarts via Getty Images Fans of the German soccer team Kaiserslautern hold up Israeli flags to protest against anti-Semitism prior to the Bundesliga match between FC Kaiserslautern and VfL Wolfsburg in March last year.
Nearly seven decades after the Holocaust, young soccer fans in Germany have become targets of neo-Nazis who preach the hatred of Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich.
“Again and again we see neo-Nazi presence in [sports] fan clubs and my office asks that action be taken against them,” said Winfriede Schreiber, head of the Brandenburg branch of the German government’s intelligence service. “For example, we see the fan club in [the German city] Cottbus consisting of a lot of neo-Nazis. We asked the football club to do something about this.”
At her office in Brandenburg, a state in eastern Germany, Schreiber monitors extremism and reports evidence of hate crimes to prosecutors.
“The neo-Nazis now look like everyone else,” Schreiber said. “Gone are the jackboots and black leather jackets that used to make it easy to expose them. Now they blend into the local population.”
According to Schreiber, the neo-Nazis subscribe to Hitler’s views and extol his one-time deputy, Rudolf Hess.
“The danger the neo-Nazis pose is that they are against democracy and they work to alienate young people from democracy,” she said. “They have made ‘Juden’ [Jews] a curse word even if there are no Jews playing on the soccer field.”
Jens Teschke, a spokesman for Germany's interior ministry, which is responsible for domestic security, said neo-Nazi activities are visible throughout Germany, but strongest in the country's east.
“Neo-Nazis take young soccer fans to homes built in the Nazi times as holiday retreats for elite members of Hitler’s party,” Teschke said. “They laud the Nazi era and the legacy of this era.”
According to Teschke, the German government launched programs in January 2011 to make soccer coaches more aware of neo-Nazi tactics.
The problem is not limited to Germany.
In England, fans of London-based Tottenham Hotspur -- which boasts a strong Jewish following -- have been subjected to anti-Semitic abuse for many years. In November, supporters of West Ham United "hissed on several occasions, mocking the mass execution of Jews during the Second World War," the U.K.'s Telegraph newspaper reported. "While the hissing, shamefully, is nothing new, Tottenham fans were also subjected to a chant of 'Adolf Hitler, he's coming for you.'"
Only days earlier, an American college student suffered a foot-long stab wound and a punctured lung when a mob of up to 50 masked men armed with knives and baseball bats attacked Tottenham Hotspur fans before a Europa League match in Rome.
Witnesses told local media that the attackers shouted "Jews, Jews" as they laid siege to the bar.
"The coordinated attack ... appears to have been motivated at least in part by anti-Semitism," the Telegraph reported.
The Simon Wiesenthal Center also recently highlighted the issue's growth. "The problem of anti-Semitic abuse at soccer matches which until recently has been limited to Eastern Europe, has been revived in Western Europe," it said in a report.
Prime targets of anti-Semitism on the soccer field are the Makkabi teams, Jewish athletic clubs located in 15 German cities.
“Every Makkabi team in Germany is confronted with anti-Semitism, as are teams with Jewish roots,” said Deidre Berger, director of the American Jewish Committee (AJC) in Berlin, an advocacy group.
Soccer coach Claudio Oppenberg, who is Jewish, said his team also faced anti-Semitism from Muslim immigrants.
According to Oppenberg, who’s coached Tus Makkabi Berlin for seven years, only two members of the current team are Jewish. The rest are from North Africa and Turkey.
During a game last March, Oppenberg said members of a Turkish team shouted at fellow Turks on the Makkabi team: “How can you play for these damned Jews?”
The Turkish team beat the Makkabis 1-0. Oppenberg said the Turkish coach confronted him after the game and said: “We f---d you Jews.”
Oppenberg filed charges with the German Football Federation and the Turkish coach was suspended for a year.
“If you have racism and anti-Semitism in society, then you will have it in football too,” said Alex Feuerherdt, a soccer referee and freelance writer
 
 
-- Karl Wolff III, Director of Communications, NSP.  1488!

1 comment:

  1. Seven decades after Holocaust, neo-Nazis use soccer to preach Hitler's hate

    By Donald Snyder, NBC News Special Correspondent

    February 16, 2013, 10:15 am


    NBCNews.com







    Alex Grimm / Bongarts via Getty Images Fans of the German soccer team Kaiserslautern hold up Israeli flags to protest against anti-Semitism prior to the Bundesliga match between FC Kaiserslautern and VfL Wolfsburg in March last year.

    Nearly seven decades after the Holocaust, young soccer fans in Germany have become targets of neo-Nazis who preach the hatred of Adolf Hitler’s Third Reich.

    “Again and again we see neo-Nazi presence in [sports] fan clubs and my office asks that action be taken against them,” said Winfriede Schreiber, head of the Brandenburg branch of the German government’s intelligence service. “For example, we see the fan club in [the German city] Cottbus consisting of a lot of neo-Nazis. We asked the football club to do something about this.”

    At her office in Brandenburg, a state in eastern Germany, Schreiber monitors extremism and reports evidence of hate crimes to prosecutors.

    “The neo-Nazis now look like everyone else,” Schreiber said. “Gone are the jackboots and black leather jackets that used to make it easy to expose them. Now they blend into the local population.”

    According to Schreiber, the neo-Nazis subscribe to Hitler’s views and extol his one-time deputy, Rudolf Hess.

    “The danger the neo-Nazis pose is that they are against democracy and they work to alienate young people from democracy,” she said. “They have made ‘Juden’ [Jews] a curse word even if there are no Jews playing on the soccer field.”

    Jens Teschke, a spokesman for Germany's interior ministry, which is responsible for domestic security, said neo-Nazi activities are visible throughout Germany, but strongest in the country's east.

    “Neo-Nazis take young soccer fans to homes built in the Nazi times as holiday retreats for elite members of Hitler’s party,” Teschke said. “They laud the Nazi era and the legacy of this era.”

    According to Teschke, the German government launched programs in January 2011 to make soccer coaches more aware of neo-Nazi tactics

    ReplyDelete