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UH-OH School board president caught on hot mic cursing out parent's speech


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Posted

seems like controlling people are all around - and joining up with the democrat LEFTISTS in power to be "good nazis".

This kind of people somehow are DESPERATE to control other people. some of them are politicians, some are church members/pastors etc, some are teachers, professors, a lot of them are in managment in business, medical fields, etc etc and we all know the controlling nutjobs flock to social media....certain forums.......

    Seems like they are coming out of the woodwork. This is a SCHOOL BOARD PRESIDENT? how arrogant can these people be?

think napoleon. think....nazi. these controllers are not right in the head. Like a huge charles manson family cult that doesn't violently murder people........ or something.

Posted

"sir you are out of order because you don't kiss our leftwing nazi rear ends"

pretty much.

it's history. oppression and control DEMANDS outlawing political opposition.

Germans who resisted Hitler and the Nazis | Biography Online

Bernhard Lichtenberg (1875 - 1943) A Roman Catholic Priest who condemned the Nazi policy towards Jews and the policy of euthanasia (killing disabled people). He was warned his activities could see him arrested, but he continued to speak out against Nazi policy. He died in transit to Dachau concentration camp in 1943.

 

https://www.facinghistory.org/holocaust-and-human-behavior/chapter-9/protests-germany

"

Some of the first Germans to speak out against Nazi injustices were a group of students at the University of Munich. In winter 1942, Hans Scholl, his sister Sophie, and their friend Christoph Probst formed a small group known as the White Rose. Hans, a former member of the Hitler Youth (see reading, Disillusionment in the Hitler Youth in Chapter 6), had been a soldier on the eastern front, where he witnessed the mistreatment of Jews and learned about deportations. In 1942 and 1943, the White Rose published four leaflets condemning Nazism. The first leaflet stated the group’s purpose: the overthrow of the Nazi government. In the second leaflet, the group confronted the mass murders of Jews:

Hans Scholl, Sophie School, and Christoph Probst conversing outdoors in 1942..

Hans Scholl, Sophie Scholl, and Christoph Probst in June 1942. They were members of the White Rose, a resistance group that condemned Nazism. 

We do not want to discuss here the question of the Jews, nor do we want in this leaflet to compose a defense or apology. No, only by way of example do we want to cite the fact that since the conquest of Poland three hundred thousand Jews have been murdered in this country in the most bestial way. Here we see the most frightful crime against human dignity, a crime that is unparalleled in the whole of history. For Jews, too, are human beings—no matter what position we take with respect to the Jewish question—and a crime of this dimension has been perpetrated against human beings.

 

 

 

In February 1943, the Nazis arrested the Scholls and Probst and brought them to trial. All three were found guilty and were guillotined that same day. Soon afterward, others in the group were also tried, convicted, and beheaded.

In March 1943, German author Friedrich Reck-Malleczewen wrote in his diary:

The Scholls are the first in Germany to have had the courage to witness for the truth. . . . On their gravestones let these words be carved, and let this entire people, which has lived in deepest degradation these last ten years, blush when it reads them: . . . “He who knows how to die can never be enslaved.” We will all of us, someday, have to make a pilgrimage to their graves, and stand before them, ashamed. 

 

 

 

Although the Nazis were able to destroy the White Rose by executing its members, they could not keep its message from being heard. Helmuth von Moltke, a German aristocrat, smuggled the group’s leaflets to friends in neutral countries. They, in turn, sent them to the Allies, who made thousands of copies and then dropped them over German cities. As a lawyer who worked for the German Intelligence Service, von Moltke had been aware of the murders for some time but had taken no action. By late October, he was asking, “May I know this and yet sit at my table in my heated flat and have tea? Don’t I thereby become guilty too?”

 

 

 

In February 1943, the same month that the first members of the White Rose were arrested, Nazi leaders began to round up the last Jews still living in Berlin and elsewhere in the Reich, in mass arrests the Gestapo called the “Dejudaization of the Reich Territory Actions.”

 

 

Thousands were arrested and most were married to non-Jews; as part of “mixed” families, they had not been targeted earlier. Most of Germany’s Jews had already been deported and murdered, but these new arrests and detentions of about 2,000 Jewish men in intermarriages were the only ones to cause a significant protest.

When the arrested Jews did not return home, their “Aryan” relatives began to search for them and quickly discovered that their loved ones were being held at the Jewish administration building at Rosenstrasse 2-4. Within hours, relatives began to gather there. Most were women—the arrested men’s wives. As relatives arrived, they began to loudly demand the release of their husbands. They feared that the men would be deported to killing centers; more than 10,000 other Berlin Jews who were not intermarried were deported to the East during the days of the protest at Rosenstrasse. When the guards refused to let the protesters enter the building, the group vowed to return every day in protest. They kept their word. The situation came to a h

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