Please register to participate in our discussions with 2 million other members - it's free and quick! Some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your account, you'll be able to customize options and access all our 15,000 new posts/day with fewer ads.
Status:
"It Can't Rain All The Time"
(set 29 days ago)
Location: North Pacific
15,754 posts, read 7,592,007 times
Reputation: 2576
Advertisements
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ellis Bell
You may want to recheck those definitions. Nationalist believe in the purity of a bloodline, (ie yellow vest in France) within their country. Globalist means different things to different people. The u.s. has had a global trade since before it was founded; there are those that believe that is what gives the u.s. its economic strengths.
Quote:
Originally Posted by 1AngryTaxPayer
Nationalist has everything to do about the Nation. You are talking about Supremist. That has nothing to do with the other. One can be any race and one is all about one certain race be it white, black red or brown.
Except for the u.s. how do you think the different countries became, (nations) Germany, France, Italy, etc ... ? It's a bloodline ... goes as far back as the Bible. Hitler though thought that only the blue eyed blond haired should be recognized as German. Racism is prejudging a person, (characteristics) based on their skin tone or the country they are born into.
You do not have to take my word for this you know ... times like this, the Internet is a handy gadget.
"This phrase originates in Germany in reference to the German people, but it predated the Nazis. It started off as a philosophy of the German peasant as the authentic core of German nationalism, and arose after Otto von Bismarck's 1871 creation of the modern German nation, when the cultural definition of what it meant to be German in an industrializing society became acute. "Blood and soil" advocates insisted that the peasantry held the most pure stock of German ethnicity. Therefore, public policy should protect the bloodlines of Germanic stock by keeping it linked to the land, rather than polluted in the cities. "Blood and soil" directly influenced Hitlerian policies such as the conquest of eastern Europe and Russia for Lebensraum, as well as the grotesque pseudo-Darwinian eugenics programs aimed at producing the "master race," and the horrors Nazis inflicted on the Jews and other peoples."
Wanna know where the progressive leftist Socialist, Workers Party leader Hitler (who deployed naming conventions and other words that only the progressive left is responsive to) got his ideas from in America, on record:
Status:
"It Can't Rain All The Time"
(set 29 days ago)
Location: North Pacific
15,754 posts, read 7,592,007 times
Reputation: 2576
Quote:
Originally Posted by eastriver
Hey Ellis,
Wanna know where the progressive leftist Socialist, Workers Party leader Hitler (who deployed naming conventions and other words that only the progressive left is responsive to) got his ideas from in America, on record:
Poland was created (again) after ww1, which included some German and some Russian land. Part of the reason to attack Poland was to re-acquire land taken from Germany in WW1. The other reasons were to capture more industry and raw materials important to the German war machine, and to have a more proximal "launching point" for the invasion of the USSR.
German propaganda made false claims of Polish atrocities against ethnic Germans in Poland to convince the German public that Germany was justified in their attack.
Keep in mind that the USSR attacked at the same time, occupying eastern Poland.
Wanna know where the progressive leftist Socialist, Workers Party leader Hitler (who deployed naming conventions and other words that only the progressive left is responsive to) got his ideas from in America, on record:
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It is free and quick. Over $68,000 in prizes has already been given out to active posters on our forum. Additional giveaways are planned.
Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.