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Summary

➡ This is a discussion about a series of episodes on the Intel District Channel, focusing on historical events and figures, particularly Hitler and Germany in the 1930s and 1940s. The speaker shares personal views on how Hitler treated children and the German people, suggesting he may not have been as evil as portrayed. The speaker also discusses his own transformation from a staunch Republican to questioning everything, triggered by a documentary. The conversation also touches on current events, linking them to historical events, and the speaker’s belief that all topics are interconnected.
➡ The speaker discusses their belief that men are naturally inclined to protect women, children, and the elderly. They express disbelief that if the events happening in Europe were to occur in the United States, American men would not tolerate it. The speaker also shares their thoughts on Hitler, suggesting that the common perception of him may not be entirely accurate, based on a piece they read by Leon de Grille, a close associate of Hitler. They argue that Hitler was not as cruel as he is often portrayed, citing his love for children and animals, and his vegetarianism.
➡ This text discusses Adolf Hitler’s life, highlighting his simplicity, clarity of thought, and exceptional oratory skills. It emphasizes his self-taught knowledge, reading habits, and wide-ranging understanding of various subjects, from philosophy to mechanics. The text also mentions Hitler’s deep belief in God and his portrayal in media. Lastly, it touches on his personal life, including his relationship with women and his late marriage to Eva Braun.
➡ The text discusses Hitler’s views on the roles of men and women, suggesting that he believed in distinct spheres for each gender, with men being protectors and women being caregivers. It also explores the idea that Hitler wanted to preserve Germanic blood and culture, not through the elimination of other races, but by preventing intermarriage. The author questions the negative portrayal of Hitler in media and suggests that he may have been a better person than he is often depicted. The text ends with a discussion about Hitler’s relationship with Eva Braun and his desire to die as her husband.
➡ The text discusses the transformation of Germany under the leadership of Hitler, comparing it to the popularity of Trump. It highlights the positive changes Hitler brought to Germany, making it a happier and more secure place, and how he was idolized by the people. The text also draws parallels between the spontaneous support for Trump and Hitler’s popularity in Germany. It ends with a wish for a similar wave of patriotism and unity in the speaker’s own country.
➡ The speaker discusses their views on the United States’ involvement in global conflicts, suggesting that soldiers were manipulated into fighting. They also mention a potential celebration hinted at by Trump, and express uncertainty about the future. The speaker ends by saying they have to leave for Long Beach in the morning, wishes everyone a great weekend, and looks forward to seeing them again soon.

Transcript

Welcome to the intel district channel. And this is the after party for Europa. Just waiting to get a few people to come in here, set this up. It was an impromptu, so see what we got going on here, if we have anybody in here yet. Not yet, but I’m sure people will be coming in shortly. So Europa was. These were, these were a couple of, a couple of interesting episodes. Hey, Mel, how you doing? Glad you made it. These are a couple of very interesting episodes. And rotor motor. Yeah, this is the after party. I can’t, because I can’t do it.

Let’s see here. Yes, it did. Somebody’s asking if it ended. Come joined the third party discussion. Sorry. Just talking to people in the live chat still. Anyway, the, this was really interesting. A couple of things that stood out for me was the lady, the ukrainian lady who talks in there about how she was, she lived it. And, you know, how the Germans were just such wonderful people when they came in there. They opened up all the churches. And, you know, one thing that strikes me, and I don’t know, let me know if I’m alone in this, but one thing that strikes me is very interesting is when I look at pictures, whether they be still images or video images of people in Germany dealing with children or, you know, or celebrating Hitler or, you know, the leaders, they, you know, the people in Germany, you can’t fake that.

I mean, it’s this, this is, you got to realize that Germany in 19, the 1930s and early 1940s, it was not like North Korea, where you have to go and there you have to, like, show your enthusiasm where they’re going to haul your ass off to jail. You know, it wasn’t like that in, in Germany. And, you know, you look at, like, the politicians of our generation, right? Like, I mean, just, let’s just say, for example, Biden, when he’s doing on the touching his little girls, and it’s just, I mean, it’s creepy. You look at, you look at pictures of Hitler when he was dealing with children and he was like, he was caressing them as though they were, um, they were precious, you know? I mean, absolutely.

There’s no way in hell that he would ever violate them in a way that would be, you know, demonstrable to the children. He just wouldn’t. I mean, he would not, it appears to me as though he would never do anything to shatter their innocence. Now, I don’t know if. I don’t know how true that is, but just from the pictures that are out there and circulating, you know, and the video imagery that we have from that period of time, it’s very easy to see that they are, I mean, how they treat those children and how the people in, you know, reciprocating.

They treated the men and women of, you know, of leadership, you know, so what’s. Is this the A R? I’m not sure what that means. Hello, Les. How you doing? Yeah, so, so less. I don’t know if. Forgive me because I don’t recognize your name. And that’s not a bad thing. I’m always love to get new people, so I just don’t recognize your name. I don’t know if you, if you haven’t been here. That was parts five and six of a ten part series. So there’s a lot more to it than just this. And every time I upload this, what happens? And when I.

Well, when I upload it to rumble, what happens is that rumble takes it down. So I have to upload after action report. Okay. I like that. Yes. This is the after action report. I like that. That’s better than the after party. I like that. I’m going to start stealing that plant. I’m going to give you full credit, but I’m going to, I’m going to steal that from you. I like that. It’s very, very militant. Yeah. Thank you, Les. I appreciate that. And I’ll just say this, guys, I am just. I’m nothing. I’m just a dude. I’m just, I’m just a dude.

I’m not anything special. You know, I love to get out there and talk about history. This. It’s my passion, so. And I’m, you know, I don’t know if a lot of you guys even know my story, but, you know, I was just like. The guys think it’s probably a good, good a time as any to tell it. I was just this hardcore Republican and, you know, like, in 2002, 2003, I was taking like, a political science class or whatever. And I remember in that class defending Bush and the Patriot act and Israel. Just like, I look back at who I am today compared to who I was then.

And, you know, I was like, 22, 21, 22 years ago. And it’s like, good lord, I cannot believe what a. It’s like I, I’m. I was a caterpillar that, like, became a butterfly. Completely different from what it once was. So, uh, but yeah, you know, I watched that. I watched that documentary called 911 in plain sight, and that just like, it was through a red pill into my, into my spokes and I, man, my world turned upside down. It was it just was one of those things that caused me to, like, question everything. And then, you know, one thing led to another and one, then another thing led to another and another thing led to another and, you know, I mean, going down, and then, you know, one thing led to another and one another thing led to it.

Okay, sorry about that. I did not mean to put, put myself on. Unmuted my screen. Cause I’m watching this live. You know, this goes across the board for me. It’s not just, it’s not just about history. You know, it covers medicine, it covers religion, it covers, you know, geopolitics, warfare, you know, local politics. I mean, it covers, you know, banking economy. I cover so many topics because they’re all connected, they’re all interconnected. And that’s kind of why, you know, I don’t, I try not to bounce around too much, and I try to stay focused on the historical component as opposed to talking about things that are happening today.

But I mean, even things that happen today, you know, like, okay, let’s just say, for example, the Trump assassination attempt. Okay, well, that is now history. It was what’s, what, like a week old? So that is now history. Even though it’s recent history, it’s still history. So. So Bushmaster says Hitler wasn’t the good guy, was he? Yup. You know, so I don’t know. I don’t know the answer to that question. I’m inclined to say that he was absolutely much better than the western press has made him out to be. And I genuinely believe that he was actually probably a pretty good man.

But that’s not to say that there weren’t some evil things that were done within Germany. I don’t know if Hitler had much to do with that, much like Trump, you know, if he was in, you know, he was the president, and things went on without his knowledge at the CIA or NSA or whatever, so. And that’s the, that’s kind of how I, and it’s not a justification, but that’s kind of how I look at things. I don’t necessarily believe that Hitler was this evil man who wanted to kill everybody, especially the Jews. I don’t think he didn’t want to kill anybody, you know? And if you look at what he tried to do, you know, a lot of people point to crystallnacht or the night of broken glass, and it’s like, oh, well, you know, the, the Germans went after all the Jews.

Okay, well, you have to understand, um, you have to understand the, the mentality at that point. The you know, the people were getting sick and tired of being sniped at by partisans. And what led to Kristallnacht was a. Was basically this jewish kid who, this jewish partisan who went into the german consulate in Paris and asked to see the ambassador or whoever, and then the guy came down and he shot him. He murdered him in cold blood. And that was it. That’s like. That was. I don’t remember exactly what year that was, but that was it.

They. People had had enough. They were like, we’re done with this. Because you got to realize, I mean, the jude, you know, remember the headline that says Judea declares war on Germany? That was in like, 19, 33, 34. So, I mean, you know, the Jews, per se, declared war on Germany long before World War Two ever broke out. And they were constantly antagonizing and bullying and, you know, and causing chaos, much like the CIA does today. So. And it’s the similar mindset, right? So not the same. Not the same individuals, but similar mindset. And so, you know, how can you.

How can you imagine if. If all the illegal aliens that are here right now, if they just started raping and murdering people? Well, how would we respond to that? We’d probably go off. We’d probably start doing vigilante things towards, you know, towards illegal aliens if. If they started doing things like that are going on in Germany or Switzerland or not Switzerland, but Sweden, rather. You know. Do you think Americans would tolerate that? Hell, no. I mean, if the police weren’t going to defend us, then we’d start getting roving gangs to go out there and. And. And protect the women.

I mean, that’s what we would do. You know, I think it’s. It’s. Man, I think the human man is pre wired to protect women. I mean, that’s just. That’s just a fact of life. Men are protectors for the most part, unless you’re a beta male. But men are pre wired to protect women. That’s. You know, what’s one of the things that is. It’s like. It’s. It’s. It’s innate in us, right? And if we. Not just women, but, you know, children for the most part, and. And also elderly people, if we see injustices happening, we are. We are like.

We go out there and we like, hey, yeah, no, that ain’t cool. You ain’t doing that. No. We try to stand up. For what? For trans. Stand up for what’s right. So I just. I cannot believe that if we were in. If the things that were going on in Europe were happening in the United States. I just. I don’t believe that the american people, american men like myself, and not just myself, but a whole host of others, they wouldn’t tolerate it. That’s. We just wouldn’t tolerate it. So, anyway, um, yes, warm. More warfare does destroy humanity.

Um, we, you know, it gets down to our basic, uh, uh, carnal, you know, um, carnal instincts. Hi, baby. What you doing? Come, my kitty cat. He stepped on something, knocked it down. But anyway, sorry about that. Let me read some of the comments in here. Hitler wasn’t the good guy. So again, I don’t know about. Hitler was a good guy. I don’t know that for a fact. Um, I I lean towards that. I lean then in that direction, you know? Um, and I don’t know if. If I’ve ever read this to you guys in the past.

I’m not going to read the whole thing, but I think it would be a good idea to read a little bit of the. Of the de grille piece. Um, let me look that up here real quick. Okay, so let me find the. Because the grill thing is very interesting. Leon de Grille was a. He was a guy who was. I’m looking for. Is this it? No. I think I’m getting close, though. He was in the military. He was in the german military, and I think he was from Belgium. But he was really good friends with Hitler, and he was, like, at the high end of them.

Like, at the high end of the government and the military, for I think he knew Hitler from 1936 on, so. Which is interesting to hear what he had to say about him. And I’m gonna. If I can’t find it here in the next minute or two, then I’m just gonna. I’m gonna just google it. I thought it would be easier to find it this way, but apparently not. All right, I’m just gonna google it on the grille. Okay, let’s see. Let’s see. Where is this link? Internet archives. I think this is it. Yes, this is it.

It’s called the Enigma of Hitler. In fact, what I’ll do is I’ll share the screen so that you guys can see what I’m reading from here, so I’ll maximize the screen. So the enigma of Hitler by Leon de Grill. Hitler, you knew him? What was he like? I’ve been asked that question thousand times since 1945, and nothing is more difficult to answer. Approximately 200,000 books have dealt with the Second World War and its central figure, Adolf Hitler. But has the real Hitler been discovered by any of them? The enigma of Hitler is beyond all human comprehension.

The left wing Germans, our german weekly daisit, once put it, Salvador Dali art’s unique genius sought to penetrate the mystery in one of his most intensely dramatic paintings. Hold on, I’m gonna maximize this a little bit more just because it’s hard for me to read. Let’s see. That’s interesting, but I’ll put the link and you guys can read it. Let’s see here. Let’s see. Like Pavlov’s dog, the mountains of Hitler. Books based on, I think it’s supposed to be blind. Hatred and ignorance do little to describe or explain the most powerful man the world has ever seen.

How, I ponder, do these thousands of desperate portraits of Hitler in any way resemble the man that I knew? The Hitler seated beside me, standing up, talking, listening. It has become impossible to explain to. People fed fantastic tales for decades. What they have read or heard on television just does not correspond to the truth. People have come to accept fiction repeated a thousand times over as reality. Yet they have never seen Hitler. They have never spoken to him, never heard a word out of his mouth. The very name immediately conjures up a grimacing devil, the fount of all of one’s negative emotions, like Pavlov’s dog or Pavlov’s Bella.

The mention of Hitler is meant to dispense with substance and reality. In time, however, history will demand more than these summary judgments. Let’s see. Strangely attractive. Let’s see. I want to get down and find some of the vigor. No? Okay. This is actually an interest. This is actually some interesting stuff. Anything that might have seemed too solemn in his remarks, he quickly tempered with a touch of humor. This, the picturesque world. The biting phrase were at his command. In a flash, he would paint a word picture that brought a smile or come up with an unexpected and disarming comparison.

He could be harsh and even implacable in his judgments, and yet almost at the same time be surprisingly conciliatory, sensitive and warm. After 1945, Hitler was accused of every cruelty. But it was not in his nature to be cruel. He loved children. It was an entirely natural thing for him to stop his car and share his food with young cyclists along the road. Once he gave his raincoat to a derelict plodding in the rain. At midnight, he would interrupt his work and prepare food for his dog, Blondie. He could not bear to eat meat because it meant the death of a living creature.

He refused to have so much as a rabbit or a trout sacrificed to provide for his food. He would allow only eggs on his table because egg laying meant that the hen had been spared rather than killed. Okay, I’m gonna pause it there because it’s like, you know, for me, when I hear something like that, when I hear something like that, it literally causes me to become. I don’t want to say apoplectic isn’t the right word, but it’s, you know, to hear somebody say that, it’s like, it’s like. Causes me to like, huh? What? So somebody who thinks this way is like, basically like a vegan, right, is going to be down with mass murder of millions of people.

Um, I’m having a hard time accepting that that’s just my brain talking. Okay? That’s not, that’s not factual information, but that’s just me, you know, using my brain. So, um, continuing on here, um, Hitler’s eating habits were of a constant source of. Yeah, it’s not, uh, he only drank water. He didn’t. And see a lot of people say, oh, he was addicted to drugs. And he was like, they, they were giving him uppers and downers now. Bullshit. Hitler only drank water. He did not smoke and would not tolerate smoking in his presence. At one or 02:00 in the morning, he would still be talking, untroubled, close to his fireplace.

Lively, often amusing. He never showed any sign of weariness. Dead tired his audience might be, but not Hitler. He was depicted as a tired old man. Nothing could be further from the truth. In September 1944, he was reported to be fairly doddering. I spent a week with him. His mental and physical vigor were still exceptional. This is probably around the time, or this is getting close to the time when. And here I’m going to put this link into the live chat, guys, so if you want to check it out, you can. The, the. After he was.

After the attempt on his life and whatnot, everybody said that he kind of, like, become a recluse. And I, you know, he had trembled. Trembles or tremors within his right, like, right hand or whatever, almost like Parkinson’s type. And I don’t know if that’s what he was suffering from or not. I don’t know. But, but in September of 44, he, the grill says that his mental and physical vigor were still exceptional. The attempt made on his life on July 20 had, if anything, recharged him. He took tea in his quarters as tranquilly as if he’d been in a small private apartment at the chancellery before the war, or enjoying the view of snow and bright blue sky through his great bay.

Window at Berkish Garden. And these are a couple. These are some things that are very interesting. And again, this is firsthand account of somebody who knew him at the very end of his life. To be sure, his back had become bent, but his mind remained as clear as a flash of lightning. The testament he dictated with extraordinary composure on the eve of his death at three in the morning on April 29 of 1945 provides us a lasting testimony. Napoleon at fond balloon was not without his moments of panic. Before his abdication, Hitler simply shook hands with his associates in silence.

Breakfast. Is the breakfast on our breakfasted on any. As on any other day, then went to his death as if he were going on a stroll. When has history ever witnessed such enormous tragedy, such. So enormous a tragedy brought to its end with such iron self control? Hitler’s most notable characteristic was his simplicity. The most complex of problems resolved it in his mind into a few basic principles. His actions were geared to ideas and decisions that could be understood by anyone. The laborer from Essen, the isolated farmer, the Ruhr industrialist, and the university professor could all easily follow his line of thought.

That very clarity of his reasoning made everything obvious. You know, what we’re. What we’re treated to on YouTube and the History channel and all that stuff is, you know, images of Hitler, you know, sweat, you know, just buried in sweat and standing up and giving a speech. And it. You know, it looks like he’s a raving lunatic, spit coming out of his mouth, and, you know, just. He just looks like he’s just, you know, he’s on one. Right. Well, how do we know? Did anybody speak German? Does anybody know what he was saying? You know, I mean, a lot of those speeches, if you listen to the.

If you listen to some of the translations and whatnot, there’s. There. I mean, a lot of his speeches were really. I mean, they were inspiring. He definitely. The one thing about Hitler was, is he was. He was an exceptional oratore. His oratory skills were off the chart. My father was a pharmacist here in town, and when he was long, long ago, probably 30, 40 years ago, I remember there was a lady who came in to the pharmacy, and I think her name was Ingrid, and she grew up in Germany. She was like. I think she was like 60, 60 years old.

She was, like 20 years older than my dad. And it was. It was very interesting to hear her talk about Hitler. She was like, you know, it’s like. It was just. It was. It was captivating. You would go. And you. You’d go to listen to him, speak and you’d be spellbound. So. And those are her words, not mine. So let’s see. Hitler was self taught to. This is, this is a very interesting paragraph. Hitler was self taught and made no attempt to hide the fact the smug conceit of intellectuals, their shiny ideas, packaged like so many flashlight batteries, irritated him at times.

What, does that not sound familiar? Uh, having can, having contempt for intellectuals, academics, um, I think I would fall into that category. His own knowledge he had acquired through selective and unremitting study. And he knew far more than thousands of diploma direct, decorated academics. I don’t think anyone has ever read as much as he did. He normally read one book every day. One book every day? People. He read one book a day. That’s a lot. I don’t even read that much. And I wish I could always first reading the conclusion and the index in order to gauge the interest for the work’s interest for him.

He had the power to extract the essence of each book and then store it in his computer like mind. I’ve heard him talk about complicated scientific books with faultless precision, even with faultless precision. Even at the height of the war, his intellectual curiosity was limitless. He was readily familiar with the writings of the most diverse authors, and nothing was too complex for his comprehension. He had a deep knowledge and understanding of Buddha, Confucius and Jesus Christ, as well as Luther, Calvin and Savanella, of literary giants like Dante, Schiller, Shakespeare and Gotha, and analytical writers like Renan and Gobineau, Chamberlain and Sorrel.

He trained himself in philosophy by studying Aristotle and Plato. He could quote entire paragraphs of Schopenhauer from memory, and for a long time carried a pocket edition of Schopenhauer with him. Nietzsche taught him about the, about willpower. His thirst for knowledge was unquenchable. He spent hundreds of hours studying the works of Tacitus and mommsen, military strategists like claustroph and empire builders like Bismarck. Nothing escaped him world history or the history of civilizations, the study of the Bible and the Talmud, thomastic philosophy and all the masterpieces of Homer, Sophocles, Horus, Ovid, Tacitus, Livius and Cicero. He knew Julian the apostate as if he’d been his contemporary.

His knowledge also extended to mechanics. He knew how engines worked. He understood the ballistics of various weapons, and he astonished the best medical scientists with his knowledge of medicine and biology. The universality of Hitler’s knowledge may surprise or displease those unaware of it, but it is nonetheless a historical fact. Hitler was one of the most cultivated men of this century, many times more so than Churchill of intellectual mediocrity or of Pierre Laval with him, mere curious, cursory knowledge of history. Or then Roosevelt or Eisenhower, who never got beyond detective novels. And then it talks about his being an architect and a lot of his artwork and whatnot, his humble origins, his search for destiny.

And then I want to read the last little paragraph here, and then I’ll end it, okay? Transcendent faith. Did Hitler believe in God? He believed deeply in God. He called God the Almighty, the master of all that is known and unknown. Propagandists portrayed Hitler as an atheist. He was not. He had contempt for hypocritical and materialistic clerics, but he was not alone in that. He believed in the necessity of standards and theological dogmas, without which he repeatedly said the great institution of the christian church would collapse. These dogmas clashed with his intelligence, but he also recognized that it was hard for the human mind to encompass all the problems of creation, its limitless scope and breathtaking beauty.

He acknowledged that every human being has spiritual needs. The song of the nightingale, the pattern and color of the flower continually brought him back to the great problems of creation. No one in the world has spoken to me so eloquently about the existence of goddess. He held this view not because he was brought up christian, but because his analytical mind bound him to the concept of God. Hitler’s faith transcended formulas and contingencies. God was, for him the basis of everything, the ordainer of all things and his destiny and that of all others. So just an interesting piece there about Hitler and, you know, kind of who he was and what he believed, taken, you know, from, from a man who actually, you know, hung out with him.

If your friend, if you, if one of your best friends survived you and would told the world about you, not saying that he was one of his best friends, but let’s just say of somebody who knew you well, survived you and talked about you and, but there was, you know, perhaps maybe you were falsely convicted of a crime or something and, you know, whatever, but, you know, the world, the world had contempt for you, but then you had, you know, people who knew you after the fact, after you passed, were coming out and saying, hey, wait, no, you guys are getting this wrong.

That’s not who he was. You know, I knew him personally, and that’s kind of what this guy degreel is. He’s somebody who knew Hitler personally. So I think it’s, you know, take it, obviously, take it with a grain of salt. But, you know, there’s. This is not the only piece out there that talks about him. And then, of course, analys going back and watching Europa again. As I mentioned earlier, you watch Europa and you see how Hitler treated the children and how he was just very gentle and kind and loving and nurturing in a way, you know.

And, you know, there was. I remember seeing something that talked about. They talked about Hitler and he. The reason that he. That he waited so long to marry Eva Braun because he didn’t want to have. He didn’t want to have a wife because he wanted. It was his desire to have the. The women of Germany, you know, look up to him and kind of as a single man, you know, as somebody who potentially was available. Not that he was going to entertain that, but it was just the mindset of women in Germany. He had, in fact.

Let me see if I can find. Let me see if I can find that. Hitler on women the role of women in Hitler’s Germany. Let me see. Here is what I wanted to be. Hitler’s Reich of men is fairly established, even for girls. Watchwords are loyalty, duty, sacrifice. For millions, membership and the Federation of German Girls, the females Hitler Youth is compulsory. At Hitler’s Berghof, groups of female visitors make a display for the newsreels of popularity of their leader. Surrounded by young admirers, the dictator presents himself as a father figure to the nation. It was that probably a better way to say it.

He wanted them. He wanted people to look at him as a father figure. And if he was married, then that some of that father figure would be tainted. So when the czech sudetenland is annexed by the Reich in 1938, the supposed liberator basks in the celebration of the female population. This is Laurie Schaff says, Hitler looked at me in the eye and stroked my cheek. For me, this was an indescribable event. It was fantastic. I didn’t want to wash. My mother said I was crazy, and I was too. And this isn’t exactly what I was looking for.

There’s a. Let’s see here. Hitler talks about women. I think maybe this is it. The role Hitler on the role of women, 1934. This September 1934 speech, trans corrupt, contains ed of Hitler’s view on the role of women. Here he is. Let’s see. Okay, here. I’ll share the screen here. Okay. The slogan emancipation of women was invented by jewish intellectuals and the content was formed by the same spirit in the really good times of german life. The german woman had no need to emancipate herself. She possessed exactly what nature had given her to administer and preserve.

Just as the man in his good times has no need to fear that he would be ousted from his position in relation to the woman. If the man’s world is said to be the state, his struggle, his readiness to devote his powers to the service of the community, then it may perhaps be said that the woman’s is a smaller world. For her world is her husband, her family, her children, her home. But what would become of the greater world if there were no. If there were no one to tend and care for the smaller one? How could the greater world survive if there were no one to make the cares of the smaller world the content of their lives? No, the greater world is built on the foundation of the smaller world.

The great world cannot survive if the smaller world is not stable. Providence has entrusted to the woman that cares of that world, which is her very own and the own. And only on the basis of this, of the smaller world, can the man’s world be formed and built up. The two worlds are not antagonistic. They complement each other. They belong together, just as a man and a woman belong together. We do not consider it correct for the woman to interfere in the world of the man in this sphere and in his main sphere. We consider it natural.

In these two worlds remain distinct. To the one belongs the strength of feelings, the strength of the soul. To the other belongs the strength of vision, of toughness, of decision. And of willingness to act. In the one case, this strength demands the willingness of the woman to risk her life. To preserve this important cell and to multiply it. And in the other, the case. And in the other case, it demands from the man readiness to safeguard life. Like what I mentioned earlier about men being, you know, pre predetermined or predestined to be, you know, protectors, sacrifices which the man makes in the struggle of his nation, the woman makes in the preservation of that nation.

In individual cases, what the man gives in courage on the battlefield, the woman gives in eternal self sacrifice, in eternal pain and suffering. Every child that a woman brings into this world is a battle, a battle waged for the existence of her people. And both must therefore mutually value and respect each other. When they see that each performs the task that nature and providence has ordained. And this mutual respect will necessarily result from the separation of the functions of each. It is not true, as a jewish intellectual assert, that respect depends on the overlapping of the spheres of activity, of the sexes.

This respect demands that neither sex should try to do what belongs to the sphere of the other. It lies in the last resort and the fact that each knows that the other is doing everything necessary to maintain the whole community. So our women’s movement is for us something which is inscribed on its banner as its program, the fight against men. But something which has its program, the common fight together for Mendez, for the new National Socialist national community, acquires a firm basis precisely because we have gained the trust of millions of women as fanatical comrades. Whereas people, or, excuse me, whereas previously the programs of the liberal intellectuals women’s movement contain many points, the program of our national socialist women’s movement has but one single point.

And that point is the child, that tiny creature which must be born and grow strong, and which alone gives meaning to the whole life struggle. Well, that’s it. I didn’t realize that was it. So. But, you know, you listen to stuff like that and it’s like, man, that’s. That’s powerful. That’s powerful talk right there. So, you know, was Hitler the good guy? Maybe. I think it’s highly plausible that, like I said, I think it’s highly plausible that he was a much better human being than the world has treated him. And I think that the predominant reason that the world hates him is because of, you know, programs, you know, media, Hollywood, you know, all that stuff.

So, uh, let’s see here. But wait. Hitler and the occult and the first for power. Oh, yeah, exactly. No, it’s, uh. Yeah, he didn’t. He didn’t want to go into Germany or. Excuse me, he did not want to attack Russia. He knew that Russia was going to ultimately attack, uh, that if you listen at the very, very beginning of the, um, of, I think it was part six when it was talked about Barbarossa, the narrator went in and he talked about how Stalin had violated every neutrality pact that he ever made. And the point of that was, is that Hitler and Russia had a non aggression pact that they signed before they both invaded Poland.

Germany from the west and England or Russia from the east. So. And what was. What was England and France? What did England and France say? If you invade, if you invade Poland, we’re going to war? Well, the Soviet Union invaded Poland, but they didn’t go to war with the Soviet Union. Make that make sense. That makes sense. So just a lot of really interesting little tidbits of information. Again, this isn’t, you know, me being a Hitler worshiper or anything like that. I still. I still hold out a little bit of a reservation of, like, you know, I don’t know because.

I don’t know, you know, but, you know, I’ve read a lot of interesting things. I have not yet read Irving’s book on Hitler, but I really want to should I need to, you know, and you look at Mein Kampf, and Mein Kampf was, you know, Mein Kampf was not bad. You know, everybody talks about how Hitler hated the races, and he only. He was like, he only wanted the master race. Okay, well, yeah, that there is an element of truth that he was all about a master race, but not at the expense of killing off other races.

He just wanted to protect german blood. He just didn’t want to allow. They didn’t want to allow german citizens to marry people who weren’t germanic. They wanted to. They wanted to protect german blood and they wanted that. That they. They wanted Germany to flourish as an. As a country in the world with germanic people. I mean, isn’t that what we want in the United States? Don’t we want the United States to flourish with Americans? It’s kind of hard to argue that. So let’s see here. Just going through some of the chat. Yeah. Kind of hard to watch any of those shows now.

Not the same. Exactly. I agree with you, rotor. If I was more virtuous to be alone. Yeah. And that’s. That’s a possibility as well. You know, when he ultimately, when he married Eva von Braun, it was right on the cusp of his death. So I think he did that for. To show that, you know, he was loyal to her. And at that point, it didn’t really matter. And he would have rather gone out with as them being husband and wife than not. I don’t know how old she was when she died. I don’t know the age difference between them.

I want to say it was like 1520 years or something like that, but I could be wrong. I genuinely do not know. And if anybody knows how old each of them were when they died, let me know in the chat. Uh, definitely. He was not like what we had been taught. That is 100% true. I would say that with absolute certainty. And have you guys. Have you guys ever seen the Mike King piece that he did on Hitler? Let me find that here. Let me see here. Don’t want that. I mean, the real news and history.

Real news and history. Okay. They lied to you about here about Hitler. This is a seven minute video, and I be. I’m actually just going to download it real quick and then I’ll play it so that it’s not echoey and all that good shit, because this, this and this. Actually, I will say, I want everybody to be honest with me and let me know after the fact if this brings a tear to your eye. I have now seen the famous german leader and also something of the great change he has effected. There can be no doubt that he has achieved a marvelous transformation in the spirit of the people, in their attitude towards each other, and in their social and economic outlook.

There is, for the first time since the Great War, a general sense of security. The people are more cheerful. There is a greater sense of general gaiety, of spirit throughout the land. It is a happier Germany. I saw it everywhere. An Englishman I met during my trip and who knew Germany well, were very impressed with the change. One man has accomplished this miracle. He is a born leader of men, a magnetic and dynamic personality with a single minded purpose, a resolute will and a dauntless heart. He is not merely in name, but in fact the national leader.

He has made the Germans safe against potential enemies by whom they were surrounded. He is also securing them against a constant dread of starvation, which is one of the most poignant memories of the last years of the war and the first years of the peace. Over 700 died of sheer hunger in those dark years. The fact that Hitler has rescued his country from the fear of a repetition of that period of despair and humiliation has given him an unchallenged authority in modern Germany. As to his popularity, especially among the youth of Germany, there can be no manner of doubt.

The old trust him. The young idolize him. It is not the admiration accorded to a popular leader. It is the worship of a national hero who has saved his country from utter despondency and degradation. To those who have not actually seen and sensed the way Hitler reigns over the heart and mind of Germany, this description may appear extravagant all the same. It is the bare truth I have. All right, let me take. Let me tell you real quick. This is David Lloyd George. Who’s doing this. David Lloyd George, who at the time was the prime minister of England.

This is in 1936. So this is. This is David Lloyd George. This in the same position that Neville Chamberlain and Winston Churchill occupied. And this is him saying this in 1936. All the same, it is the bare. I have never met a happier people than the Germans. And Hitler is one of the greatest men. Former prime minister David Lloyd George writing in 1936. So watch these pictures. Watch these images of the people. Every night in my dreams I see you. I feel you. That is how I know you go far across the distance and spaces between us.

You have come to show you go near wherever you are. I believe that the heart does go. You open the door until my heart and my heart will go on and on. Much like a Trump. Ralph. Time. And never let go till we come. Love was when I left you. One true time I hold you in my life will always go wherever I believe that the heart of the world once more. You open the door and you hear it. My heart, my heart will go forever this way you are safe in my heart and my heart will go on.

Man love. I’m sorry. Does that look like people who were forced into, like, following him? I know. Not at all. You could very easily put Trump in that car and trump on those. On those balconies, and it would be extraordinarily easy. I mean, imagine Trump was in the car and the flags were red, white and blue all everywhere. I mean, would that just seem, you know. You know, people now, they look back on that and they all look at all those nuts, nazi stuff. Oh, my God. Well, you got to realize that that was their red, white and blue.

They loved Germany. And if you understand anything about its symbology with the. With the swastika. The swastika was actually a symbol of peace. If you go back and you look at the swastika, it was a symbol of peace for, you know, forever. So, you know, all this stuff that they talk and they spew out there, swastikas are evil and bullshit. You know, the swastikas were made evil by people who wrote about Germany. Yeah. So rotor says, I just thought of that kind of reminds me of Trump, but way too soon to make side by side comparisons.

I get that, and I’m okay with that. I’m simply talking about what he. You know, the. What was evidence then is how it’s evidenced now. I mean, you know, I remember in 2020, just for example, that, you know, you’d have, like, hundred mile caravans just spawning out of nothing in California. I mean, it was. I mean, it was the. The, you know, the. The boat caravans in Florida. I mean, everywhere. Trump didn’t even have to show up. People, people just did it spontaneously on their own. And, you know, that was the type of. That was a type of fondness that Germans had, especially the german people had for Hitler.

So. Yeah, sure, the pledge of allegiance. Yeah. And, you know, another thing about, you know, they say, oh, well, the Germans were socialists. No, they weren’t socialist. They, you know, yeah, they have the term national socialism. But you got to understand the context of what national socialism was. I knew what you meant. Yarn. You’re talking about the salute. And that was really more. That was really more of a roman salute than it was a german salute, because that’s where. That’s where the Germans took it from. They copied it from Rome, because if you go back and you look, there’s the.

You know, there was. They called that the Third Reich. Well, the second Reich was basically Germany from when they gathered, when Bismarck gathered all the tribes together in, like, the 1870s and up until the end of World War one, that was the second German Reich. The first German, or the first Reich was the Roman Empire. A lot of people don’t know. But anyway, getting back to the whole thing about Trump, you know, the, you know, people who, like, just spontaneously just get out there and do stuff, and it was very similar in many respects to what happened in Germany back then.

So it’s interesting stuff, guys. You know, I’m just trying to present you guys some information that maybe you’ve never seen before. Maybe it’s. Maybe you’ve heard me talk about it in the past, you know, and I try very diligently, very diligently not to appear as though I’m worshiping Hitler, because I’m really not. I assure you I’m not. But, you know, the more I read and the more I learn, the harder it is for me to not like him. Does that make sense? The harder it is for me to not like him. I will confess that it’s difficult for me not to like him, so.

And have respect for a lot of the things that. That were done under, under. Under his leadership, so. And, you know, he got in there and he’s like, hey, I’ll vote me in. And if I do good, then you guys can. If you. If you don’t like what I’ve done, vote me out in four years. Give me four years to see if I can turn this thing around. And he did, so. I wish the country would be like that. All the citizens proud of our country and of our leader have that pride in ourselves. Exactly. Well, and you know what? So when I see stuff like this, when I watch some of those, like, the music of, like, the young kids in Russia who are, you know, that really proud to be russian, you know, it brings tears to my eye.

And it’s not because I’m sentimental towards what I’m watching. It’s I’m jealous because I want that for our country. That’s the best way for me to say it. I shed tears because I so want that for our country. I want the people to come together. I want the people to unite. I want the people to set aside their differences, their petty fucking differences that are really stupid. Set that shit aside and let’s. You know what I mean? We agree on so much more than what we disagree on. You know, we probably agree on 80% to 90% of things, but yet the media, academia, and all of these people, they get out there and they focus on the things that we disagree on.

It’s just, it’s, it’s, it’s maddening, so. Yeah, exactly. Thank you, Les. It’s hard not to like it, and it’s. And at the very minimum, it’s, like I said, it’s, it’s. I do have a sense of jealousy, but I absolutely believe that we are going to see a monster wave of patriotism grip our country and we’re gonna see, I think it’s starting to build and, you know, it’s starting to bubble under the surface. So let’s see. Just kind of sad to know that we had a hand in destroying something special. Exactly. 1000% agree with you on that roto rotor.

Thousand percent. Because I look at what, what the United States did, and, you know, I don’t, I don’t hold any animosity towards the fighting men because they were brainwashed into fighting the fight. Right? No. Very similar to how, how our military was brainwashed into fighting the fight of the global, global war on terrorism because of 911. You know, I do believe that there are men. And you heard that Russia, you heard that english bomber pilot talk about it when he said, you know, he’s like, we were the bad guys. We were the ones. We were way worse than the Germans ever were, so.

But, yeah, you know, let’s see. Didn’t Trump say we would have a year long celebration? Well, yeah, but I think that’s going to. I think that’ll come in time. I’m not 100% sure how or when that will come, but I believe it will come. Um, it’s going to be interesting to see how all this stuff plays out. I really don’t know. So too bad we can’t go back and try and hang Roosevelt. Well, I think you have to go back further than Roosevelt. You need to go back to, like, warburg and all those guys that did the, the creep, the, you know, the Federal reserve.

Roosevelt. Teddy Roosevelt. Teddy Roosevelt was a douchebag to see. Let’s see. Yeah, and I got to get going, guys. I’ve got some, I got some stuff this is about. I didn’t think I was going to do an hour tonight, but, you know, it’s kind of. Kind of hard not to talk about some of this stuff. I was just sitting there watching it and I just kind of had these things building up inside me. I was like, man, you know what? Because I really wasn’t planning on doing an after party. So nice to do this. So I’ve missed.

I’ve been really busy this week, so I haven’t had much time to do anything. So. But at the very minimum, I want to make sure that I always get the watch party up. So. So in any event, guys, I am gonna. I’m gonna call it a night. Got a few things to get done. So thank you, rotor. Appreciate that. Appreciate that very much. By the way, send me an email or unsold history at. At gmail. Untoldhistorychannel at gmail. Shoot me an email if you’re so close to me. We should. We should connect at some point. Excellent.

Less. Glad you enjoyed it, bro. Thank you very much. And thanks. Yarn. Yeah. Awesome. And you can find me on Twitter. I don’t know, rotor, if you’re on Twitter, but repj 1969 is my Twitter handle, so you can find me on there, too. You can either send me message request or whatever if that’s easier. Whatever. Whatever is easier. So. But in any of the guys. Okay, well, I’m going to go ahead and call it on. Like I said, I’ve got some stuff to do and I got a. I got to get up and go down to the.

I got to go down to Long beach in the morning. Long drive, so. But anyhow, I hope you all have a wonderful weekend. And I might see that over the weekend. I might not. Just depends, but at the very minimum, I will see you Monday and then Tuesday as well. So I hope you all have a fantastic weekend. Appreciate you and your time and look forward to seeing you again soon. Take care, everybody. Good night. Bye.
[tr:tra].

See more of Untold History Channel on their Public Channel and the MPN Untold History Channel channel.

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