Thursday, February 27, 2025

We need to talk about the GERMAN ELECTION!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jLtdQbkxvks&t=836s

@john2001plus
12 minutes ago (edited)
13:57 This is factually incorrect. Hitler supported the German Revolution of 1918–1919. Later, when he attended a meeting of the German Workers' Party for the first time, the official topic was why free-market capitalism should be abandoned. Hitler was so impressed with the group that he left the army and eventually became its leader. The party was later renamed the National Socialist German Workers' Party. 

This group saw itself as a nationalist socialist alternative to international socialism, which had gained a foothold in Germany. Hitler was not opposed to socialism, but he was a nationalist who opposed foreign political influence. 

In the United States, the political left initially supported fascism and Mussolini until America entered the war. After World War II, they created the narrative that fascism was far-right and have promoted this lie ever since. However, the right generally opposes government control and authoritarianism. The motto of the Italian Fascists was, "Everything for the state, nothing outside the state." The Nazis held a similar stance, asserting that private companies must serve the goals of the state or be taken over by it.

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