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|    alt.fan.adolf-hitler    |    Apparently for more than the moustache    |    4,278 messages    |
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|    Message 3,018 of 4,278    |
|    Topaz to All    |
|    Re: Re: Right Wing Homo Hitler Hated Soc    |
|    02 Mar 15 16:27:35    |
      XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.politics.democrats, misc.survivalism       XPost: uk.politics.misc       From: mars1933@hotmail.com              By Walter Ruthard               I myself was brought up in a small village in the southwest of       Germany. In 1939, when the war broke out, we left for the less exposed       Odenwald area until the possible danger of a French invasion had       passed. Shortly after that my father was transferred to the Ruhr       region. He as requested work as a foreman for the Mauser arms factory.       The government, true to their claims to be national and socialist,       took their promises seriously and provided young people starting a       family, as well as those who already had children, with affordable       housing. The first child brought a reduction of the mortgage by 25       percent, and when the fourth child arrived the mortgage was no more.       My parents already had four children then and thus were eligible for a       free newly built house from the government.               This was but one of the many programs the government established in       order to improve the quality of life for its citizens..               Then there was the "Kinderlandverschickung" program. It was started       before the war and enabled mothers in need of recreation to spend some       time in rural settings together with their children..               Another very popular social program of the government was "Kraft       durch Freude" (strength through joy). Here deserving workers could       take all-inclusive tours on luxury liners that were built especially       for this purpose. On these ships there was only one class and       everybody was treated the same. They visited the Azores and       Spitsbergen among other places. Those ships were not allowed to dock       in and English port however. The reason was that the British       government did not want it's citizens to see what it also could have       done for them..               The most misinterpreted program in Germany was the so-called       "Lebensborn". It was the exact opposite of what people are made to       believe it was, or should I say, of what people like to believe.. The       Lebensborn was the institution to help unwed mothers who did not know       where to turn for help. They were taken care of during their       pregnancies and afterward as well. This was the Lebensborn, and any       other interpretation is plain hogwash..               My father was able to buy not one but three guns plus two pistols,       together with plenty of ammunition. All it took him was proof that he       was indeed a German citizen without a criminal record. Then in 1945,       when the French "liberated" us, they disarmed him. I know that he was       not the only one to have guns at home, because I saw the many, many       arms that were handed over to the French, and this was in a very small       village..              Then, after the war was over, we had our first experience with a real       democracy. The French introduced it and gave us some shining examples;       one was that the lived off the country and stole everything which       wasn't nailed down..               It was not until many years later that I learned that Hitler held at       least five plebiscites during the first half of his rule. In       democratic Germany, from 1945 until today there has never been a       plebiscite.               There were foreign workers employed in Germany during WWII. I knew       one of them. He worked on a farm and was treated exactly like the son       who was in the army. After the war he stayed on and married the       daughter of the house. He was a prisoner of war from Poland and I       never saw him guarded by any policeman. This is how foreigners were       treated in Germany. They earned the same wages as the Germans, they       took part in the social insurance program, had paid-for holidays       including free train fares, and many came back with friends who also       wanted to work for these "horrible" Germans. Today they are called       slave laborer.               Not everyone was entitled to go on to a university. Only good marks       and above-average performance in schools qualified. But good       performers were promoted with all means available. Today we are much       more democratic; everyone is entitled to a university education and if       the parents are wealthy enough, the son or daughter can study until       they are 35..               Germany was also the country to introduce, in 1933, the first-ever       comprehensive animal protection law. Farm animals had to be kept in       strictly natural environments and no animal factories were allowed. Of       course, no testing of products on animals was permitted, and no kosher       slaughter.               If new industrial facilities were built they had to conform to the       highest standards with adequate lighting and air inside, canteens       where the workers were served nutritious meals at affordable prices,       and beautiful lawns outside: all for the benefit of the workers.. In       national socialist Germany, no child labor was allowed as it still was       in other European countries.                     And finally, although I could still go on for a while, I would like to       mention that on express orders from Hitler himself, it was strictly       forbidden to use corporal punishment in the army. He was of the       opinion that in was incompatible with the honor of a German to be       punished by such degrading means.               That was the Germany I grew up in, and I am glad that I did.                     http://www.ihr.org http://nationalvanguard.org http://www.bpp.org.uk              http://national-socialist-worldview.blogspot.com              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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