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  • Papichulo
    #13535
    Igen, arrol is van szo benne. De csak a te kedvedert, ime:

    "And if the Jews were sell-outs, no one told that to the Jews who died fighting for Germany (from Wikipedia):

    A higher percentage of German Jews fought in World War I than that of any other ethnic, religious or political group in Germany; some 12,000 died for their country. Ironically, it was a Jewish lieutenant, Hugo Gutmann, who awarded the Iron Cross, First Class, to a 29-year-old corporal named Adolf Hitler. When Hitler came to power in 1933, Gutmann left Germany and escaped to the United States.

    In October 1916, the German Military High Command administered Judenzählung (census of Jews). Designed to confirm accusations of the lack of patriotism among German Jews, the census disproved the charges, but its results were not made public. Denounced as a “statistical monstrosity”, the census was a catalyst to intensified antisemitism and social myths such as the “stab-in-the-back legend” (Dolchstosslegende)."

    Es meg egy picit:
    "For the countries that lost the war, the carnage of the battlefield seemed a sacrifice made in vain, inexplicable except by insidious internal betrayal. The stab-in-the-back legend attributed the German and Austrian defeat in World War I to internal traitors working for foreign interests, primarily Jews and communists. The prominence of individual communists of Jewish descent in revolutionary regimes (Leon Trotsky in the Soviet Union, Béla Kun in Hungary, and Ernst Toller in Bavaria) confirmed to anti-semites the "natural" attraction of Jews and international communism. This legend was widely believed and deliberately disseminated by the defeated German military leadership, seeking to avoid personal consequences for their policies. Like other negative stereotypes about Jews, the stab-in-the-back legend was believed despite the fact that it was entirely untrue: German Jews had served in the German armed forces loyally and bravely. The prominence of the "stab in the back" myth is unquestioned, and its effect in undermining the Weimar Republic was significant." (Teljes cikk)

    "The stab-in-the-back legend (Dolchstoßlegende in German) was a conspiracy theory propagated by the Nazis and other right-wing groups in the aftermath of World War I that blamed the Bolsheviks, Weimar politicians, and Jews for the loss of the war." (Teljes cikk)