The Ethnic Cleansing of German Minorities after the War

The Ethnic Cleansing of German Minorities after the War

Thinking that his interrogation had ended, Fittkau stood up to leave when the “interpreter suddenly wheeled and pounced on me like an animal catching his prey by surprise. ‘We know you were a member of the Nazi Party. We know you had connections all the time with the SS. They sent you out of Germany with special orders to spy for the Nazi government.’” Thrusting his clenched fist into the air in the Communist salute, Fittkau’s interrogator shouted, “The great Red Army has destroyed Hitler’s swine! Now it will go on to wipe out all priests and all other pigs!”

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The Jewish Moral Corruption of Germany and America

The Jewish Moral Corruption of Germany and America

Paul Johnson tells us that films like Blue Angel were so corrupt that they “could not be shown in Paris. Stage and night club shows in Berlin were the least inhibited of any major capital. Plays, novels and even paintings touched on such themes as homosexuality, sadomasochism, transvestism and incest; and it was in Germany that Freud’s writings were most fully absorbed by the intelligentsia and penetrated the widest range of artistic expression.”[i] Many of these films were labeled “decadent” as soon as Hitler rose to power, and many of the producers fled Germany.

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The Life and Times of Jerry Springer

The Life and Times of Jerry Springer

Jerry Springer’s sole sibling (Evelyn) and parents emigrated to the U.S. in 1949. As Springer often remarks, “I left England at age five when I found out I couldn’t be king.” And therein lies a more revealing truth about Springer’s character than of Bob Hope’s, from whose repertoire he borrowed. With the assistance of a New York-based Jewish refugee foundation the family settled in a tightly-knit Jewish neighborhood in Queens, New York, where Springer’s aunt resided. Richard Springer made stuffed animals and peddled them on street corners, with Jerry often in tow. Margot worked as a bank clerk. Jerry’s mother laid down firm rules governing the household. ”It was always work before play,” she recalls. “‘I guess it’s the German in us.’”

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