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The German army and nation suffered greatly after WWI due to sanctions and chaos. Poverty, inflation, and unemployment led to despair. Germany then transformed into a powerful nation under Hitler, but faced intense hatred during WWII. Millions of Germans suffered horrific atrocities, a dark secret in history. Translation: The German army and nation suffered greatly after WWI due to sanctions and chaos. Poverty, inflation, and unemployment led to despair. Germany then transformed into a powerful nation under Hitler, but faced intense hatred during WWII. Millions of Germans suffered horrific atrocities, a dark secret in history.

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Adolf Hitler, born in 1889, resented the degeneration of Germany and joined the German Workers' Party in 1919. He attempted to seize power in Munich through a failed coup in 1923, but his popularity grew. Hitler wrote "Mein Kampf" during his imprisonment and outlined his political and philosophical ideas. When he became the leader of Germany in 1933, Hitler implemented various policies to revive the country's economy, including the construction of infrastructure and the introduction of interest-free loans for married couples. He also focused on promoting German culture and family values. Hitler's actions gained support from the German people, who saw improvements in their quality of life.

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Adolf Hitler, born in 1889, resented the degeneration of Germany and joined the German Workers' Party in 1919. He attempted a coup in Munich in 1923 but failed. While in prison, he wrote Mein Kampf, outlining his political and philosophical ideas. Hitler became the leader of Germany in 1933 and implemented various policies to rebuild the country, including creating jobs, improving the economy, and promoting family values. He also banned smoking, animal cruelty, and ritual slaughter. Hitler's actions gained him popularity among the German people, who saw him as a savior. However, his ideologies and actions have been heavily criticized and condemned.

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To create a better world, we must unite against a common threat, rallying around a leader who has taken practical steps for Europe and civilization. Adolf Hitler transformed Germany into an authoritarian socialist state, addressing bankruptcy and unemployment while promoting national sovereignty and self-sufficiency. His policies were rooted in German traditions and aimed to counter globalization and liberalism. The economic reforms he implemented, such as job creation and tax relief, revitalized the economy and reduced unemployment. Hitler's rejection of the gold standard in favor of a barter system based on productivity further asserted Germany's independence. This rapid economic turnaround, coupled with a disdain for liberal democracy, led to international opposition against Germany, resulting in significant suffering for its people.

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Hitler rose to power in 1933, revamped the economy by banning usury, and introduced labor treasury notes. Unemployment dropped from 50% to 2%, crime decreased, and the country prospered. Hitler's social programs provided leisure activities and affordable vacations for workers. He initiated winter relief work, built the Autobahn, and created the Volkswagen. Hitler was seen as friendly and charming by his secretaries, with a fatherly demeanor towards the youngest. Overall, Hitler's reign brought economic stability and social cohesion to Germany.

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While Mussolini established fascism in Italy, Hitler observed and adapted his strategies in Germany. After his release from prison, he promised jobs and a brighter future, resonating with a disillusioned populace during the Great Depression. His powerful speeches, filled with simplistic promises and scapegoating of Jews and communists, captivated many. In 1932, the Nazi party gained parliamentary seats, and in January 1933, President von Hindenburg appointed Hitler chancellor. Shortly after, a fire at the Reichstag allowed Hitler to suppress opposition and consolidate power, silencing moderates and dissenters. His regime relied on a mix of fascination and terror, using violence and intimidation to maintain control. Hitler effectively dismantled democracy, positioning himself as a dictator with a plan for Germany and beyond.

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The Weimar Republic, established after Germany's WWI loss and crippling reparations, faced economic devastation, with hyperinflation and mass unemployment. Foreigners exploited the cheap prices, leading desperate Germans to the sex industry, particularly in Berlin, where prostitution flourished in a legal gray area. All types of prostitutes were available, including child prostitutes, with advertisements in newspapers. Homosexual, lesbian, and transsexual bars were common, and violent sexual acts occurred. Pornography also thrived. Fashion blurred gender lines, and drug use was rampant. Magnus Hirschfeld, a homosexual Jew, founded the Institute of Sexual Research, which developed gender categories and performed sex reassignment surgeries. Art, music, and film became sexualized and anti-authoritarian. Jewish individuals were prominent in politics, the press, the arts, and the sex industry, leading to perceptions of Jewish overrepresentation. The Nazis shut down homosexual bars, pillaged Hirschfeld's institute, and burned books deemed degenerate.

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Hitler took power in 1933 in a struggling Germany. He removed international bankers, restricted Jewish ownership, and outlawed debt-based money. Instead, he introduced labor treasury notes, leading to full employment, economic growth, and stability. By 1938, unemployment dropped from 50% to less than 2%. Germany thrived without debt or inflation, financing itself without gold. This success was hidden from history books.

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The German army and nation suffered greatly during World War I and the aftermath, with crippling sanctions leading to chaos, anarchy, and poverty. However, after the National Socialists were elected, the German economy improved, unemployment decreased, and confidence was restored. The transformation seemed like a cultural, economic, and political renaissance. But envy and fear from other countries led to World War II, the deadliest and most destructive war in history. Germany was subjected to terror bombing, with cities like Hamburg and Dresden being devastated. The bombings resulted in massive destruction, loss of life, and unimaginable horror. The crimes committed against Germany during and after the war have been buried under propaganda and laws for over 70 years. This film aims to shed light on these atrocities and hopes to prevent such events from happening again.

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The hyperinflation in Germany attracted attention to Berlin, known as a hub of depraved sexual activities. Cultural Marxist Jews were blamed for introducing decadence and immorality into German culture, making Berlin a symbol of immorality in the 1920s. Moral boundaries were blurred, and anything was accepted.

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The Weimar Republic in Germany was marked by high unemployment, hunger, and despair among the people. Suicide rates were high, unemployment reached over 30%, and birth rates were low. Anarchy and chaos prevailed as communists took control of parts of many cities. The disarmed and hungry German population felt helpless in the face of these challenges.

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After World War II, the denazification process in Germany turned into a brutal purge involving torture, rape, and death. Many Germans were forced to register and faced interrogation, often resulting in false confessions obtained through torture. The Morgenthau Plan aimed to destroy Germany's industry and reduce its population through starvation. The Allied occupation led to widespread suffering, with orphans and starving children struggling to survive. The harsh policies of denazification and non-fraternization further degraded the German population. Meanwhile, the Soviet Union looted German resources, and the United States dismantled German industry and stole valuable assets. The post-war years in Germany were marked by immense suffering and despair.

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The Weimar Republic, established after Germany's WWI loss, faced economic devastation due to war debts, causing hyperinflation, unemployment, and a high suicide rate. Foreigners exploited the cheap prices, leading desperate Germans to the sex industry in urban hubs like Berlin, where prostitution flourished in a legal gray area. Child prostitution, homosexual acts, and sexual perversions were rampant. Art, music, and film were overtaken by sexual revolution and anti-authoritarianism. Homosexual films and German Expressionist cinema gained prominence, with Jewish influence noted in film production. The Dadaist movement opposed authority, and architecture shifted towards repulsive designs. Jews, comprising less than 1% of the population, held significant influence in politics, the press, the arts, and the sex industry, leading to the perception of a "Juden Republic." Magnus Hirschfeld's Institute of Sexual Research contributed to gender theory. After Hitler's rise, homosexual bars were shut down, Hirschfeld's institute was pillaged, and books on transsexual ideology were burned.

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In Germany, Hitler rose to power democratically in 1933, promising economic and cultural revival. He abolished the debt-based monetary system, creating jobs and stability. Hitler restored national pride, promoted art and culture, and relaxed gun control laws. He implemented social programs like Strength Through Joy, providing affordable leisure activities for workers. The nation experienced a cultural and economic rebirth, inspiring the world. Hitler was described as friendly, charming, and paternal by his secretaries. Germany under Hitler became a prosperous and advanced country.

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Germany before the war had a high standard of living, with benefits like loans for marriage and children. After the war, the city was in ruins, with millions of Germans dying under Allied brutality. General Patton lamented the destruction of a good race and the spread of communism. Women in Berlin faced violence, and allies of Germany fought against communism, including democracies like Finland and Romania.

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Tariffs and the farm aid rationale dominated public discussion in the late 1920s. Hoover, running for president in 1928, pledged higher duties on agricultural imports and summoned a special session of Congress for selective tariff revision. The tariff debate centered on helping American farmers and equalizing production costs, but when trading partners retaliated, farmers actually lost more from higher costs on imports than they gained from price increases for their products, most of which faced little foreign competition. An American Farm Bureau Federation study showed American farmers would gain $30,000,000 from tariff increases and lose $330,000,000 in higher costs. The House passed the act in May 1929. If the United States wouldn’t buy abroad, others couldn’t earn dollars to buy Americans’ goods or to meet interest payments on American loans, and by September 1929 Hoover’s administration had received protest notes from 23 trading partners. Some countries protested, others retaliated with trade restrictions and tariffs of their own. American exports to protesting nations fell 18%, and exports to those that retaliated fell 31%. Scholars debate whether the Smoot-Hawley tariff caused the stock market crash of October 1929, since it wasn’t signed into law until the following June, though others argue investors anticipated its effects. If investors anticipated the tariffs, they might have sold stocks; exports fell from $7,000,000,000 in 1929 to $2,500,000,000 by 1932. Federal spending rose from $2,600,000,000 in 1929 to $3,200,000,000 in 1932. The tariffs didn’t help the American farmer: trade accounted for 17% of farm income before the tariffs, and farm exports were slashed to a third of their 1929 level by 1933. On the eve of the crash, the United States was in seemingly good shape: productivity-enhancing innovation was abundant, and management practices were being revolutionized (Ford paid workers well; Alfred Sloan’s GM management reforms, RCA’s tech boom—its stock rose 940% between 1925 and 1929, with a peak PE of 73). Yet only 3% of Americans owned any stock, and about 1% owned enough to maintain a broker account, so the Great Depression could not be blamed solely on a stock bubble or tariffs. By 1920 the U.S. held about 40% of the world’s monetary gold; France increased its share to 17% by 1929 and 22% in 1931 as other central banks tightened to stem gold outflows. Deflation spread as monetary gold accumulated abroad; by 1930-1933 prices fell sharply. The deflation was the most dramatic the U.S. had experienced, with prices dropping an average of 7% per year, and the wholesale price index falling 33% from 1929 to early 1933. As the depression deepened, unemployment soared, and GDP plummeted. Hoover’s public optimism contrasted with the collapsing economy: production fell 9.3% in 1930 and 8.6% in 1931; by June 1932 GDP was 55% below its 1929 peak. The global downturn lasted a decade, with the Soviet Union’s planned economy appearing comparatively untouched. The era reflected a transition from a largely rural, agrarian society to a more urban, industrial one, increasing vulnerability to market volatility.

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The transcript describes the Weimar Republic (1918–1933) as a dark era for Germany, naming it a period defined by degeneracy, hopelessness, poverty, and death. Poverty intensified after the Versailles Treaty, with hyperinflation attributed to Jewish influences over the monetary system. It states that 4,000,000,000 marks equaled 1 US dollar and that people used money as fuel for fire, with the ink on banknotes more valuable than the money itself, leading to widespread desperation and over twenty-five thousand suicides annually. Unemployment exceeded five million, and prostitution was rampant, with some cities reporting that one in three women resorted to it, including along with their daughters. It claims child trafficking and prostitution were common, with children on street corners holding signs listing prices for sexual acts, which could be ordered and delivered. The transcript asserts that nationalists and communists were killing each other in the streets. It characterizes the era as marked by Jewish domination of banks, media, industries, academia, and law, claiming that Jews owned 150 private banks in Berlin despite being less than 1% of the population, and that Germans owned only 11. It further claims that most cinemas, newspapers, and publications were in Jewish hands. It references the Frankfurt School for Critical Theory and asserts that Jews pushed a list of degeneracy onto Germany, including destruction of the family, destruction of tradition, destruction of culture, multiracialism, weakening of nation-states, political correctness and intolerance, democratization and emancipation, equality dogma, equality of sexes, homosexualization of society, ideological loss of reality, promiscuity, and destruction of environmental protection requirements. A quote attributed to a Jewish doctor allegedly summarizing these aims is provided: “Whilst large sections of the German nation were struggling for the preservation of their race, We Jews filled the streets of Germany with our vociferations. We supplied the press with articles on the subject of its Christmas and Easter and administered to its religious beliefs in the manner we considered suitable. We ridiculed the highest ideals of the German nation and profaned the matters which it holds sacred.” The quote is attributed to Doctor Manfred Reifer in the German Jewish magazine Chernowitzer Allegemein Zeitung, September 1933. The transcript concludes by stating that Adolf Hitler removed Jews from positions of influence in mass media, literature, art, music, journalism, cinema, and popular entertainment.

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The Weimar Republic, established after Germany's WWI loss and burdened by massive debt, faced economic devastation, hyperinflation, and high suicide rates. Berlin became a hub for prostitution, with up to 100,000 prostitutes nightly, including child prostitutes advertised in newspapers. Homosexual, lesbian, and transsexual bars thrived, alongside a booming porn industry. Drug use was rampant, with cocaine readily available. Magnus Hirschfeld, a homosexual Jew, founded the Institute of Sexual Research, which developed a system categorizing 64 genders and coining "transvestite" and "transsexual." Art, music, and film were overtaken by sexual themes and anti-authoritarianism. Jews were perceived as overrepresented in politics, the press, the arts, and the sex industry, despite comprising less than 1% of the population. The Weimar Republic was often called the "Juden Republic." After Hitler's rise, homosexual bars were shut down, and Hirschfeld's institute was pillaged, with his books among the first burned by the National Socialists.

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Ben Bernanke attributed the Great Depression to Jewish leaders at the Federal Reserve. In Germany, the effects of the stock market crash were severe, with prices doubling every 2 days for 20 months. Inflation in 1920-1922 was out of control, leading to people needing suitcases of banknotes to buy goods due to rapidly rising prices.

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In 1930, Jewish statistician Alfred Marcus found that the average Jewish income was three times higher than the general population. By January 1933, over 6 million people were unemployed as industries went bankrupt.

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The Weimar Republic, established after Germany's WWI loss, faced economic devastation due to war debt, leading to hyperinflation and mass unemployment. Foreigners exploited the cheap prices, fueling a booming sex industry in Berlin with up to 100,000 prostitutes nightly, including child prostitution advertised in newspapers. Homosexual bars and explicit content thrived, alongside drug use. Magnus Hirschfeld's Institute of Sexual Research in Berlin promoted radical sexual theories, coining "transvestite" and "transsexual," and performing early sex reassignment surgeries. Art, music, and film became sexualized and anti-authoritarian, with Jewish figures prominent in the film industry. The Dadaist art movement rejected capitalist norms. Jews, though a small minority, held significant influence in politics, the press, and the arts, leading to the perception of a "Juden Republic." The NSDAP piece claimed Jews held a disproportionate number of positions as notaries, doctors, hospital directors, lawyers, and dentists. After Hitler's rise, homosexual bars were shut down, and the Institute for Sexual Research was pillaged, with its books burned.

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Unemployment led to a rise in sex work in Berlin, attracting many young boys and girls seeking hard currency.

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One country that concerns me is Germany. Historically, in the early 20th century, Germany went to war against the world, which was unexpected and surprisingly close. About 30 years later, Germany chose to go to war again, this time with a notorious leader at the helm. You would think the world would respond by saying to Germany, "You can’t keep attacking the world and expect to remain a country."

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The German army and nation suffered immensely during and after WWI due to crippling sanctions and widespread chaos. The election of the National Socialists brought economic revival and renewed hope, but external forces, driven by envy and fear, sought to dismantle Germany, leading to WWII. The war resulted in unprecedented destruction and mass atrocities against Germans, a truth suppressed for over 70 years. Allied terror bombing decimated German cities, exemplified by the firestorm in Hamburg and the obliteration of Dresden, resulting in mass civilian casualties. In the East, the Red Army committed horrific acts of rape, torture, and murder against German civilians. Even after Germany's defeat, the Allies subjected the German people to further suffering, including mass imprisonment, starvation, and expulsion from their homes.

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After World War I, Berlin descended into chaos as Germans fought each other. The Weimar Republic emerged, turning Berlin into the sex capital of Europe. Prostitution thrived, catering to every sexual desire. The city became a hub for perversion, debauchery, and creativity, with strip clubs and sex clubs hidden in unexpected places. Berlin's liberal spirit attracted intellectuals and artists, including Marlene Dietrich and Christopher Isherwood. However, inflation spiraled out of control, causing widespread poverty. Foreign tourists flocked to Berlin for cheap sex. Magnus Hirschfeld, a pioneering doctor, founded the world's first institute for the scientific study of sex. But in 1933, Hitler's rise to power marked the end of Berlin's decadent era. Many prominent figures fled the city, and the vibrant culture was extinguished.
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