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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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Speaker 0: How How would you look at Hitler in this light? Would you see him as a personification, a symbol of the father? Speaker 1: Oh, well, no. No. Not at all. I know. No. You see, I I couldn't possibly explain that very complicated fact Hitler represents. It is just too too complicated. You know? He's a hero figure. Yes. And the hero figure is far more important than any fathers that have ever existed. I see. Speaker 0: Much broader than Speaker 1: right No. He was a medium father, but all not at all. He was a hero Yeah. To in in in the German myth. Yeah. And mind you, a religious hero. He was a savior. Yes. Yes. He was meant to be a savior. That is why they put his photo on upon the others. Yes. Yes. Or somebody declares on his tombstone that he is happy to that his eyes have beheld Hitler. And now he kept lying peace. Oh, yes. It's the human race, you know.

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Keiser Rudolf had the one. The speaker has told this story many times since 1991. They are gradually getting more documents, but the British government is withholding many more files, which is shameful. Rudolf Hess came to Britain in 1941 to try to stop what he thought was inevitable. Listening to him would have saved millions of lives, but Winston Churchill's vanity led to a different route, resulting in millions of deaths and Britain losing everything. The speaker believes Britain had a great empire that was a force for good, but it was lost due to a mad, drunken prime minister's vanity. "Drunk in charge of an empire" should be Churchill's epitaph.

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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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Since 1914, I have dedicated myself to my people with love and loyalty. I did not desire war in 1939, it was instigated by international statesmen of Jewish origin. Despite efforts for peace, war was wanted for business and by propaganda of international Jewry. I choose to remain in Berlin, refusing surrender to enemies. I urge soldiers to resist in the spirit of National Socialism. I ask my comrades to prioritize the nation's interests over personal feelings. Let us build a National Socialist state for future generations, serving the common good above all else. All Germans, National Socialists, and soldiers must remain faithful to the new government and resist international Jewry.

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Speaker 0 asserts that Nick Fuentes thinks Hitler was cool, but reminds him that Hitler ultimately lost and had to shoot himself. This implies that Fuentes should understand he isn’t on a winner, even if he believes otherwise. The speaker adds, “Oh, you’re nicer than me. I’d say follow your leader,” and then clarifies, “That’s not our advice.”

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Adolf Hitler did not die in a Berlin bunker. He escaped Germany using underground tunnels and submarines to Argentina, where he lived for nearly two decades with many other members of the Third Reich. Argentina became a second base of operations for the Third Reich. Argentinian President Javier Melies has ordered the release of documents on Nazis who fled to Argentina after World War II. Hitler reportedly lived in Bariloche, Argentina, until his death in the mid-1960s. CIA and FBI documents mention Hitler sightings in the area. The United States and its allies allegedly facilitated this through Operation Paperclip. The skull held in Russia, purported to be Hitler's, is female. DNA tests were conducted on skull fragments. Stalin knew Hitler lived, and it is widely known in Argentina that Hitler had two children there.

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The transcript presents a sequence of testimonies and extracts arguing that Adolf Hitler possessed exceptional intellect, memory, and strategic genius, contrary to prevailing liberal and popular stereotypes. - IQ and intellect at Nuremberg: It is stated that the Allies found the IQs of National Socialist leaders on trial to be much higher than expected, with some sources suggesting Hitler’s IQ around 140+ or higher. Jaalmar Schacht is cited as saying Hitler’s IQ was 150 or more; Schacht’s own IQ was tested at 143, and ministers reportedly averaged 129, with many acknowledging Hitler’s superiority. The text asserts Hitler read voraciously, with a private library of over 3,000 books, and could lead discussions on any topic, possessing strong verbal ability, memory, and autodidactic learning. - Personal recollections on Hitler’s learning and memory: Excerpts from He Was My Chief (Christa Schroeder), Was Hitler Really a Dictator? (Friedrich Christian), Hitler Democrat (Leon deGrell), and The Hitler I Knew (Otto Dietrich) emphasize Hitler’s extraordinary memory and lifelong study. Schroeder describes Hitler reading 500 Vienna reference library volumes in youth, recalling minute details of places, architecture, and conversations, as well as recalling names, books, statistics, faces, and the atmosphere of rallies. Dietrich notes Hitler’s ability to memorize a book in a single sitting and to notice engine discrepancies on a plane, while deGrell highlights Hitler’s wide range of knowledge—from Buddha to Shakespeare to Tacitus, from theology to physics and biology—and his habit of reading at least one book daily and quoting long passages from memory. Dietrich also stresses Hitler’s equal facility in architecture, philosophy, and science, and his almost universal command of knowledge across disciplines. - Hitler’s cognitive and technical leadership in strategy: The narrative contends Hitler could devise audacious military strategies that surprised even his top commanders. It recounts that Hitler rejected a conventional Schlieffen-inspired plan and instead developed a bold, integrated approach to the 1940 West campaign. In Winiza and at his headquarters, Hitler supposedly explained and reviewed his strategic process, using a binded map collection of the France campaign to illustrate decisions, including the choice to strike at Sedan and to coordinate a rapid armored thrust with air superiority. He allegedly insisted on secrecy, careful data gathering, and a seamless integration of tactical details under a single strategic idea. - The Western campaign and Dunkirk: The text describes the May 1940 offensive (the Zickelschnitt or sickle cut) as a decisiive success, with the Wehrmacht breaking through using a combination of armored thrusts and flanking maneuvers, advancing from Sedan toward the coast, and ensuring the encirclement and isolation of Allied forces. Hitler is portrayed as acknowledging—yet regretting in hindsight—the Dunkirk decision, explaining he did not destroy the entire British force because of the danger to further operations and time, arguing the need to avoid excessive losses and preserve strength for subsequent operations. The account attributes a rational, strategic calculus to Hitler, including concerns about Eastern possibilities and peace prospects. - Post-Dunkirk reflections and leadership style: The transcript portrays Hitler as calm under pressure, capable of long, rational discussions with staff after shocking events like Arnhem, and capable of endurance through fatigue. It also emphasizes his interpersonal trust with his inner circle, including his architect Heinrich Himmler and Speer, and notes various personal anecdotes illustrating his restraint, discipline, and occasional moments of levity. Keitel, Jodl, and Manstein are referenced as colleagues whose assessments evolved to align with Hitler’s strategic vision, while some allied commanders are depicted as underestimating his genius. - Conclusion on Hitler’s genius: The compilation argues that Hitler was “one of the most cultivated men of the twentieth century,” with “military genius” and “an invention of modern strategy,” whose leadership integrated a mass of tanks and air power in ways other militaries failed to conceive. While it acknowledges criticism of certain decisions (e.g., Dunkirk), it credits Hitler with transcending conventional military thought, guiding not only German policy but also shaping European strategic doctrine through a fusion of meticulous planning, memory, and intellectual breadth.

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On April 29, 1945, Hitler, accepting defeat, allegedly escaped from Berlin to Argentina by submarine after poisoning his wife, Hebe Braun, with cyanide. He purportedly blamed the war's loss on his engineers' failure to develop a nuclear bomb and the anti-gravity war machine, Die Glocke (Nazi bell), which he intended to use against the U.S. military.

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Hitler, in his bunker in Berlin, had learned of Mussolini's death, with Eva Braun by his side. They were surrounded by his high command, a situation that had persisted since 01/16/1945. Churchill's bombings of German civilians and the rape of Germany continued non stop, and by 1945 the Germans faced a hopeless situation. The Red Army had reached the River Oder, which stood as the last great natural obstacle before Berlin. Germany would now be surrounded from every frontier. The Soviets reportedly had twice as many men as the Wehrmacht and four times as many tanks. Stalin claimed that he had 6,000,000 men against the remaining 1,000,000 Germans of every unit the Reich could gather. Hitler understood that he was surrounded. Facing certain defeat, foreign volunteers, old men, women, and children prepared for the last fight against hopeless odds. Boys of the Hitler Youth also prepared themselves for the last battle. The only thing that stood between heaven and hell was the remaining German troops. On April 19, Soviet troops reached the Berlin suburbs. Every remaining desperate defender of Germany would be eliminated in house-by-house street fighting. The Red Terror couldn't be haunted anyone. The combat embraced everyone in its battle zone. Hitler's dreams of a free world had been shattered to a million pieces.

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Hitler didn't want to exterminate the Jews at the time. He wanted to expel the Jews.

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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 speaker visited Germany in 1933 because the papers were full of what was happening there. Someone offered to introduce her to Hitler, and she was extremely interested, as everyone was at the time. Upon meeting him, she found him to be a very interesting and fascinating man. The speaker emphasizes that Hitler was charming and completely different from anyone she had ever met. She notes that he possessed something special to rise from being an out-of-work painter to dictator of Germany. When asked about Hitler's responsibility for the deaths of 6,000,000 Jews, the speaker states that it is inexcusable. She says the man she knew was not someone she could have believed capable of such acts. She also points out that other dictators have killed more people than Hitler, yet were still visited and found charming by world leaders long after committing their crimes. She initially didn't believe the reports of atrocities, but eventually accepted them.

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In the 1930s, Hitler was given power by the wealthy, powerful, and complacent elite who thought they could control him. They believed his extreme views were just for show. However, like other dictators, Hitler brought death and despair. Millions of Germans thought it couldn't happen there. In 1933, Germany was wrong. The speaker questions if the same mistake will be made today. Hitler asks if he will become a dictator, to which he denies.

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Speaker 0 describes a stance to attack only on the front lines, not against women or children, noting that “that was a data loss,” and that they “did it to all fronts” and “we did not fly a night attack.” He argues that since bombs would be dropped anyway, before the German people he cannot permit his own Volksgenossen to perish while sparing foreigners, so the war must be fought and the sacrifices available must be used. Speaker 1, after acknowledging that he cannot deny this any longer, refers to himself as “the greatest strategist born so far” and declares that the Luftkrieg (air war) is his doing. He calls it a brilliant idea by Mister Georgill against the civilian population, noting England apparently rejected this in anticipation of future developments. He asserts that in this war he did not conduct night attacks on civilian populations in Poland, arguing that at night the objective cannot be hit as accurately, so he primarily targeted roofs and aimed at military targets. He says he did the same in Norway, Holland, and France. He contrasts this with a belief that the British Air Force would be unable to escape German scrutiny if night raids targeted civilians, implying that the German campaign aimed at military targets. As the war in the West ended, he extended his efforts toward “Henglad,” and faced pressure from many to act sooner: “how long, Führer, do you wait? They do not stop.” He waited over three months and then gave the order to commence the fight with the same resolve with which he had started every battle, continuing “up to now.” Speaker 2 portrays the enemy as incredibly cruel and determined to destroy Germany, stating that the enemy has proclaimed this thousands of times, and asserting that there is no reason to doubt it. He intensifies the claim by equating the enemies’ motives with biblical purge concepts, describing a wish for Germany’s extermination with “Mann und Maus und Jung und Alt.” He emphasizes that what would be done to German women and children cannot be imagined, urging that it will be a total war that affects every German, their lives, existence, family, wife, and child—the war threatens life itself. He concludes that wherever now flourishing cities and villages exist, a future of desolation would result, turning into a desert; the war, he says, is total and affects everyone.

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In February 1945, Stalin traveled to the Black Sea resort of Yalta to attend the most historic of the big three conferences of the war. At the Yalta conference, the plot to reshaping of the postwar world was made. The biggest winner was Stalin. Churchill muttered to Stalin, "We have killed six or 7,000,000 Germans, and probably there would be another million or so killed before the end of the war."

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Speaker 0 argues that it’s logistically absurd to claim the Holocaust involved gassing millions and hauling bodies from so-called gas chambers, noting the inefficiency of that method. He points out the irony that the person most famous for gassing people refused to use gas that could have won the war, because he would not be the first to use gas, despite having 20,000 kilograms of tabun and sarin. He asserts there were no counters to that chemical weapon, yet the decision not to use gas led to the downfall of his country. Speaker 1 adds that Hitler was gassed himself at the end of World War I, which blinded him. During the fall of the Kaiser’s empire, the Reich’s collapse and the emergence of Bolshevik and Weimar structures occurred as some German states did not join the Weimar Republic and became sub-states or Soviet-like entities. Speaker 0 emphasizes that anyone uncertain about Hitler’s legacy should read Mein Kampf and hear from Hitler’s own words to understand why he held his beliefs. He claims Hitler did not begin as an anti-Semite intent on killing Jews, and describes Hitler as someone who admired and observed the universe, was a truth-seeker from day one, engaged in political discussions, and was fascinated by philosophy, German history, the British Empire, and America. He notes Hitler was well-read and well-spoken, but deprived economically, working as a day laborer with little work available to feed himself. He claims Hitler went days without food to afford a book, showing a love of knowledge, and that he wasn’t a failed artist; he was a talented artist whose path could have been architecture rather than drawing. Speaker 0 contends that smear campaigns against Hitler fail and are “nonsense.” He dismisses more extreme claims as false, such as insults about Hitler’s sexuality or anatomy, and mentions that such accusations are common against many figures. Speaker 1 comments that a lot of the negative rumors about Hitler (e.g., perverse claims) are typical allegations made against many people, implying they are not unique to Hitler.

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I was born in Austria and lived there during Hitler's regime and the Soviet communist occupation after World War 2. Contrary to what the media reported, Hitler was elected by the Austrian people with 98% of the vote. Initially, Hitler didn't seem like a monster and talked like an American politician. Gun registration was introduced to ensure safety, claiming that guns were dangerous and led to accidents. Gradually, over five years, Austria transitioned into a dictatorship. When the people fear the government, it becomes tyranny, but when the government fears the people, that's you.

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Hitler initially wanted to expel the Jews, not exterminate them. Khadz Amin al Husseini told Hitler that if he expelled the Jews, they would all come to his location. When Hitler asked what he should do with them, al-Husseini allegedly told him to burn them.

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Something is approaching, and it won't be stopped. Look around; darkness is prevalent. My hatred manifests in various forms. We have a plan to assassinate the Fuhrer, and you will act as our spy in Ignat. Churchill views Germany as a threat, fearing that a bomb linked to England could lead to invasion or worse. I'm prepared to face my destiny in silence.

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The Fuhrer has absolutely forbidden the use of poison gas. The enemy is to use it first, and then we will retaliate with ours. the Germans would have won the war because the Germans had not just poison gases like mustard, the Germans had nerve gases. At this time, in 1944, they already had stockpiles of 30,000 tons of nerve gases, sarin and tabun. But he had put his name on a piece of paper, the Geneva Gas Protocol, saying that he would never use gas first because it would be a war crime. the nine or 10 panzer divisions out of Normandy and sent them to the Russian front.

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Adolf Hitler did not die in a Berlin bunker. He escaped Germany weeks before the supposed suicide via underground tunnels and an airstrip. Submarines transported him and numerous Third Reich members to Argentina, which became a second base of operations. Hitler reportedly lived in Bariloche, Argentina, until the mid-1960s. Argentinian President Javier Emile has ordered the release of documents related to Nazis who fled to Argentina after World War II. CIA and FBI documents mention Hitler sightings in the area. The escape was allegedly facilitated by the United States and its allies, possibly through Operation Paperclip. The skull held in Russia, purported to be Hitler's, is female. DNA tests were conducted on skull fragments. Stalin knew Hitler lived, and it is widely known in Argentina that Hitler fathered two children there. The book "The Gray Wolf" covers this topic.

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Hitler initially wanted to expel the Jews, not exterminate them. However, Khad Amin al Husseini approached Hitler and expressed concern that if the Jews were expelled, they would come to his region. In response, Hitler suggested burning them.

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Hitler rose to power amidst German misery, promising to restore the nation. He eliminated unemployment and stamped out political opposition, consolidating power. Laws were enacted that turned Jews into second-class citizens, and opposition was eradicated. The 1936 Olympics showcased Hitler's Germany, and he later met with David Lloyd George, who was impressed. Secretly, Hitler prepared for war, rearming Germany. Eva Braun, Hitler's mistress, documented his private life, but their relationship was strained. Hitler formed alliances with Mussolini and Japan, then annexed Austria. He demanded self-determination for Germans in Czechoslovakia, leading to the Munich Agreement. In 1939, Hitler invaded Poland, triggering World War II. Initial victories were followed by the defeat at Stalingrad. Allied bombing devastated German cities. As the war turned against Germany, Hitler retreated to his bunker, blaming betrayal. Allied forces liberated concentration camps, revealing Nazi atrocities. In 1945, with the Red Army in Berlin, Hitler married Eva Braun and committed suicide, leaving Germany in ruins. In his final testament, Hitler claimed the war was provoked by the Jews.

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Cyclone B was dropped into the death chamber, killing people in 3-15 minutes. The screaming stopped when they were dead. Special commandos removed rings and extracted gold from teeth. Children were exterminated because they couldn't work. Rudolf Herr's confession was obtained by the British through torture before he was turned over to the Soviets and Poles. This was confirmed in "Legions of Death" by Bernard Clark, who bragged about torturing Herr and threatening his family. The speaker wishes the Fuhrer had taken responsibility for his commands, stating he was their sovereign. The speaker would rather die than see the sovereign subjected to humiliation in a foreign court, believing the Fuhrer would have taken responsibility.
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