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During World War I, Germany faced chaos, poverty, and social issues, but experienced an economic boom and regained hope when the National Socialists came to power. However, envy and fear from other nations led to World War II, the deadliest war in history. Germany suffered terror bombing by the British, and the Soviet Union committed atrocities against German civilians. The Allied forces, including Americans and British, engaged in looting, rape, and killing, while German prisoners of war were mistreated and many died from starvation and neglect. Men in American camps were forced to drink their own urine, and the International Red Cross's efforts were rejected. Eisenhower's program of mistreatment resulted in the deaths of at least 1.5 million German prisoners. Denazification became a cover for rape, torture, and death, and the Morgenthau plan aimed to destroy Germany completely, causing widespread suffering. The expulsion of Germans from Eastern Germany led to around 2 million deaths. The suffering of the German people was largely ignored, while Allied leaders and their actions were shielded from criticism. The true horrors of war cannot be justified or ignored.

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Stalin violated multiple non-aggression pacts and invaded several countries, causing widespread terror and death. The Allies, including Churchill, remained silent about Soviet aggression and focused on using Poland to start a war against Germany. Hitler knew Stalin was planning to invade Europe and launched a preemptive strike. The Eastern Front became the site of brutal battles, with many Russians surrendering to the Germans. The German army fought to save Europe from communism and received support from Russian volunteers. The Allies, particularly Churchill, deliberately targeted German cities in devastating bombing campaigns, causing immense civilian casualties. The Battle of the Bulge was a turning point, but the Allies delayed Patton's advance to give the Soviets time to conquer Eastern Europe. The war ended with the destruction of German cities and millions of German casualties.

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Stalin oversaw the expulsion of millions of Germans from their homes in Eastern Europe after World War II, resulting in the deaths of around 2 million women and children. Many more Germans died during similar expulsions in other countries. The atrocities committed during these expulsions, including beatings, looting, and starvation, were immense. Western leaders like Winston Churchill turned a blind eye to the suffering of the German population, leading to more deaths in the aftermath of the war than during the conflict itself.

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Following Germany's victory over France, Hitler offered Britain peace, proposing the British Empire retain its colonies and Germany's continental position remain unchallenged. These offers, delivered via Swedish and Italian intermediaries, were rejected by Churchill. Hitler reportedly expressed reluctance to attack England, admiring the English population. Despite Hitler's peace leaflets dropped over London and correspondence with Mahatma Gandhi, Churchill, influenced by Jewish advisors, allegedly sought to provoke Germany into bombing London to draw the US into the war and quell a domestic peace movement. Churchill initiated bombing raids on German cities, violating the Geneva Convention. Hitler retaliated after repeated provocations, leading to the Blitz. Deputy Fuhrer Rudolf Hess flew to Scotland with another peace offer, proposing German withdrawal from occupied territories in exchange for a free hand in the East and protection of the British Empire. This mission failed, and Hess was imprisoned. Secret documents revealed numerous rejected peace offers. President Franklin Roosevelt normalized relations with the Soviet Union and was surrounded by communist-leaning Jewish advisors who acted as Soviet agents. Similarly, Churchill was financed by a primarily Jewish group, "The Focus," and was influenced by Zionist leaders like Chaim Weitzman, who promised to bring the US into the war in exchange for the creation of a Jewish army in the Middle East.

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Zuby posed a question about what people in Germany were like after 1945. The response: after the occupation of Germany, the Soviets engaged in the biggest mass rape in recorded human history, with the majority of assaults committed in the Soviet occupation zone. Estimates of the numbers of German women raped by Soviet soldiers have ranged up to 2,000,000. According to historian William Hitchcock, in many cases, women were the victims of repeated rapes, some as many as 60 to 70 times. At least a 100,000 women were believed to have been raped in Berlin based on surging abortion rates in the following months and contemporary hospital reports, with an estimated ten thousand women dying in the aftermath. Female deaths in connection with the rapes in Germany overall are estimated at two hundred and forty thousand. Antony Beaver describes it as the greatest phenomenon of mass rape in history. Soviet soldiers raped German females from eight to 80 years old. The speaker then questions why this isn’t learned about in countless World War II lessons in high school, and notes that if you’re in high school watching, you should ask your history teacher why you don’t know about any of this, anticipating the teacher’s likely response of, oops. Sorry, lol.

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When the Germans discovered mass graves in early 1943, they brought in a European Red Cross committee called the Kading Commission, comprising 12 forensic experts and their staff. At the Nuremberg trials, the Soviets blamed the Germans for perpetrating the Kading massacre, while the British, French, and Americans let them do it. Numerous German officers were wrongly hanged for the murder of thousands of innocent Polish nationalists, murders that, the speaker asserts, were actually committed by Stalin's NKVD. President Roosevelt allegedly deliberately covered up evidence of who really committed these crimes. The Soviet report blaming the Germans for the Kading massacre was listed at Nuremberg as 54 USSR, with Academic N. N. Burdenko and Mitropoulos Nikolay listed as members of the Special State Commission, described as two obvious liars with an agenda who signed this report. These were the same known liars who also signed the official Soviet report on Auschwitz, listed at Nuremberg as eight USSR. The speaker asserts that this alone should be cause for concern to anyone seeking objective truth, noting that the Soviet report on Auschwitz was signed by two proven liars.

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In Munich, the British Prime Minister and the French government leader tolerate Hitler's invasion of the Sudeten region in Czechoslovakia. Britain and France agree.

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During World War I, Germany offered England a negotiated peace, but the Zionists in Germany went to the British war cabinet and promised to bring the United States into the war as an ally if they were given Palestine after the war. England agreed and made the Balfour Declaration, promising Palestine to the Zionists. After Germany's defeat, the Jews were blamed for their loss and faced discrimination. In 1933, the Jews declared a worldwide boycott against Germany, leading to tensions. The situation escalated, and Germany and the Jews ended up in a war to determine their survival. The Germans believed Europe had to be either Christian or communist.

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Stalin violated multiple non-aggression pacts and invaded several countries, terrorizing and killing people. The Allies, including Churchill and Roosevelt, did not take action against Stalin's aggression. Hitler believed that Stalin was planning to invade Europe, and documents support this claim. Hitler launched a preemptive strike against the Soviet Union, saving Europe temporarily. The war on the Eastern Front was brutal, with millions of lives lost. Many Russians surrendered to the Germans, viewing them as liberators from Soviet tyranny. The Allies, particularly Churchill, intentionally targeted German cities with devastating bombings, resulting in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of civilians. The war crimes committed by the Allies were largely ignored and remain largely unknown.

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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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In 1947, the United Nations decided to create Israel in Palestine, dividing it into 8 zones. Palestinians would get 4 pieces, Israelis 3, and an international zone. Palestinians would have 48% of their state, even though Israelis legally owned only 5% of Palestine. This decision was driven by guilt over the holocaust.

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During World War 1, the United States was supposedly forced into the war so that the Zionists could obtain Palestine. After the war, the Zionists asked Great Britain to fulfill their promise in a cryptic letter known as the Balfour Declaration. At the Paris Peace Conference in 1919, the Jews requested Palestine as their own territory. This made the Germans realize that they were defeated and suffered heavy reparations. The Jews had been prosperous in Germany before this, but the Germans felt betrayed. This betrayal is likened to the hypothetical scenario of the United States being at war with the Soviet Union and then being defeated because of the involvement of another country, like China. Germany was sold out for the sake of Jewish power.

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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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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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The Soviets kept their own crimes secret; communist documents were released in 1989 documenting that the Soviet NKVD carried out the Kading Massacre. In 2012, World Press reported their findings on the Kading Massacre. It was long suspected that Churchill and Roosevelt knew that Stalin ordered the massacre but kept their mouths shut about it. The US covered it up.

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The current state of Great Britain raises questions about its post-war recovery, suggesting it resembles a nation that lost rather than won. The alliance with Stalin during World War II is particularly troubling, especially after urging sacrifices to protect Poland, only to hand it over to him. This raises moral concerns about leadership decisions. While acknowledging the necessity of opposing Hitler, the discussion emphasizes the failure to maintain Western civilization's integrity post-war. Despite defeating the Nazis, the decline of British influence and values is evident. The conversation highlights the need to reassess historical actions and their long-term consequences on Western civilization.

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In September 1939, Poland was invaded by Germany and the Soviet Union, with Germany reclaiming Western Polish territory and the Soviets taking Eastern Poland. The division was based on Germany's invasion. Anti-German propaganda in the US and Western Europe focused on German territorial claims without mentioning Soviet occupation of Eastern Poland.

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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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Prior to WWII, Germans in Poland were a persecuted minority, attacked by Polish partisans working for Jewish or communist interests. There were 80,000 ethnic Germans in refugee camps. William Joyce said Germans were hunted in Bromberg, and thousands fled Poland. There were 44 acts of armed violence against German official persons and property. Germany made practical proposals to resolve problems, but Polish Minister Joseph Beck refused every proposal. Globalists selected Ritz Smigel to provoke Germany, so Britain and France could attack Germany from the West, and the Soviet Union from the East. Emil Ludwig called for a rebirth of the anti-German alliance. Hitler signed the German-Soviet Non-Aggression Pact to hinder the Allies and avoid a two-front war. Polish newspapers declared a struggle between Poland and Germany was inevitable, with no room for human feelings. Lord Beverbrook said Jews in England were working against accommodation with Germany and may drive Britain into war. Hitler said Poland's provocations were intolerable. Racial propaganda in the Jewish-owned press played a major role in the persecution of ethnic Germans, culminating in the Bloody Sunday massacres. Germany retaliated on 09/01/1939, reclaiming territories taken by the Versailles treaty. Britain and France declared war on Germany. The Allies used Poland as a dummy to start the war. Hitler pleaded for peace, but Roosevelt and Baruch instead repealed neutrality acts. The Allies planned to invade Norway and Sweden to cut off Germany's iron ore resources. Germany launched Operation Westerbund to secure Denmark and Norway. Hitler invaded Belgium and the Netherlands for their strategic location and collaboration with the Allies. Churchill came to power and invaded neutral Iceland. At Dunkirk, Hitler issued a halt order, allowing British evacuation in a gesture of peace.

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The book introduces the idea that World War II wasn't simply a conflict of good versus evil, pointing to the alliance with Stalin. Before the alliance, Hitler's regime, through events like Kristallnacht and the Röhm purge, resulted in hundreds of deaths and approximately 25,000 people in concentration camps like Dachau, according to American historians. In contrast, Stalin's victims numbered around 10 million dead, including 5 to 9 million Ukrainians, plus the victims of Lenin and Trotsky. Despite Stalin's atrocities, the alliance was formed to defeat Hitler.

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The Red Army invaded Germany in 1944, committing horrific atrocities like rape, torture, and murder. Women, children, and the elderly were brutally assaulted, with no one spared. The Jewish commissars orchestrated the violence, defiling churches and public spaces. German civilians suffered unimaginable horrors at the hands of both Soviet and Western invaders. Millions were killed, raped, and enslaved, marking the beginning of Germany's nightmare.

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Churchill seized an opportunity to justify bombing Berlin after a German attack near London. The British retaliated by targeting German cities, leading to the start of the Blitz. Despite Hitler's initial reluctance to attack England, the bombing continued. Churchill's propaganda portrayed the British as stoic, but in reality, they were given ineffective weapons for defense. The British people endured the hardships of war, believing they were under attack by an evil enemy.

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The current state of Great Britain raises questions about its post-war recovery, especially considering the long rationing period. There's frustration over the alliance with Stalin during WWII, particularly the decision to hand Poland to him after fighting to protect it. The moral implications of this alliance are troubling, as it undermines any moral authority to lecture others. While acknowledging the threat of Hitler, there's a call for a reassessment of Churchill's actions and their consequences for Western civilization. Despite defeating the Nazis, the decline of Western values and Christianity is concerning. The discussion highlights the complexity of historical leadership and the ongoing impact on society today.

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The transcript asserts that Stalin’s plan to dominate Eastern Europe was aided by Eisenhower and Marshall due to their focus on invading Europe from England rather than advancing from the European “soft underbelly.” It claims that by July 1944, communists had advanced into Poland and Germany. It attributes the instigation of Soviet Red Army violence against German civilians to Ilya Ehrenberg, described as Stalin’s Jewish chief propagandist and a prominent member of the Soviet-sponsored Jewish Anti-Fascist Committee. According to the speaker, Ehrenberg urged mass rape and murder of German civilians as the Red Army approached German territory. The transcript cites Ehrenberg’s involvement with propaganda against Germans, including gloating statements about German women and references to Jews “around Roosevelt,” asserting that Ehrenberg sought extermination and genocide of the entire German people. It notes that Ehrenberg encouraged mass rape and killing, with leaflets declaring Germans “are not human beings” and containing messages such as “Nothing gives us so much joy as German corpses.” It mentions leaflets air dropped on troops near Danzig, allegedly composed by Ehrenberg and signed by Stalin, with the directive: “Kill them all.” The text quotes orders and exhortations to Soviet troops: “Men, old men, children and women, after you have amused yourself with them. Kill,” “Nothing in Germany is guiltless, neither the living nor the yet unborn,” and “Break the racial pride of the German woman. Take her as your legitimate booty.” It further claims that a massive violence followed, described as “an unimaginable orgy of violence and rape” that would become one of the ghastliest episodes in human history. Finally, the transcript asserts a quantitative outcome: “At least 2,000,000 German women young and old were gang raped, sodomized and beaten often in view of their children or family members.”

Uncommon Knowledge

David Kennedy, Andrew Roberts and Stephen Kotkin Discuss the Big Three of the 20th Century
Guests: David Kennedy, Andrew Roberts, Stephen Kotkin
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In this episode of Uncommon Knowledge, the discussion centers on the Big Three leaders of World War II: Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Winston Churchill, and Joseph Stalin. The conversation explores their national interests and relationships, particularly in response to Hitler's invasion of the Soviet Union in 1941, which prompted the formation of the Grand Alliance. Churchill aimed to preserve the British Empire and ensure Soviet involvement to weaken Germany. Roosevelt sought to create a world safe for democracy, while Stalin's initial goal was survival, later shifting to territorial aggrandizement. The Tehran Conference in 1943 marked the first meeting of the Big Three, where strategic decisions about the war were made, including the contentious issue of a second front in Europe. Roosevelt's approach involved balancing Stalin's demands with the realities of military capabilities. At Yalta in 1945, agreements were made regarding post-war Europe, including the fate of Poland, which ultimately fell under Soviet influence despite Western hopes for democracy. The discussion concludes with reflections on the war's legacy, emphasizing that while the Soviet Union suffered immense losses, the United States emerged as a dominant global power, shaping the international order for decades. The lessons of World War II remain relevant today, highlighting the dangers of isolationism and the need for strong democratic engagement.
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