Trump takes sides with a murderer

Should Saudi Arabia be punished

  • No, they said they were sorry and we need their oil

    Votes: 2 15.4%
  • Yes, all arms sales to that POS country should be cancelled, at least.

    Votes: 11 84.6%

  • Total voters
    13

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
no, i don't remember it, i wasn't born for another 31 years....i'm aware it happened...but i don't see the significance. this isn't a European political party trying to gain a foothold in America.....this is fucked up ignorant racist, hateful, fearful Americans who finally have a hateful, fearful, bigoted piece of shit to speak for them......which is disappointing....i was hoping the kids were smarter than we parents were, but i guess genetics counts, in some things
I am surprised you don't recall it from the first three times she posted it. It's like watching a third grader go through history class.

The last one of those Nazi rallies (until recently) was particularly fun. I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall. About halfway through it, news of Pearl Harbor was announced over the loud-speakers. Everybody just slunk away and learned to keep their darkest thoughts to themselves.
 

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
And the actual last Nazi rally drew a whopping 23 people. They had to have a police escort and be sequestered from the 36,000 that showed up to shout them down.

Nazis are cowards. They always have been. They always will be.
You are forgetting Trump rallies. They have more in common with the original Nazi party rallies than today's Nazi party rallies do.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
no, i don't remember it, i wasn't born for another 31 years....i'm aware it happened...but i don't see the significance. this isn't a European political party trying to gain a foothold in America.....this is fucked up ignorant racist, hateful, fearful Americans who finally have a hateful, fearful, bigoted piece of shit to speak for them......which is disappointing....i was hoping the kids were smarter than we parents were, but i guess genetics counts, in some things
the significance is anything can grab a foothold here..every generation wants it 'the way we were'..they just have foggy memories of how things really were or maybe they're unaware altogether..'those were the days' from late 60's early 70's..here are the words:


ahhhhhhhhh, but those WEREN'T THE DAYS..according to the main characters:

  1. Glenn Miller 1940's
  2. Hit Parade 1940's/1950's
  3. You knew where you were then; girls were girls, men were men (obvi)
  4. Herbert Hoover the best President up until that time (really?)
  5. Didn't Need No Welfare State; everybody pulled his weight (false)^
  6. Anyone still have a LaSalle?..during the 1970's?:lol: (no)

^However, during the Second World War, Anglican Archbishop William Temple, author of the book Christianity and the Social Order (1942), popularized the concept using the phrase "welfare state."[9] Bishop Temple's use of "welfare state" has been connected to Benjamin Disraeli's 1845 novel Sybil: or the Two Nations (in other words, the rich and the poor), where he writes "power has only one duty — to secure the social welfare of the PEOPLE".[10] At the time he wrote Sybil, Disraeli (later a prime minister) belonged to Young England, a conservative group of youthful Tories who disagreed with how the Whig dealt with the conditions of the industrial poor. Members of Young England attempted to garner support among the privileged classes to assist the less fortunate and to recognize the dignity of labor that they imagined had characterized England during the Feudal Middle Ages.[11]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare_state
 
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Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
the significance is anything can grab a foothold here..every generation wants it 'the way we were'..they just have foggy memories of how things were or maybe they're unaware altogether..those were the day from late 60's early 70's..here are the words:

ahhhhhhhhh, but those WEREN'T THE DAYS.
Yeah, we get it. You watch a lot of TV.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
You are forgetting Trump rallies. They have more in common with the original Nazi party rallies than today's Nazi party rallies do.
is there actually an officially "recognized" nazi party? or is it just a bunch of skinhead assholes saluting hitler and telling each other that Aryans are better than everyone else....not that it matters much....just curious if they were in any way "sanctioned" ?
 

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
the significance is anything can grab a foothold here..every generation wants it 'the way we were'..they just have foggy memories of how things were or maybe they're unaware altogether..'those were the days' from late 60's early 70's..here are the words:


ahhhhhhhhh, but those WEREN'T THE DAYS..according to the main characters:

  1. Glenn Miller 1940's
  2. Hit Parade 1940's/1950's
  3. You knew where you were then; girls were girls, men were men (obvi)
  4. Herbert Hoover the best President up until that time (really?)
  5. Didn't Need No Welfare State; everybody pulled his weight (false)^
  6. Anyone still have a LaSalle?..during the 1970's?:lol: (no)

^However, during the Second World War, Anglican Archbishop William Temple, author of the book Christianity and the Social Order (1942), popularized the concept using the phrase "welfare state."[9] Bishop Temple's use of "welfare state" has been connected to Benjamin Disraeli's 1845 novel Sybil: or the Two Nations (in other words, the rich and the poor), where he writes "power has only one duty — to secure the social welfare of the PEOPLE".[10] At the time he wrote Sybil, Disraeli (later a prime minister) belonged to Young England, a conservative group of youthful Tories who disagreed with how the Whig dealt with the conditions of the industrial poor. Members of Young England attempted to garner support among the privileged classes to assist the less fortunate and to recognize the dignity of labor that they imagined had characterized England during the Feudal Middle Ages.[11]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Welfare_state
I see you expounded on your post.

Why? Just, why?
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
Humor is often used to help us deal with grief. Humor is also a good weapon against tyranny. Humor is a way to communicate what is absurd about the current situation so that people will stop taking it for granted. There are a lot of good reasons to laugh at the times we live in.

What I think you mean is that some are wrongly saying "we'll look back on all of this as if were necessary and good that we went through it. Like boot camp or "best thing that ever happened to Democrats"". On this, I would agree that, assuming this country's democracy survives Trumpism, we will simply remember it as a tragedy.
+rep:clap:
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
I am surprised you don't recall it from the first three times she posted it. It's like watching a third grader go through history class.

The last one of those Nazi rallies (until recently) was particularly fun. I would have loved to have been a fly on the wall. About halfway through it, news of Pearl Harbor was announced over the loud-speakers. Everybody just slunk away and learned to keep their darkest thoughts to themselves.
i've only posted it once before today..additionally, not everyone reads every thread and i was answering his question to ME. so STFU already.

EDIT: the spinoff 'the jeffersons' theme song was quite the opposite with stereotypical racial undertones and if a kid can tell at that time..?

i work for 'likes' and you're a little short.
 
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Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
yes, i posted same on two different threads to drive the point home- i'm glad you got it.

you're still short on 'likes' and this is pay for play.
so you posted it on two threads and claim you posted it once. Neat trick. Show me how to do that.


You have a dozen or so posts in this thread with not a single like. It's getting to you, we can tell.
 

Unclebaldrick

Well-Known Member
Yes.

The only real one left is the old National Socialist Movement that was founded back in the early 1970's. Most of the other so-called Nazi parties are wanna-be's that come and go. Jeff Schoep runs it and has for years now.
Most of the "german-cultural meetings" of the 1930s and early 40s were not official Nazi sanctioned meetings but, were in all but name, Nazi rallies.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
did we remember this at Madison Square Garden 1934?

It's not really the same. President was FDR when that photo was taken. The country was in another Republican caused depression at the time. So, yeah, there was a tragedy going on at the time but a fascist president and threat of a fascist takeover wasn't it.
 

Fogdog

Well-Known Member
And the actual last Nazi rally drew a whopping 23 people. They had to have a police escort and be sequestered from the 36,000 that showed up to shout them down.

Nazis are cowards. They always have been. They always will be.
Nazis have been coming to Portland to raise hell. They raised Nazi salutes to their leaders and tried to parade through our streets. We held them in check until the police showed up to flush them. There were about 700 of them in one rally this summer.
 
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