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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: tejek who wrote (208574)10/25/2004 8:30:32 PM
From: AK2004  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1575450
 
re: All of Islam did not support Hitler as your post suggests

why do you think serbs dislike their muslim neighbours so much?

re: For that reason, I want my gov't to scale back its subsidy of Israel.

you seems to be ok with US helping Egypt though.....



To: tejek who wrote (208574)10/26/2004 3:32:06 AM
From: GUSTAVE JAEGER  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1575450
 
Re: One of the Palestinian leaders duing the 1930s went and saw Hitler in Berlin. All of Islam did not support Hitler as your post suggests.

But who didn't go and see Hitler in the 1930s??? Every country sent prominent personalities to visit Germany and her Nazi leaders in the 1930s... recall Charles Lindbergh, Henry Ford, etc. Here's the latest:

The Führer's friend

Ian Kershaw shows how the seventh Marquess of Londonderry had a knack for always backing the wrong horse in his biography of Churchill's 'half-wit' cousin, Making Friends with Hitler

Piers Brendon
Saturday October 2, 2004
The Guardian

Charles Stewart Henry Vane-Tempest-Stewart, seventh Marquess of Londonderry, was the sort of grandee who makes you wonder why there was no British revolution. Stinking rich from Durham coal, he was so hostile to the miners during the general strike that even his cousin Winston Churchill rebuked him for turning an industrial dispute into a political battleground. Londonderry abused the middle class and threw such glittering receptions for his peers that he was said (by FE Smith) to be "catering his way into the cabinet". Acknowledging that he had "no great affection for Jews", he finally urged friendship with Hitler's Germany. Londonderry actually managed to make Ribbentrop look good, snatching back the over-generous half-crown tip that he gave to a golf caddie and replacing it with a shilling. Wits called the pro-Nazi nobleman "The Londonderry Herr".
[...]

books.guardian.co.uk