Staged, LMAO . sorry zero yyou lose again.You probably still believe in the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy. What the fuck do you know.
Fighting fot dipshit of the year?
http://www.cbsnews.com/news/why-kasi...-trump-killer/ Originally Posted by i'va biggen
Actually, your lame attempt only confirms your retard status. Embrace your true self, LittleRetardEva! Originally Posted by CuteOldGuy
You probably still believe in the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy. What the fuck do you know.Combining these two posts still adds up to zero.
Jim Originally Posted by Mr MojoRisin
One needn't "fantasize" to know that George Soros--a major Hildabeast supporter--is a known Nazi collaborator. . Originally Posted by I B HankeringWhen Phil Gramm started voting Republican, he henceforth would have to answer his congressional votes as a Republican. The matter of the fact is that the leftist voting bloc in Weimar Germany, so heavily concentrated in major cities, had been resolutely voting against the Nazis. The effort ultimately failed to stem the tide of the Nazi onslaught, but not for lack of trying. It's fair to say the German people collectively did propel Hitler to the apex of his political career over all his rivals, so assigning blames to one segment of the voting blocs is rather myopic.
Maybe you should read Engels' racist diatribe...as well as Hitler's admission that, "I have learned a great deal from Marxism, as I do not hesitate to admit." . Originally Posted by I B HankeringEngel???!!! 1849???!!! Well all I need to state is this: actions always speak louder than words. The German liberals (especially SPD) have stood up for the minorities from time to time. It's the ultra conservative/nationalist governments of the second and the third Reich that ever pursued the racial persecutions most severely.
Marx wrote his little pamphlet in 1848. Germany became a nation in 1871. So, which tradition is older: German socialism or German nationalism? How can you possibly argue that the newer tradition is "conservative" or "right-wing"? . Originally Posted by I B HankeringThe path to German nationalism had been undertaken through a series of military, political, and economic reforms right after the humiliating defeat at Jena-Auerstedt. It culminated with the proclamation of Wilhelm I as "German Emperor." So German nationalism started at least forty years ahead of any "liberal movement" you care to come up with.