Tag: death

Cities fed into the Allies Incinerators

The total destruction of the German city of Dresden in February 1944 has never been justified. There are squalid attempts to downplay the numbers of martyred civilians. Over three days of infamy, 1,249 USAAF and RAF bombers removed from the face of the earth a once-great city. The holocaust, to give the inferno its proper term, is falsely claimed to have led to the loss of 22,000 to 25,000 lives.

To My Brother Killed in Battle

The arts, literature and poetry, were very important to the peoples of the workers Reich. Literature, poetry and art were the roots through which the folk sustained their unique culture. Immersion in one’s being, experienced through the third eye, is a binding influence on the nation. Warriors, wherever in the world they are posted, know their land and their folk are with them.

Covid Brings on the Clowns

The drastic restrictive measures imposed on multiple nations around the world proved wholly ineffective for the spread of COVID-19. The most stringent non-medical, health interventions to curb the spread of COVID-19 include quarantine, restrictions on access and business closures. Given their global social and economic consequences, it is important to assess their real impact on the evolution of the epidemic.

No More Brother Wars

On the 18 January 1919 the Paris Peace Conference that ended the First World War began at Versailles. It resulted in five controversial treaties that rearranged the map of Europe and imposed onerous financial penalties on Germany and the other losing nations. These reparations gave rise to political resentments that lasted for decades.

Another conspiracy theory comes true

The Sunday Times is facing a social media backlash for peddling Covid-19 vaccination passports as ‘freedom certificates’. Many note that the idea was considered a crazy conspiracy theory only a few months ago. An article published in the UK newspaper on Sunday makes the case for ’immunity passports,’ which would allow vaccine recipients to be exempt from lockdown restrictions.

America’s Greatest Loss of Life on Water

On April 27, 1865, the United States experiences its worst maritime disaster in history. Mere weeks after the Civil War came to an end, the steamboat; Sultana exploded and sank in the Mississippi River, killing an estimated 1,200 to 1,800 Union prisoner of war soldiers who were released and on their way home.