Sunshineinabag
Active member
I'd love to see Nancy pelosi living with somalis loolol
- You are really stuck on this 'racist-fascist-ultra-right' trip man - see thru it - and view it from the two sides of the boxing ring that perpetrates the whole stupid phenomenon - don't believe what you have been indoctrinated into - because you will just be a pawn of those that wish to continue to 'Divide and Rule' over us - look to who funded/created and encouraged the rise of fascism and communism/Bolshevism - to create a never-ending battle between us humans - then research the lives and motives of those who were/are supporting and funding it all - don't go around trying to stick a political/racial label on everything you see - for the people divided will never be united - and so will always be defeated - time and time again - and the politicians and the media that perpetuate this sickening BS - are bribed to continue to do so - ever seen a poor politician?
* All ya need is love in your life - a roof over your head - food in your belly - and some plants in the garden -
View Image
- I grew up with Jamaican-British friends into - Ska - Bluebeat - and Rocksteady - all three came together to make Reggae - and then Dub Reggae came out - Augustus Pablo was always a favourite of ours -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ztq7-kkygZk
- King Tubby Meets Rockers Uptown -
Augustus Pablo - Rockers Meets King Tubby In a Fire House [full album] -
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=?u_w0u_LzIQ4
View Image
No. They have only shown you that your discourse coincides exactly with that of the current ultra-right and neo-fascism (in time and form); which only presents slight changes with that of the Nazis and Francoists...
Kalergi Plan: The Undying “White Genocide” Conspiracy Theory
Similar to the "Great Replacement Theory," the "Kalergi Plan" is a false conspiracy theory that claims there is a plot to wipe out white Europeans.
profile avatar
by: Roland Clark on May 2, 2020
Co-Written By Dr. Roland Clark and Dr. Nikolaus Hagen
When Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi outlined his idea for a unified Europe in his book Paneuropa in 1923, the Tokyo-born Austrian politician had no idea that almost a hundred years later his name would be associated with an imaginary plot to wipe out white people through immigration and intermarriage.
Kalergi was a tireless advocate for European unification, and served as president of the Paneuropean Union for almost fifty years. A liberal-conservative, he opposed both communism and racism, hoping that: “today’s races and classes will gradually disappear owing to the vanishing of space, time, and prejudice.” Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Party bitterly attacked Coudenhove-Kalergi, asserting that his vision was a masonic plan to enslave Europe.
Coudenhove-Kalergi left Freemasonry in 1926. Nonetheless, today’s references to “the Kalergi Plan” are common in right-wing websites and speeches. The conservative non-profit group Turning Point USA recently tweeted a photograph of its members encouraging people to educate themselves about the dangers of the Kalergi Plan, and the conspiracy theory is reported as fact in online news sources, such as Slovenia’s Democracija, Germany’s Epoch Times and Austria’s Zur Zeit.
A Twitter search for the hashtag #Kalergi produces thousands of tweets from people warning that “the replacement of indigenous Europeans with ‘diversity’ is the ultimate goal of the ‘globalists’” and that “We caused the population explosion in Africa. Now we are enjoying the consequences. Europe will be African within a century.” The former British National Party leader, Nick Griffin, associated the Kalergi Plan with “Soros-backed leftists” in Czechoslovakia, who were apparently trying to prevent local television stations from reporting the “truth” about Muslim immigration. Most recently, right-wing bloggers have begun associating the “black Jewess” Meghan Markle with the Kalergi Plan.
How did the Kalergi Plan become a major trope of right-wing discourse, when just two decades ago this alleged plan was virtually unknown? The apparent success of this conspiracy theory is as puzzling as it is distressing. It is a remarkable example of how globalized right-wing discourse has become in the last decade and how it openly resorts to tropes and claims originating in Nazi propaganda.
The Origins Of The Kalergi Plan Conspiracy Theory
In November 1940, the Völkischer Beobachter, the infamous official daily paper of the Nazi party, claimed: “Count Coudenhove-Kalergi […] the commercial prophet of Pan-Europe, a dressed-up, nasty mongrel, dreams of a world of Eurasian-Negroid humans, subject to the God-given rule of the Jews.” This claim was based on a distorted reading of his books combined with outright fabrications. Another Nazi newspaper asserted that Coudenhove-Kalergi was supported by “international Jewry and Freemasonry”. Coudenhove-Kalergi was not Jewish, but he did vehemently opposed anti-semitism – as had his father Heinrich, who had written his dissertation on the character of anti-Semitism.
For the Nazis this was proof enough that he was indeed an agent of international Jewry. Further proof was, that – as an opponent of Nazism – Coudenhove-Kalergi had colluded with the fascist Dollfuß-Schuschnigg regime (often termed Austrofascism), arguably the (Austrian) Nazis biggest rival. In 1938, Coudenhove-Kalergi fled Austria and eventually lived in the United States until 1945.
Couvenhove-Kalergi returned to Europe after the war, dying in Austria in 1972. Postwar agitation against Couvenhove-Kalergi was mostly confined to the radical right and neo-Nazi circles, whereas the conservative right hailed him as a prophet of European unity. This changed in the early 2000s. In 2003, Gerd Honsik, a prominent Austrian Holocaust-denier and Neo-Nazi, who had evaded imprisonment in the 1990s by fleeing to Spain, self-published a book about the alleged Kalergi Plan.
The book, written in German, is now out of print. A translation of the book is however available online in Croatian. Honsik might have even coined the term “Kalergi Plan” himself, but the book’s content came straight from Nazi propaganda of the 1930s and 1940s. Although Honsik was a convicted felon on the run, he had remarkable connections to the then-governing Austrian Freedom Party (FPÖ) and other right-wing circles, and promoted his views extensively on the internet and through far-right publications. Honsik’s theories thus infiltrated more mainstream right-wing discourse.
Around 2005, Honsik also published an open letter to the Austrian and German presidents in seven languages, alleging that the United States purposely committed a genocide of 13.2 million Germans after 1945 and had – among a number of strategies – resorted to the “Kalergi Plan”, in order to implement this “genocidal” goal. This letter is still available on international “revisionist” and Holocaust-denial websites in different languages. Honsik’s book was also discussed in 2006 on the American Neo-Nazi internet forum, Stormfront. These are perhaps the earliest examples of how Honsik’s “Kalergi Plan” myth found its way into the American and international radical right.
Meanwhile, in Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has popularized his own iteration of the Kalergi Plan myth: the Soros Plan. Over the past few years, Orbán’s regime has attacked the billionaire philanthropist repeatedly. They accuse him of masterminding attacks on the Hungarian nation through “liberal” educational institutions, such as Central European University, and of convincing the European Union to accept refugees.
In 2019, the Hungarian government claimed that Soros was working together with Jean-Claude Junker to “to weaken member states’ rights to protect their own borders”. The eternal return of the Kalergi Plan (and its variants) suggests that – despite unparalleled access to information – our society has still not come very far beyond those which believed the Illuminati were the masterminds behind a new world order, or that The Protocols of the Elders of Zion was an accurate record of a Jewish conspiracy for world domination.
by: Roland Clark
Dr. Roland Clark is a Senior Lecturer in Modern European History at the University of Liverpool and a Senior Fellow with the Centre for Analysis of the Radical Right. His first book, Holy Legionary Youth: Fascist Activism in Interwar Romania (Cornell UP, 2015) examined the experiences of rank and file fascists during the 1920s and 1930s. He has also published a number of book chapters and specialist journal articles on fascism, religion, and East European cultural history.
.
https://rantt.com/the-kalergi-plan-explained
The title 'The Kalergi Plan' - though being real - is merely just that: a title. An agenda that's been given a particular name...this desire for the extermination and/or corruption of the White European race (and their nations) and its implementations have been occurring throughout most of recorded human history long before Mr. Kalergi was born. Most people are absolutely clueless concerning this dynamic. This is nothing new and is very ancient.
Mr. Kalergi was not the sole individual to entertain these ideas or attempt to implement them. The rabbit hole goes very deep concerning this and all it takes is research on your own. These tactics of mass immigration pitting different races and culture against each other to corrupt and divide is a well oiled and practiced ancient art of warfare that has destroyed most every great ancient empire in human history.
Our history books never tell the truth and instead people are given a hundred different reasons and answers as to why great empires dissolved in the past...without ever telling you the simple reasons. Occam's Razor. The answers to many things are not complicated and are very basic, clear and simple.
There has remained one constant theme and ingredient to this. It never wavers and it has remained unchanged in its behavior and tactics for thousands of years.
aldebaranvideo.tv/index.php?/Revilo-Pendleton-Oliver-The-jewish-strategy
View Image
''Imagine for a moment the world has only type of dog. Imagine the world having only one type of cat. Imagine the world having only one type of bird. Imagine the world having only one type of tree. Imagine for a moment that there is only one type of food. Imagine for a moment there is only one type of building. Would you be happy with any of those scenarios?
The human race is filled with different cultures, customs, religions, ethnicities, and races, each is unique and has a history whether big or small. We are opposed around the world by a ruthless conspiracy of largely Jewish and Zionist forces (although there are also Christian and Islamic Zionists too) who seek to destroy the genuine diversity of the human race. What they seek would be like merging all marker colours into one dark boring colour instead of keeping the different colours and their uniqueness.
Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi was born to an Austrian diplomat in 1894. In 1915 he married 13-year-old Jewish actress Ida Roland who was very active with him in the movement which would become the Kalergi Plan. He also is viewed as a founding father of the European Union. Richard was able to gather a lot of attention and support from high ranking officials given his father was a diplomat who spoke many languages including Hebrew. His father was friends with none other than one of the founders of Zionism, Theodore Herzl.
In 1921, Kalergi joined a Masonic lodge and had the full support of free masonry.
In Vienna in 1922, he founded the Pan European Movement which sought to create a new world order by destroying the nation states.
View Image
Two years later according to Kalergi in his biography, he received a call from none other than Louis de Rothschild. Rothschild said that Max Warburg read his book about his Pan European manifesto and he wanted to get to know them. Max Warburg is a Jewish Rothschild banker and brother of Paul Warburg, one of the architects of the Federal Reserve in the United States. Max Warburg offered 60,000 Gold Marks to finance the movement for the first three years.
In 1925, he went to the United States and started to get support from Paul Warburg, Bernard Baruch, and Ludwig Von Misses. All of them are Jewish Zionist financial elites of course.
Paul’s brother Felix Warburg was married to none other than Freida Schiff who’s father was none other than the Jewish Zionist banker Jacob Schiff. This is the same Jacob Schiff who funded the Bolshevik revolution which killed tens of millions of European Christians and millions of Central Asian Muslims.
In 1925, Kalergi wrote a book called Practical Idealism, and he outlined the fact he wanted to destroy the previous identities of Europeans. He called for Europeans to mix with Asians, Arabs, and Africans. These people of course don’t do this out of some desire for Europeans to get along better with Asians, Arabs, and Africans. The banking elites and other oligarchs have ruthlessly exploited the Asia, Africa, and the Arab World. More than that these are the Jewish Zionists who have been massacring Arabs for over 80 years with the goal of expelling them from their land. Of course he never calls for Jews to mix with other races. He and his Jewish banker supporters have sought to destroy identity and the routes of the peoples of the world so they are more easy to control.''
* How about reading 'Practical Idealism' - by Count Coudenhove Kalergi? - should clear up what you think of as a 'conspiracy' - because it all laid out in his book - and has been since 1925 - long before Hitler and the Nazi's ever came to power -
- link to Kalergi's books - https://www.amazon.co.uk/s?k=couden...c&hvqmt=p&tag=mh0a9-21&ref=pd_sl_34g742mdzs_p
**more at this link - https://redpilledreality.com/the-ka...d-identities-of-all-nations-excluding-israel/
-
Kalergi Plan: The Undying “White Genocide” Conspiracy Theory
Similar to the "Great Replacement Theory," the "Kalergi Plan" is a false conspiracy theory that claims there is a plot to wipe out white Europeans.
profile avatar
by: Roland Clark on May 2, 2020
Co-Written By Dr. Roland Clark and Dr. Nikolaus Hagen
When Richard von Coudenhove-Kalergi outlined his idea for a unified Europe in his book Paneuropa in 1923, the Tokyo-born Austrian politician had no idea that almost a hundred years later his name would be associated with an imaginary plot to wipe out white people through immigration and intermarriage.
Kalergi was a tireless advocate for European unification, and served as president of the Paneuropean Union for almost fifty years. A liberal-conservative, he opposed both communism and racism, hoping that: “today’s races and classes will gradually disappear owing to the vanishing of space, time, and prejudice.” Adolf Hitler’s Nazi Party bitterly attacked Coudenhove-Kalergi, asserting that his vision was a masonic plan to enslave Europe.
Coudenhove-Kalergi left Freemasonry in 1926. Nonetheless, today’s references to “the Kalergi Plan” are common in right-wing websites and speeches. The conservative non-profit group Turning Point USA recently tweeted a photograph of its members encouraging people to educate themselves about the dangers of the Kalergi Plan, and the conspiracy theory is reported as fact in online news sources, such as Slovenia’s Democracija, Germany’s Epoch Times and Austria’s Zur Zeit.
A Twitter search for the hashtag #Kalergi produces thousands of tweets from people warning that “the replacement of indigenous Europeans with ‘diversity’ is the ultimate goal of the ‘globalists’” and that “We caused the population explosion in Africa. Now we are enjoying the consequences. Europe will be African within a century.” The former British National Party leader, Nick Griffin, associated the Kalergi Plan with “Soros-backed leftists” in Czechoslovakia, who were apparently trying to prevent local television stations from reporting the “truth” about Muslim immigration. Most recently, right-wing bloggers have begun associating the “black Jewess” Meghan Markle with the Kalergi Plan.
How did the Kalergi Plan become a major trope of right-wing discourse, when just two decades ago this alleged plan was virtually unknown? The apparent success of this conspiracy theory is as puzzling as it is distressing. It is a remarkable example of how globalized right-wing discourse has become in the last decade and how it openly resorts to tropes and claims originating in Nazi propaganda.
The Origins Of The Kalergi Plan Conspiracy Theory
In November 1940, the Völkischer Beobachter, the infamous official daily paper of the Nazi party, claimed: “Count Coudenhove-Kalergi […] the commercial prophet of Pan-Europe, a dressed-up, nasty mongrel, dreams of a world of Eurasian-Negroid humans, subject to the God-given rule of the Jews.” This claim was based on a distorted reading of his books combined with outright fabrications. Another Nazi newspaper asserted that Coudenhove-Kalergi was supported by “international Jewry and Freemasonry”. Coudenhove-Kalergi was not Jewish, but he did vehemently opposed anti-semitism – as had his father Heinrich, who had written his dissertation on the character of anti-Semitism.
For the Nazis this was proof enough that he was indeed an agent of international Jewry. Further proof was, that – as an opponent of Nazism – Coudenhove-Kalergi had colluded with the fascist Dollfuß-Schuschnigg regime (often termed Austrofascism), arguably the (Austrian) Nazis biggest rival. In 1938, Coudenhove-Kalergi fled Austria and eventually lived in the United States until 1945.
Couvenhove-Kalergi returned to Europe after the war, dying in Austria in 1972. Postwar agitation against Couvenhove-Kalergi was mostly confined to the radical right and neo-Nazi circles, whereas the conservative right hailed him as a prophet of European unity. This changed in the early 2000s. In 2003, Gerd Honsik, a prominent Austrian Holocaust-denier and Neo-Nazi, who had evaded imprisonment in the 1990s by fleeing to Spain, self-published a book about the alleged Kalergi Plan.
The book, written in German, is now out of print. A translation of the book is however available online in Croatian. Honsik might have even coined the term “Kalergi Plan” himself, but the book’s content came straight from Nazi propaganda of the 1930s and 1940s. Although Honsik was a convicted felon on the run, he had remarkable connections to the then-governing Austrian Freedom Party (FPÖ) and other right-wing circles, and promoted his views extensively on the internet and through far-right publications. Honsik’s theories thus infiltrated more mainstream right-wing discourse.
Around 2005, Honsik also published an open letter to the Austrian and German presidents in seven languages, alleging that the United States purposely committed a genocide of 13.2 million Germans after 1945 and had – among a number of strategies – resorted to the “Kalergi Plan”, in order to implement this “genocidal” goal. This letter is still available on international “revisionist” and Holocaust-denial websites in different languages. Honsik’s book was also discussed in 2006 on the American Neo-Nazi internet forum, Stormfront. These are perhaps the earliest examples of how Honsik’s “Kalergi Plan” myth found its way into the American and international radical right.
Meanwhile, in Hungary, Prime Minister Viktor Orbán has popularized his own iteration of the Kalergi Plan myth: the Soros Plan. Over the past few years, Orbán’s regime has attacked the billionaire philanthropist repeatedly. They accuse him of masterminding attacks on the Hungarian nation through “liberal” educational institutions, such as Central European University, and of convincing the European Union to accept refugees.
In 2019, the Hungarian government claimed that Soros was working together with Jean-Claude Junker to “to weaken member states’ rights to protect their own borders”. The eternal return of the Kalergi Plan (and its variants) suggests that – despite unparalleled access to information – our society has still not come very far beyond those which believed the Illuminati were the masterminds behind a new world order, or that The Protocols of the Elders of Zion was an accurate record of a Jewish conspiracy for world domination.
by: Roland Clark
Dr. Roland Clark is a Senior Lecturer in Modern European History at the University of Liverpool and a Senior Fellow with the Centre for Analysis of the Radical Right. His first book, Holy Legionary Youth: Fascist Activism in Interwar Romania (Cornell UP, 2015) examined the experiences of rank and file fascists during the 1920s and 1930s. He has also published a number of book chapters and specialist journal articles on fascism, religion, and East European cultural history.
https://rantt.com/the-kalergi-plan-explained
The link has been taken down? Damn it man. Wait...when I click on the link it takes me there...the top link. It's Vanguard Audio Books anyways and - if you can get there - just look for the audiobook 'The Jewish Strategy' by Revilo Pendleton Oliver.
the-savoisien.com/blog/index.php?post/Vanguard-Audio-Book-Alex-Linder
Well now...so the President of the United States of America is propagating a 'far right' conspiracy theory?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UgrliuQW_-Q&feature=emb_logo
There is no such thing as Far Right, Extreme Right, Right Wing Extremist or Ultra Right...those are merely political monikers given to normal, sane people who have not been affected by the decades of relentless propaganda, gaslighting (brainwashing), indoctrination and conditioning. Normal, healthy and sane logic that we have practiced for thousands of years...and for some reason has now become radical extremist views, LOL! This is why we call it Clown World.
Red Ice TV
Renegade Tribune
- I don't understand why you keep posting someone else's post Muntono -
- If you read back on my post - you will see an Amazon link to Kalergi's books - read them - then it will prove to you what Kalergi wanted - and it looks like it has come to be - to some extent already - how can it be a conspiracy theory if its that easy to prove for yourself?
Gypsy, I just answered your last highlighted paragraph with the following, but they have deleted it. I hope it is a mistake, and that he is not right in what I predicted about this thread to Magaluci: That first they would take away the smile ... then the freedom of expression?
Apart from being a study backed by a methodology and sources light years ahead of your meme-pamphlets in terms of depth and rigour?:
Because it answers again and again the same question and misrepresentation of the Chi 13 n' Dr. Ronand Clark quoted text that you make:
No one denies that they existed, nor that they exist, nor that wiil exit, Kalergis n' more, with the most devious plans will exist.
It is pointed out to you, however, that the manipulation and use of this crazy plan by the new-old ultra-right and their condemned terrorists, coincides exactly with your discourse.
At the same time, this discourse is just "an update for these times" of old Nazi and fascist discourses. Like Franco's from the 1930s; see: "The Judeo-Masonic-Bolshevik cospiracy wants to erase the sacrosanct Christian identity of the West with they hordes...".
PURE COINCIDENCE ??
So you too are constantly repeating the messages of "others", but without the real spirit of reply, which I do have in my quotations...
...Besides, your "others" have hands and tongues stained with blood...
Translated with www.DeepL.com/Translator (free version)
By the way, thanx for dont delete my before post a second time..
No, Gypsy: I'm just using the history that our 2 countries have in common, to try to show you what happens to us Europeans when we pretend to be alien to each other, and concentrate on admiring our pink or brown navels...
We could illustrate it with what we let happen to Germany, ruining it, after WW1...but I am not fluent in the subject. Surely the contribution of German friends could do it....
(I think Gunter Grass's "It's a long story" is a good novel for illustration, am I wrong?)...
...Or more currently, with allowing the ruin of Greece...
(And how in both times and countries fascism grew afterwards...)
View Image
No. Solo te han mostrado que tu discurso coincide exacto con el de la actual ultraderecha y neofascismo (en tiempo y forma); el cual solo presenta solo leves cambios con el de los nazis y franquistas...
No. They have only shown you that your discourse coincides exactly with that of the current ultra-right and neo-fascism (in time and form); which only presents slight changes with that of the Nazis and Francoists...
Now yes, Gypsy.
Now we can get into a real debate on the issue.
Now you have finally stripped it of all those ultra-right and racist judgements you were marinating it with.
I find your message very interesting. It also opens up an interesting debate on the two views on the role of the U.K. and Russia and the rest of Europe. I see both their possible negative and positive sides.
It also shows that you did not pay attention, or I did not know how to make you understand, many humorous but not stupid comments like this one:
But I'm telling you that all the mystical-mythical-fascist imaginary and the meme-pamphlets (I don't know if apocalyptic or hallucinatory) like this one, with which you (selfishly?) impregnated the topic, is unnecessary and smells bad (as bad as that racist racial classification by intelligence that you defunct in other thread, of course...):
View Image