Red Ideologies
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Documenting the extensive links between Red and Brown ideologies
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Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany more or less abolished the profit motive but left just enough private enterprise to leech off. They routinely extracted forced loans from businesses which were never repaid, similar to the loans they forced foreign governments' central banks to give them which were never repaid.

Source: Killing History

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Forwarded from Martinez Politics
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The fraud of fascist anti-Communism summarized

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On Nazi farming policy:

> "Although nominally privately owned, German farmland was controlled by marketing boards to set production and fix prices under a quota system... farms were organized into cartels, which were regulated by a government body known as Reichsnahrstand (RNST) where the Nazi state decided 'everything from what seeds and fertilizers were used to how land was inherited"

The Hereditary Farm Law of 1933 made it impossible for farmers to sell their property and leave the industry, shackling them down to these more or less state-run farms.

From "Hitler's Garden of Eden":

> "If they proved their diligence they could receive up to twenty-five hectares. The ethnic German farms were subjected to high SS quotas and random confiscations of milk and other produce. Ukrainian and Byelorussian prisoners and forced laborers tilled the reserve farmland not allotted to the German and SS farmers."

So even in Ukraine, where the Germans kept Soviet collective farm system in place, they fake-privatized some farms exclusively for Germans but then "subjected them to high SS quotas and random confiscations" aka they were not private at all.

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"The Nazis viewed private property as conditional on its use - not as a fundamental right. If the property was not being used to further Nazi goals, it could be nationalized."

This is the concept of eminent domain but without an independent judiciary to limit state abuses or allow citizens to take the state to court. There were no checks and balances on the state in Nazi Germany - it was fundamentally totalitarian.

Watch: Hitler's Socialism: The Evidence is Overwhelming

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Fascism = Communism wrapped in a flag

National Socialism = Communism wrapped in a flag and a race

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On the NS seizure of economic power into state hands.

> The Nazis destroyed the four basic freedoms of private capitalism
> Eliminated were the freedoms of trade, contract, association & markets
> The government determined the general economic policies, instituted a peculiar system of economic planning & regulated all the markets in the economy
> Government went into business; it performed many administrative & quasi-managerial functions in the economy
> Compulsory business organizations of private owners operating throughout the regime
> The Nazi party gradually occupied all strategic positions in the economy
> It reserved for itself a series of economic prerogatives & thereby became the major holder of power in the economy
> Big business was pushed to the back seat

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The MEFO scam.

The Nazi regime did not have the funds to pay back the firms who they borrowed from so they "forced banks to buy government bonds, seized money from savings accounts and insurance companies... and printed more Reichsmarks to meet the cash shortage, which resulted in inflation while exacerbating the shortage of raw materials".

Source: Killing History

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PraxBen on that "economic miracle" bit we always hear about.

"By 1936 the German recovery was no more advanced than that of Britain or the United States"

"Deficit spending was dominated by war preparation"

"Full scale rearmament had begun by 1934 and 70% of government expenditures had gone toward it by 1939"

"The economy recovery of the 1930s was like a balloon. The Nazis tried to fill the balloon with air but they could never tie the knot to keep it stable. The massive short term gain with equally massive long term consequences"

From the booklet "Deficit Spending in the Nazi Recovery"

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Fascism is primarily anti-capitalist. Its fake anti-communism is a ruse to trick right-wingers into embracing it on social grounds.

Article

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By 1940 Hitler was fully convinced that he wanted a fully planned and regimented economy modeled on the Soviet Union.

> Hitler attributed the success of National Socialist economic policy primarily to state control of the economy. From 1940 at the latest, Hitler increasingly became a proponent of the state planned economy – partly because he was convinced of the superiority of the Soviet Union and its economic system. In his monologs to his inner circle (known as “table talks”) on July 27-28, 1941 Hitler said that “A sensible employment of the powers of a nation can only be achieved with a planned economy from above.”

> About two weeks later he said: “As far as the planning of the economy is concerned, we are still very much at the beginning and I imagine it will be something wonderfully nice to build up an encompassing German and European economic order.” The statement that as far as the planning of the economy was concerned one was still at the very beginning is important because it shows that Hitler was not thinking at all of a reduction of state intervention – not even for the time after the war – but, on the contrary, intended to expand the instruments of state control of the economy even further.

Source

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Forwarded from Martinez Politics
Did Hitler & Stalin Admire Each Other? | Martinez Politix Investigates

Duration:
01:08:11

Topic: In this episode I look into the relationship of Hitler and Stalin; did they admire each other? Or were they diametrically opposed?; the evidence is overwhelming that Stalin and Hitler admired each other; Hitler privately praised the communist butcher as "brilliant" and "the greatest living statesmen"; he was impressed with Stalin's brutality and "revolutionary consistency"; Stalin liked Hitler too; he was so enamored with Hitler that he ignored clear intelligence warnings of an impending invasion believing his friend Hitler would not do it; Hitler eventually came to support and copy the Soviet planned economic model to achieve his own military and imperial goals of Lebensraum and autarky; Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin all shared a common hatred of capitalism, money and wealth. (Sources used: Rainer Zitelmann, L. K. Samuels, Timothy Snyder, Volker Ullrich, David Irving, Alan Bullock, Juliana Geran Pilon, John Lukacs, A. James Gregor & others)

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In Hitler's second book, he muses about Russian Bolsheviks removing the Jewish Bolsheviks and thereby Russifying Bolshevism, which he liked, proving that he was not against Bolshevism in and of itself but only against Jews; also proving that he was a staunch anti-capitalist amenable to Communism:

> "However, it is conceivable that in Russia itself an inner change within the Bolshevist world could take place insofar as the Jewish element could perhaps be forced aside by a more or less Russian national one. Then it could also not be excluded that the present real Jewish-capitalist-Bolshevist Russia could be driven to national-anti-capitalist tendencies."

Hitler was so psychotically anti-capitalist that he described Stalin's Russia there as "capitalist" even though it was the antithesis of capitalism. Later, Hitler confirmed this view that he believed Stalin eliminated the Jewish element in his government, but was still hostile to Russia anyway:

> "'Alluding to Mussolini’s letter in January, and to his own reply a few days before the meeting, Hitler emphasized how British intransigence had forced him to conclude an alliance with Russia. But, although Stalin had deprived Bolshevism of its Jewish and international character and turned it into a ‘slavic Moscowitism’, Russia remained for Germany an ‘absolutely foreign world’. ‘For Germany only one partner came into question: Italy. Russia was only insurance cover.’" (Source: Ian Kershaw, Hitler: 1936-1945 Nemesis)

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Hitler "clung to the positive assessment" of Stalin even after he invaded the USSR:

> "From early 1940 onwards, however, there were an increasing number of statements made by Hitler in which his admiration for Stalin and the Bolshevist regime become clear. These, no doubt, also served the purpose of defending the pact he had concluded with Stalin in 1939. But even after the attack on the USSR, when Hitler no longer had an alliance to justify, he clung to his positive assessment of Stalin. On September 23, 1941, Sturmabteilung (SA) Standartenführer Werner Koeppen noted the following statement by Hitler: 'Stalin was one of the greatest of living men because he succeeded in forging a state out of this Slavic family of rabbits, albeit only with the harshest of compulsion. For this he naturally had to avail himself of the Jews, because the thin Europeanized class which had formerly carried the state had been exterminated, and these forces would never again grow up out of the actual Russianhood.'"

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Stalin: socialist, dictator, imperialist, anti-capitalist.

Hitler: socialist, dictator, imperialist, anti-capitalist.

The only difference is that Hitler emphasized race and Stalin didn't. But Mussolini didn't emphasize race so he was indistinguishable from Stalin.

Two sides of the same socialist coin.

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Hitler, Stalin and Mussolini all agreed that they wanted to destroy the "capitalist democracies" despite both Mussolini and Hitler previously praising FDR as a fellow socialist.

> "That wasn’t quite right. As German negotiator Karl Schnurre had observed the month before, “despite all the differences in their respective worldviews, there is one common element in the ideologies of Germany, Italy and the Soviet Union: opposition to the capitalist democracies. Neither we nor Italy have anything in common with the capitalist West. Therefore it seems to us rather unnatural that a socialist state would stand on the side of the Western democracies.” Since capitalist democracy was their common enemy, why not pool resources?"

> "Hitler and Stalin had demonized each other over several years, but they also had interlocking interests. Hitler wanted to invade Poland without fear of war on two fronts, so he had to neutralize the Soviets. He also needed access to Russia’s natural resources. Stalin coveted German industrial and weapons technology. To his cadre, he explained that he could destroy Germany later, after Hitler had assisted him in destroying the most “reactionary” imperialist capitalist countries, England and France. Though some balked, most communists world-wide acquiesced. Even the Marxist historian Eric Hobsbawm later acknowledged he’d had “no reservations” about it at the time."

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Stalin liked Hitler too. Moron Stalin ignored warnings of a coming German invasion because he thought his pal Hitler would not go through with it.

> "CONAN: And then there is Stalin. Universally described as shrewd and suspicious, canny, but who could not bring himself to accept overwhelming evidence that an invasion was about to happen."

> "Mr. LUKACS: Now added to this comes a very important element that some people have known, and that's Stalin had a liking for Hitler. Stalin greatly admired Hitler. The odd thing is that his respect and admiration for Hitler appeared in drips and drabs even after the war started, even toward the end of the war, here and there he dropped some quite comfortable remarks about Hitler, or rather he had admired. And another element connected with this is that Stalin had a great liking and respect for Germans and for Germany. And that goes back to pretty early in his career."

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