tyb
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Been a good night with some real digs and decodes,
finally like the old days of comparing notes, ideas and direction of the source of the troubles, we already knew that there was a strong possiblity that the german regime had move into the e.u from previous digs. but now they are physically resurfacing with their attempted takeover of the great reset.
The names at the top and those hidden have all the same agenda,
Bloodlines and dominance with extreme callousness of humanity to get their Build Back better, green new deal and Eugenics agenda finished. Speech suppression, socialism, the playbook being played again from ww2 down to the storming of the capital and riots, antifascists.
The Fourth reich and 1000 points of light or 1000 years of reign
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https://www.historytoday.com/history-matters/fears-fourth-reich
Although Hitler’s Third Reich collapsed almost 75 years ago, its successor – the Fourth Reich – is alive and well. That, at least, is the claim of some European and US journalists, politicians and other activists, who, in recent years, have used the phrase to attack opponents.
In the last decade, Greek leftists and Russian nationalists have accused the German Chancellor Angela Merkel of using the EU to impose a German-dominated Fourth Reich on Europe. Arab critics have accused the Israeli government of acting like a Fourth Reich, following its military actions in Gaza and Lebanon. And left-wing activists in the US have charged Donald Trump with trying to establish a Fourth Reich in America.
The spread of the Fourth Reich as a polemical slur is more than merely the latest example of a wired world’s casual use of inflationary and defamatory rhetoric. As a historical concept, the Fourth Reich has a complicated history, with important lessons for how we conduct political discourse.
Today, the idea of the Fourth Reich is synonymous with resurgent Nazism, but it is more ominous than ‘neo-Nazi’, as it designates something actual rather than merely aspirational. The Fourth Reich suggests that right-wing extremists are on the brink of power, or have already attained it. Ironically, the term actually had a very different meaning. The Fourth Reich was first used as a rallying cry in the 1930s by German opponents of the Nazi regime. The groups who employed the term spanned a broad political spectrum: from left-wing German exiles in Paris, who produced a ‘Draft Constitution for a Fourth Reich’ in 1936, to conservative monarchists, who spoke of a future post-Nazi Fourth Reich of Christian unity. Equally strange bedfellows were Jewish refugees in New York, who called their neighbourhood the ‘Fourth Reich’, and renegade Nazis belonging to Otto Strasser’s schismatic ‘Black Front’ organisation,
who envisioned the Fourth Reich as a place where a ‘genuine’ National Socialism would one day be realised.
The term’s meaning changed dramatically after the Second World War. As Allied forces occupied Germany, fears that unrepentant Nazis would refuse to surrender – and one day seek to return to power – gradually transformed the term from one of hope to one of fear: a fear that was far from groundless. Although today Germany’s postwar democratisation is often seen as inevitable, in 1945-47 Nazi groups challenged Allied troops with various coup attempts. All of them were eventually suppressed, but their media coverage hyped the averted threats as harbingers of a possible Fourth Reich, changing the term’s meaning.
In the decades that followed, the Fourth Reich became the term of choice for activists who hoped to keep the western world vigilant about the evolution of West Germany’s fledgling democracy. When the Federal Republic faced neo-Nazi threats in 1951-52 – with the rise of the Socialist Reich Party (SRP) and the uncovering of the Nazi ‘Gauleiter Conspiracy’ – western newspapers actively warned of a possible ‘Fourth Reich’. The same was true around the time of the ‘swastika wave’ of antisemitic vandalism in 1959-60 and the rise of the far-right National Democratic Party (NPD) in 1966-69. Such warnings continued through the anxious years surrounding German unification in 1990. In short, the Fourth Reich was a probationary term, reminding Germans that the West had not forgotten the Nazi past.
The Fourth Reich was also applied to the US. Thanks to the racist backlash against the Civil Rights Movement, the escalation of the Vietnam War and the scandals of the Nixon administration, many on the political left claimed that a Fourth Reich was dawning in America. In a 1973 interview, the writer James Baldwin decried American voters’ decision to return ‘Nixon … [to] the White House’, declaring that: ‘To keep the n- in his place, they brought into office law and order, but I call it the Fourth Reich.’
continued in next post