Nathaniel ball park franks have the joos and electrolytes
Brauchen Sie Daniel Lotion?
Das uberfehgel ist das shitposting diesen gynotology zersetzung mit hobbits und saurkrauters
The cia is haveing its first briss at a shiva
Das uberfehgel wants to get you molested by old pecker Faggots
Norsefire is the fictional White supremacist, Nordicist[2][3][4] and neo-fascist[5][6][7][8][9][10] political party ruling the United Kingdom in Alan Moore and David Lloyd's V for Vendetta comic book series. The organization gained power promising a stability and a restoration of the United Kingdom after a worldwide nuclear war between the United States and the Soviet Union decimates the Earth. The United Kingdom and Ireland survive due to their geographic isolation and the decommissioning of Britain's nuclear arsenal, but suffers widespread damage leading to societal instability, which is a catalyst for the rise of Norsefire.[2][11]
Due to the chaotic state of the world outside of the United Kingdom, the party gained power by promising order and security among the population.[11] However, while the Norsefire regime did indeed bring order back to the country, this order came at a cost. Political opponents (namely left-wingers), Jewish Britons, Black Britons, Asian Britons, Arab Britons, homosexuals, Irish and Italian Britons Catholics and people of non-Christian, non-Protestant faith were rounded up and sent to concentration camps.[10] With their potential enemies all removed within a short space of time, Norsefire began consolidating their power over the country.
In public, the party portrays itself as a Christian fascist party supportive of the Anglican communion.[12] In private, the party leaders are apathetic on the subject, and allowed higher-ranking members to not follow Christian morality or Christianity in private as long as it did not threaten the party's power. For instance, propagandist Lewis Prothero takes illicit drugs, Bishop Lilliman has relations with children, and three Fingermen attempt to rape Evey Hammond when they apprehend her.[12] The head of the party, Leader Adam Susan, actually worships Fate, the super-computer surveillance system that surveys the nation, and considers himself and his creation God. While this is not explored in the film, both novel and film imply that Susan/Sutler is not a fervent Christian so much as a person who values security and order, which he maintains by eliminating political opponents and cultural minorities. Similarly, the Islamophobia that Norsefire exhibits in the film is likely not the result of a hatred of Islam so much as a consequence of their perception of Muslims as terrorists, as well as that many Muslims are Arabs and thus violate Norsefire’s standards for racial purity. [9]
The Norsefire party is loosely based on Nazi Party and the private religious views of Adolf Hitler.[4][8][13][10]
In the story, the party is presented as rising during a post-apocalyptic Britain that has narrowly avoided an international nuclear war from 1988 on.[10] As displayed during the story of Evey Hammond, although the United Kingdom did not suffer any nuclear attacks, the effects of full-scale nuclear war on other countries had severe effects on the environment, and thus on agriculture. This in its turn severely damaged the British economy and mass riots broke out. As Evey relays to V, an anarchist determined to destroy Norsefire, the government quickly collapsed and chaos overran the country.[10]
The situation turned after several years. From the madness of the violence came the ultra right-wing Norsefire regime: fascists[5][6][7][9] (similar to Oswald Mosley's British Union of Fascists) that united with the surviving big companies and businesses, giving them the appearance of wealth and stability. After seizing control of the country, the party gained complete control over the Anglican Church and other influential organizations to promote doctrines favorable to Norsefire.[12] They began promoting and demoting members of the clergy as they saw fit. They also took over the television companies, creating NTV (Norsefire Television), and implemented the technologies that would allow for a closely monitored society, including closed-circuit television. In the novel the British monarchy continues under Queen Zara. No direct reference is made to the monarchy in the film, though God Save the King is played during a television comedy sketch to greet an actor playing Chancellor Sutler.
By the time the story of the graphic novel has begun, Norsefire has shut down the concentration camps and is essentially in complete control of society. Although competition exists between the varying branches of the state, they generally have complete control over the United Kingdom. Their control over the state soon faces a threat from V, the anarchist protagonist of the story who seeks to overthrow the regime and allow the people to decide their own fate. By the end of the novel, every top government official and notable figure in Norsefire has died, except for Lewis Prothero who is driven insane by V and incapacitated by Norsefire early on in the novel, and Eric Finch who leaves Norsefire after he kills V and when Norsefire collapses.
In the movie, anti-Irish sentiment is implied to be an element of party policy, Prothero mocks a member of the technical staff on his show as "that Paddy" and Creedy views Finch with suspicion on the grounds that Finch's mother was Irish and then gloats about the death toll in Ireland from the "St. Mary's Virus"[2], although the outbreak in Ireland may have been an unintended result of infected British citizens travelling to the Irish Republic.
Motto
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A common recurring motto is "Strength Through Purity, Purity Through Faith" (or in the film, "Strength Through Unity, Unity Through Faith"). The British Union of Fascists also used a similar slogan, "Action within unity". Another maxim often used by Norsefire as a salute is "England Prevails".
The unfriendly atmosphere of V for Vendetta could be attributed to the government’s slogan, “Strength through unity, and unity through faith.” This slogan is used by the government as propaganda to get the people to believe that the nation will only be strong if it is united, and it will only be united if there is unquestioning trust in the government. Likewise, in 1984, the slogan “War is Peace; Freedom is Slavery; and Ignorance is Strength,” is used by The Party to gain power. In both V for Vendetta and 1984, the government wants to be the supreme ruler of everyone and everything. Thus, the government needs the people to think that it is always right and to never stray from party thinking. In 1984, this is done by a branch of the administration known as the Ministry of Truth. The Ministry of Truth works to re-write history in the favor of the state of Oceania. For example, when the citizens of Airstrip One received less and less amounts of food, The Party made it seem like they were receiving more food than ever by rewriting their conjectures. Similarly, in V for Vendetta, a man blows up a building, but the government makes it look like they planned the explosion so that it appears to have control over everything.
"Unity makes strength" (Bulgarian: Съединението прави силата; West Frisian: Iendracht makket macht; Dutch: Eendracht maakt macht, pronounced [ˈeːndrɑxt maːkt mɑxt] (About this soundlisten); French: L'union fait la force) is a motto that has been used by various states and entities throughout history. It is used by Bulgaria and Haiti on their coats of arms and is the national motto of Belgium, Bolivia, Georgia and Bulgaria. Until 2000, it was the national motto of South Africa.
The motto was originally used by the Dutch Republic. It was derived from the Latin phrase concordia res parvae crescunt ("small things flourish by concord"), used in the Bellum Iugurthinum of Roman Republican writer Sallust.[1]
The similar moral of the Aesopic fable "The Old Man and his Sons" has been rendered in various related ways: "All power is weak unless united" (1668),[2] "Unity makes strength, strife wastes" (1685),[3] "Strength lies in union" (1867),[4] "Strength is in unity" (1887),[5] "Unity is strength" (title), "Union gives strength" (moral) (1894),[6] "Union is strength" (1912),[7] "In unity is strength" (1919);[8] although older versions are more specific: "Brotherly love is the greatest good in life and often lifts the humble higher" (2nd century),[9] "Just as concord supplies potency in human affairs, so a quarrelsome life deprives people of their strength" (16th century).[10]
Eendragt maakt Magt was a noble-society (Heeren-Sociëteit) founded in Rotterdam in 1830, originally based in the Kralingse Plaslaan. It originally held weekly meetings in the Den Otter coffeehouse on the corner of the Hoflaan and the Honingerdijk. On 1 May 1865, the Association of Shareholders began fundraising for a private building for the society. This coincided with the fiftieth anniversary of the Battle of Waterloo, which was one reason the society took the motto of king William II of the Netherlands. The architect Jan Verheul designed the new building, and it opened in 1903 on the corner of the Oudedijk and Waterloostraat. In 1980, the building was demolished to make way for the Caland Line metro route. A section of its ornate art nouveau facade (with the club's name between glazed tiles and leaf patterns) was preserved and built into the nearby Voorschoterlaan station.[17]
The name was also used as the business name of the tailors "Eendracht maakt macht", who in 1910 decided to rent a building on Oranjeboomstraat in Rotterdam, as a joint workshop-office to move their office out of their home. The fine dust from the finished goods caused many to suffer from emphysema and a larger workplace named "Eendracht maakt macht" was built.
The motto was also used by Helena Blavatsky in her editorials, in response to the internal feuding which often affected the Theosophical Society.
The motto of the fascist British government in the Doctor Who serial Inferno, mainly set in an alternate world, was "Unity is Strength," based on the slogan "Union is Strength" used by Oswald Mosley's contemporary Union Movement.[18] Similarly, Norsefire, the fascist British government in the 2005 film V for Vendetta uses "Strength through Unity" (along with "Unity through Faith") as a prominent slogan.[19]
The Latin form concordia res parvae crescunt is used by various institutions: the Ateneum in Helsinki, Finland; the former mortgage society in Riga, Latvia (now the Foreign Ministry).[20]
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Skilurus, a legendary Scythian king who taught the same moral by instructing his sons to break a bundle of arrows