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Was Hitler a Zionist?
0:00 Did Hitler want to exterminate “the Jews” or expel them?
0:40 Who created “Israel” and when?
3:33 Are Caucasians “lost Israelites”?
10:16 Who are the “Palestinians”?
12:57 What is the Zionist agenda?
22:26 Where is the “Palestinian” Messiah?
According to the Auschwitz-Birkenau Museum, the Holocaust was so secret and effective that only the remains of 700 bodies were found. By some “miracle”, as Baron Rothschild put it, “Israel”—which is named after the heretical kingdom of Samaria (1 Kings 12)—rose to become the greatest superpower in the Middle East immediately after the Holocaust.
Nazis called prisoners at Auschwitz “Muselmanner” (Muslims) when they were about to die from starvation like many “Palestinians” today. They also chanted in the streets: “"Juden raus! Raus nach Palästina!" ("Out with the Jews! Off to Palestine!"); see Hannah Arendt, Eichmann in Jerusalem (Viking Press, 1963) at 228. Yet, Zionists like the Rothschilds claim that the establishment of the state of Israel was a “miracle”, not the Final Solution to get European Jews to kill and be killed by Palestinians, as Romans called Judeans.
Auschwitz operated from 1942 to 1944, even though the British ceded mandatory Palestine to the Rothschilds as early as 1917. The Nakba (“catastrophe”), which took place in 1948, immediately after WWII, visited worse horrors on Palestinians over a much longer period that continues today. This prompts the question where (or rather, where else) the “Nazi” “fascists” and “terrorists”—as Albert Einstein and other Jewish intellectuals characterized the newly established state of Israel in an open letter to the New York Times in 1948—obtained the training and means to commit such atrocities at such scale so quickly.
While Ashkenazis identify as the fictional “Lost Tribes” of Israel, Ashkenaz—who is not a Semite—is the biblical nephew of Magog (Genesis 10:2-3), as in Gog and Magog (Ezekiel 38). Magog refers to Germany (Bereshit Rabbah 37:1), whereas Gog is the prince of Magog (Ezekiel 38:2) whose namesake is the Amalekite prince Agag (1 Samuel 15:8). Amalek in turn is the son of Edom (Genesis 36:12), who represents Rome or the West (Megillah 6b:1).
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