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how many Jews were killed by the Muslims?
how many Muslims were killed by Jews?
why Jews trust Christians while they have been responsible for the the Holocaust?
why Israelis trust Bush while it is a common knowledge that his grandfather , Prescott Bush collaborated with Hitler?

2007-12-13 11:03:23 · 21 answers · asked by macmanf4j 4 in Politics & Government Politics

21 answers

It's the whole sordid world of religion. We'd be so much better of without it. A dangerous beast, man is, but that is not all there is to him. There is also the refined, the cultured, the thinking man, and so few of them are they, that we daily witness the spectacle of our foolish and ignorant masses being swept this way and that, promised everything and delivered next to nothing, claiming allegience to this party or that, and decrying the other for dull-mindedness or empty humanitarianism. So many arguments we can make! Our language abused, humans killing humans.

Some quotes:

It was morality that burned the books of the ancient sages, and morality that halted the free inquiry of the Golden Age and substituted for it the credulous imbecility of the Age of Faith. It was a fixed moral code and a fixed theology which robbed the human race of a thousand years by wasting them upon alchemy, heretic-burning, witchcraft and sacerdotalism.

..the great artists of the world are never Puritans, and seldom respectable. No virtuous man - that is, virtuous in the Y.M.C.A. sense - has ever painted a picture worth looking at, or written a symphony worth hearing, or a book worth reading...

It is the fundamental theory of all the more recent American law...that the average citizen is half-witted, and hence not to be trusted to either his own devices or his own thoughts.

The mob-man, a savage set amid civilization, ....believes firmly that right and wrong are immovable things - that they have an actual and unchangeable existence, and that any challenge of them, by word or act, is a crime against society. And with the concept of wrongness, of course, he always confuses the concept of differentness - to him the two are indistinguishable.

That erroneous assumption is to the effect that the aim of public education is to fill the young of the species with knowledge and awaken their intelligence, and so make them fit to discharge the duties of citizenship in an enlightened and independent manner. Nothing could be further from the truth. The aim of public education is not to spread enlightenment at all; it is simply to reduce as many individuals as possible to the same safe level, to breed and train a standardized citizenry, to put down dissent and originality. That is its aim in the United States, whatever the pretensions of politicians, pedagogues and other such mountebanks, and that is its aim everywhere else.

But to denounce it as un-American seems to me to be a ridiculous folly, a gross and idiotic misuse of words. The Klan is actually as thoroughly American as Rotary or the Moose. Its childish mummery is American, its highfalutin bombast is American, and its fundamental philosophy is American. The very essence of Americanism is the doctrine that the other fellow, if he happens to be in a minority, has absolutely no rights - that enough is done for him when he is allowed to live at all.

2007-12-13 11:48:11 · answer #1 · answered by Fraser T 3 · 3 3

The Nazis were Occultists, they traced their origins back to the Aryans of the Indus Valley.

That's why they used an inverted Buddhist symbol

As for numbers lets just say that too many people have been killed for stupid reasons.

The answer to the rest lies in politics and economy, not in peoples.

ADDED for 'Galahad'

Did you know that the first real extermination camps were on US soil and the first use of the Concentration camp was in Cuba after the so called liberation from the Spanish.

The British also used them in south Africa against the boars.

Just a little true History for you.

ADDED for 'eelfins'
I think you find the they were more influenced by Charles Darwin's sister and her theories which lead to Egenics

FURTHER NOTE FOR ASKER
There is a connection between Hitler and Jewish people though.
When he lived in Vienna, he worked as an artist painting post cards and his closest friends and business partners were Jewish.

FTWR

2007-12-13 19:46:55 · answer #2 · answered by Sly Fox [King of Fools] 6 · 2 0

The U.S. did not operate death camps; it liberated them. As to Muslims they are fighting in palestine for their national survival. Oil and philosemitsm are the primary motives of U.S. support for Israel,the latter being religously-based. It did not begin with Bush,but with Johnson in 1965. Neither Eisenhower nor kennedy were particularly partial to the idea of jewish domination of Palestine and both were deeply opposed to their acquisition of nuclear weapons which kennnedy in particular was concerned would trigger off a nuclear arms race in the Mideast since the Arab states would clearly be threatened by the jews being armed with nuclear bombs.

2007-12-13 19:41:40 · answer #3 · answered by Galahad 7 · 4 0

Nazis were responsible for Jewish Holocaust; not the Southern Baptist Leadership Conference. (Not all Christians fit in the same tent, as it were.)

Just because the Israeli's take money from Bush doesn't mean they trust him.

It was a nation that killed the most Jews, not a religion.

2007-12-13 19:10:56 · answer #4 · answered by Citizen1984 6 · 4 3

No. The Nazis actually denied the existence of God & Jesus.

First published:
Creation 24(3):47
June 2002
Browse this issue

by Jonathan Sarfati

The Nuremberg trials of leading Nazis conclusively proved that they attempted genocide against the Jews, resulting in the Holocaust, in which some six million Jews were killed. But one senior member of the US prosecution team, General William Donovan, compiled a huge amount of documentation that the Nazis also planned to systematically destroy Christianity.

Donovan’s documents—almost 150 bound volumes—were stored at Cornell University after his death in 1959, and are now being posted online at the Rutgers Journal of Law and Religion. This ‘criminal conspiracy’ involved the very top Nazis, including Adolf Hitler and propaganda chief Joseph Goebbels, as well as Hitler Youth leader and Nuremberg defendant Baldur von Schirach.

These documents show that the Nazis, right from the beginning, realized that the church would have to be neutralized because of its opposition to racism and aggressive wars of conquest. So they planned to infiltrate the churches from within; defame, arrest, assault or kill pastors; reindoctrinate the congregations; and suppress denominational schools and youth organizations.

Bible-believing, evangelical churches were in the forefront of opposition, as opposed to compromising churches. Without a firm belief in the inerrancy of the Bible, liberal churches were more readily inclined to ‘reinterpret’ Christianity to suit the ruling pro-evolution ideology, which is similar to what happens with Darwinistic ‘science’ today.

As early as 1937, Protestant churches issued a manifesto objecting to Nazi policies, and the Nazis retaliated by arresting 700 pastors.

In an ominous parallel with current clamours by humanist and self-professed ‘civil liberties’ groups to ‘keep Creation in the church’ and obliterate all traces of Christianity from public life and schools, ‘The various Christian Churches … were confined as far as possible to the performance of narrowly religious functions, and even within this sphere were subjected to as many hindrances as the Nazis dared to impose.’

All this furthered the Nazis’ aim of a ‘slow and cautious policy of gradual encroachment’ to eliminate Christianity and use the churches’ organizational structures for their own purposes.

http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v24/i3/nazi.asp

2007-12-13 19:13:26 · answer #5 · answered by The Wiz 7 · 3 3

Hitler was a devout Roman Catholic, his SS were modeled after the Jesuits.

2007-12-13 21:26:29 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

Christians did not kill the Jews. Good grief. Study your History. They were not true Christians and chose to be led by a mad man.
It doesn't make any different what your ancestors did.it is not to be blamed on the third or fourth generation.

Do not bash a religion.It can get you in a place you do not want to be.In a corner you can not get out of.

2007-12-13 19:11:20 · answer #7 · answered by ♥ Mel 7 · 4 4

Wow....you have probably won my most ignorant person of the day award.

No Nazis where not Christians. Hitler was early on in life, but then he described it as "A religion for weaklings". Get off line for five seconds, and look it up in a good, old fashioned encyclopedia.


EDIT: Never mind, the person above me won the most ignorant person of the day award.

2007-12-13 19:09:03 · answer #8 · answered by Anonymous · 3 4

But Jesus didn't kill those people. Hitler did.
Jewish people killed Jesus for no reason.
They allowed Roman soldiers to whip Jesus, they
allowed Jesus to go through pain...

When all Jesus wanted to do is to heal people, take no money, help people, spread the word, and everything good.

2007-12-13 19:21:58 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

"That is a load of garbage. Nazis were not Christians, Christians were therefore not responsible for the Holocuast and what somebody's granddad did or was does not automatically mean the son is the same thing."

Nazi's were Christian, Hitler was actually a devout Christian and some Christian (and German Pagan) symbols were used in Nazi symbols.

But you didn't consider that, did you?

"The Nazis in fact were secularists who believed in Social Darwinism,"

Actually the specific religion Nazi's practiced was called Positive Christianity, they may have believed in some sort of forced racial darwinism, but this was not their religion.

Joe Kennedy, Prescott Bush, yada yada yada, you can't judge people on family members they had limited (if any) contact with.

"No Nazis where not Christians. Hitler was early on in life, but then he described it as "A religion for weaklings". Get off line for five seconds, and look it up in a good, old fashioned encyclopedia."

From one of those good "old fashioned" encyclopedia's:

"Nazism claimed to adhere to Positive Christianity which attempted to replace traditional Christian beliefs with those agreeable with Nazism, which many German Christians accepted. Even in the later years of the Third Reich, many Protestant and Catholic clergy within Germany persisted in believing that Nazism was in its essence in accordance with Christian precepts"

You've just been what's known as "schooled"

"No. The Nazis actually denied the existence of God & Jesus."

Considering they issued statements in both Der Stürmer and Völkischer Beobachter backing Positive Christianity, you're not going to win. I can find you a source that says Nazi's were aliens, it doesn't make it true.

2007-12-13 19:08:57 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 4 6

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