NSDAP not NAZI

Everything you always wanted to know about Nazis (but were afraid to ask)
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Stubble
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Re: NSDAP not NAZI

Post by Stubble »

I did nazi this coming Anne Frank-ly some of it seems controversial for no reason. Ultimately, as long as the left recognizes the sash on my sleeve, that's sufficient, and they can call me whatever they want so long as they get in the back of the Opel.
If I were to guess why no t4 personnel were chosen to perform gassing that had experience with gassing, it would be because THERE WERE NONE.
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Hektor
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Re: NSDAP not NAZI

Post by Hektor »

Scott wrote: Fri Mar 13, 2026 2:43 am The term Nazi is informal but it is not wrong.

To say otherwise is letting the Jews and the Left frame the narrative, which I refuse to do.

:-)
It's an opportunity to correct those using it. Simply show that you are formally better educated on matters. In discourse that can work wonders with the audiences.
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Scott
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Re: NSDAP not NAZI

Post by Scott »

Well, my evidence was the Goebbels diaries in the good doctor's native German language, not a translation.

This satisfied the criteria asked for by Roberto Muehlenkamp, a native German speaker who is fluent in several languages and practices law in Portugal, and contributes to the infamous Holocaust Controversies blog. Roberto disagreed with my take and asked me to find an example of a prominent Nazi using the German phrase Wir Nazis (we Nazis) or something similar.

And voila, Dr. Goebbels clearly does use the term "Nazi" with affection and pride.

For example, in the privacy of his personal journals ─ which were preserved for posterity per his orders by being photographed onto glass microfiche ─ the Gauleiter of Berlin and Reichs Propaganda Minister vents his spleen about Nazi colleagues like (SS Lieutenant General) SS-Obergruppenführer Dr. Arthur Seyss-Inquart, who was the former Chancellor of Austria, and by then a National Socialist official (Reichskommissar) in the German-occupied Netherlands, as being too soft on the Dutch Resistance. Dr. Goebbels laments, "He is no real Nazi."

The victorious Allies at the International Military Tribunal in Nuremberg evidently did not agree with Dr. Goebbels that Seyss-Inquart was too soft as a "Nazi" occupying official because he was hanged on October 16th, 1946.

:)
A young General Napoleon Bonaparte gives the mob a "Whiff of Grapeshot" on the streets of Paris, and that "thing we specifically call French Revolution is blown into space by it."
~ Thomas Carlyle
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Wahrheitssucher
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Re: NSDAP not NAZI

Post by Wahrheitssucher »

Scott wrote: Tue Mar 24, 2026 12:49 pm Well, my evidence was the Goebbels diaries
…Dr. Goebbels clearly does use the term "Nazi" with affection and pride.
R u going senile?
This isn’t contested.

You are repeatedly dodging the point about the term having being used as a pejorative for decades now. One used to demonise anyone who has nationalist loyalties.
A ‘holocaust’ believer’s problem is not technical, factual, empirical or archeological — their problem is psychological.
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Scott
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Re: NSDAP not NAZI

Post by Scott »

What I contest is that the term is pejorative vs. the more formal version "National Socialist."

I don't see it that way ─ and in any case, using the more formal NS terminology is hardly going to make it less pejorative to the Left or to the Kosher-certified corporate mass-media.

So, of course Nationalist is pejorative. We live in a world where Bolshie officials and their "Sanctuary Cities" full of activist AntiFa creeps are widely lauded as defenders of Democracy.

The most vile Immigrant street crime and Somali welfare fraud, etc. takes a back seat to authentic National values. And you are a Hater if you dare even notice.

:-)
A young General Napoleon Bonaparte gives the mob a "Whiff of Grapeshot" on the streets of Paris, and that "thing we specifically call French Revolution is blown into space by it."
~ Thomas Carlyle
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