Perhaps if during or after WWII America had not exterminated in the American Rheinwiesenlager network of concentration camps so many of the 2.87 million Germans held by America in brutal conditions and denied the benefits of the Geneva Convention, and had allowed many of those people to emigrate to the US, rather than engaging in dysgeni…
Perhaps if during or after WWII America had not exterminated in the American Rheinwiesenlager network of concentration camps so many of the 2.87 million Germans held by America in brutal conditions and denied the benefits of the Geneva Convention, and had allowed many of those people to emigrate to the US, rather than engaging in dysgenics, the makeup of the US population today would be different and the population would be smarter and there would not be so many of the problems caused by the low mean IQ of Americans.
The exact numbers of Germans who, according to James Basque, were systematically murdered, including through a policy of starvation to death, with the deaths and policy covered up by America, is unknown but some put the figure as being as high as 1.7 million, when other deaths under American occupation are also taken into account.
Regardless of precisely how many perished, it was a large number and had they instead been treated humanely and permitted to emigrate to the US then the US would be seeing the benefits today.
Few years back I tried to find some engine parts for my fishin friends in northern Cuba. Persistent perusal of the ads in south Fla took me to the home of a recently deceased gentleman whose wife was disposing of his workshop.
Walking in to which was a journey into another world. Those lathes and machining tools whispered to me of a time when thousands of those exiled Germans took the time and care to produce parts the world has forgotten even can be made. Their work ethic and craftsmanship are extinct. Only a few geezers like meself even know they ever existed.
Perhaps if during or after WWII America had not exterminated in the American Rheinwiesenlager network of concentration camps so many of the 2.87 million Germans held by America in brutal conditions and denied the benefits of the Geneva Convention, and had allowed many of those people to emigrate to the US, rather than engaging in dysgenics, the makeup of the US population today would be different and the population would be smarter and there would not be so many of the problems caused by the low mean IQ of Americans.
The exact numbers of Germans who, according to James Basque, were systematically murdered, including through a policy of starvation to death, with the deaths and policy covered up by America, is unknown but some put the figure as being as high as 1.7 million, when other deaths under American occupation are also taken into account.
Regardless of precisely how many perished, it was a large number and had they instead been treated humanely and permitted to emigrate to the US then the US would be seeing the benefits today.
This!
Few years back I tried to find some engine parts for my fishin friends in northern Cuba. Persistent perusal of the ads in south Fla took me to the home of a recently deceased gentleman whose wife was disposing of his workshop.
Walking in to which was a journey into another world. Those lathes and machining tools whispered to me of a time when thousands of those exiled Germans took the time and care to produce parts the world has forgotten even can be made. Their work ethic and craftsmanship are extinct. Only a few geezers like meself even know they ever existed.
All part of zee plan.
Yet they were all duped by Hitler, so there is that.