.…. countries greatest traitors ?, page-29

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    Chrysalis … you seem very concerned about 100,000 Homosexuals … and out of interest who were these 'gay' members of the Nazi party or High Command ? … you are sure they exist ? (doubtful) if so names should be available ?

    … there are a lot of mis-conseptions of the Nazi's and Hitler by people who rightly hate him and of course they lost the war, so their side of the story is rarely heard ….

    Also read below compared to 100,000 homosexuals …..

    "On January 30, 1930 the Politburo approved a resolution On Measures for the Elimination of Kulak Households in Districts of Comprehensive Collectivisation.

    This document has not achieved the notoriety of the Final Solution though it yields nothing to it in terms of scale and malice.

    It divided the kulaks into three categories. Those in the first were to be shot or imprisoned; the second, including the families of the first, faced deportation; the third were to be expelled from the kolkhoz, the collective farm, and settled on marginal marsh or forest land. In practise, those in the third category could not meet the State grain procurement from poor land, and so they were deported too.

    Mass starvation started when the snow melted in March, 1933. People ate rats, ants, and earthworms. They made soup with dandelions and nettles. The New York Evening Journal correspondent visited a village twenty miles from Kiev. "Still the activists searched for grain; shot mothers who they found digging up potatoes; beat those who were not swollen up in the tell-tale sign of starvation to make them reveal their source of food. "We were realising Historical Necessity," wrote the activist Lev Kopolev. "We were performing our revolutionary duty. We were obtaining grain for the socialist fatherland. I saw women and children with distended bellies, turning blue, with vacant, lifeless eyes. And corpses --- corpses in ragged sheepskin coats and cheap felt boots; corpses in peasant huts, in the melting snow of old Vologda, under the bridges of Kharkov..."
 
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