4,736 words
Übersetzt von Deep Roots.
English original here
Am 20. Januar 2009 wurde der erste schwarze Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten in sein Amt vereidigt. Read more …
4,736 words
Übersetzt von Deep Roots.
English original here
Am 20. Januar 2009 wurde der erste schwarze Präsident der Vereinigten Staaten in sein Amt vereidigt. Read more …
Sasha Polakow-Suransky
The Unspoken Alliance: Israel’s Secret Relationship with Apartheid South Africa
New York: Vintage, 2011
Israeli checkpoints, concrete walls, and the ongoing blockade of the Gaza strip continue to reinforce the growing opinion of Israel as an apartheid state. Sasha Polakow-Suransky’s book The Unspoken Alliance details Israel’s ties to the original apartheid state — South Africa. Read more …

Top: Nelson Mandela and Jewish Communist leader "Joe" Slovo. Bottom: NAACP President Kivie Kaplan posing with Martin Luther King Jr.
2,888 words
Editor’s Note:
This article demonstrates two important points. First, in South Africa as in the United States, the Jewish role in promoting “civil rights” for blacks is essentially the same. It springs from the same motives of anti-white hatred and has the same results: the rule of Jewish oligarchs over whites through black proxies and puppets. Read more …
4,642 words
German translation here
On January 20, 2009 the first black President of the United States was sworn into office. The man stumbled over the words of his inauguration oath and grinned. President Obama had been voted into office by 43% of the white electorate.
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Werner Heisenberg: The renowned physicist’s own Jewish colleagues and students eventually plotted his kidnapping, destruction, and murder.
Werner Heisenberg was only twelve years old at the outbreak of the Great War, but he always remembered the feelings of patriotism and ‘selfless exhilaration’ that the war aroused in the German people. Another man would write, “Germany was fighting for her existence, the German nation for life or death, freedom and future.” Werner’s father, an army reservist, was called for duty and sent home due to his wounds in 1916. It was a sense of duty and patriotism that would later prevent Werner Heisenberg from leaving Germany in the days before the Second World War.[1]