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639

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[–] 12 pts

Precisely why I posted this. So many people are in the same position. Once you know that it's literally evil kikes every fucking time, then you can start to fix what's wrong.

[–] 9 pts

It can be kind of difficult to untangle the mess of info I was given in "education" and the actual facts available to us.

There's this old saying, something like "The most effective lies always have an element of truth to them". Why not apply this to propaganda?

They taught us partial truths, while leaving out massively important details. I remember being in about 10th grade, and it was like the 6th time we had to look at all of the dead "holocaust" victim photos, and something occurred to me- "Why were the Germans doing this to the jews?" Nobody had asked, and the teacher certainly didn't offer this info. I asked, and the answer was something to the effect of "Well the Nazis thought they were the superior race, blonde hair and blue eyes, blah blah blah, so they began with the jews simply out of convenience, with the intention of purging the world of all non-blonde haired, blue-eyed people."

But here's the thing about propaganda- it's most effective when the target is in a heightened emotional state. For example, let's say you have... idk, a 10th grader. American kid from a good area, decent upbringing and such. Then you show him a picture of a pile of 30 nude typhoid ridden-corpses. It's shocking and gruesome, and you can't look away- like a car accident. You're so affixed on the images, focusing on the feelings of horror and anger at whomever caused this, that you never pause to think "Wait- why did this happen? What even happened? It's a pile of skinny corpses, what is this?"

Today, I know that most of those photos were pictures of Russians or other non-jews being held by commie-kikes. A lot of those photos of emaciated people- taken in Russia. Then you have all the edited photos. I remember being shown the photo of the Panzer with the German officer standing in front of it, a dead woman hanged by the fucking gun barrel. A few years later, I actually got to interact with tanks a little bit, and I recall once thinking "It must've been really difficult to hang a person from a turret like this, and then pose for a perfect photo op..." My questioning ended there though, too busy with duties to think on this shit any further.

Wasn't till late in my military career when the truth of a lot of things started becoming clear. I don't think I'll ever get over the guilt- guarding poppy fields for close to a year, only to come home and find out that like 50% of my town is now addicted to heroin or oxycodone. That was the last straw, I became totally disillusioned with the military and couldn't wait to get out.

[–] 7 pts

My first exchange with teachers about anything Nazi related wasn’t about the Holocaust, but rather about Mien Kampf specifically. Without anyone else in my life interested in the topic I had just enough interest to go buy the book myself and read it in a week. I was talking to my main teacher (a good man) and my principle, a short (I’d find out years later jewish) woman, after school. I can’t remember exactly what brought it up but they had made some statement on Hitler planning for decades to kill all the Jews and bragging about it mien Kampf. And without thinking I simply told them they were wrong, and told them in pretty good detail (as it was quite fresh) what he did actually say. I remember the whole exchange suddenly becoming so weird because I only read the book because I thought it was interesting only a small handful of major historical leaders pend their own books, and had no particular affection for Hitler. But what I remember was how truly obligated they both seemed to take their positions. Even at the time I wasn’t claiming I was right, but simply what was actually written, and being aware of it there in the conversation that they seemed to argue purely out of fear of being open minded, and how ridiculous that looked. And it only made me want to look into it more.

[–] 6 pts

Yup. Just like all those photos of blacks hung in the old south:

1) There were far more whites hung than blacks. Just like today where more whites are shot by cops than blacks.

2) The 13/55 problem was the same back then as well. Blacks were a smaller percentage of the population but constituted the majority of crime. Most of the blacks in those pictures? They raped white women, robbed and killed. Just like today.

3) In those days the country was so sparesly populated there wasn't a judicial system with the reach that it has now. Local communities solved their own problem.

You are right. The upside is that here we are on Poal. Even total retards like me have figured it out along side all others on here an all the other places online. The knowledge is spreading far and wide.

[–] 1 pt

White people lynched white people until we removed most of the genes for being impulsive rapists and murderers out of our population.

You need to remove rapists and murderers out of the gene pool

[–] 4 pts

My teachers gave similar answers. Totally baseless hate, old religious grudges and other shit the made no sense. I asked why the corpses were emaciated. My teacher got angry and sent me to the principles office. It was then I knew the holohoax was a lie.

[–] 3 pts

guarding poppy fields for close to a year, only to come home and find out that like 50% of my town is now addicted to heroin or oxycodone.

Why do we bother with the "real deal" opiods when fentanyl is super easy to create and does not require poppies at all.

Netflix is run by a bunch of faggots, and their original content drags on because it is poorly paced + overly long. That said, their War Machine film stood out to me because it not only crapped on 0bama but it mentioned that the Americans were forcing the Afghans to grow poppies, and were barring them from growing other crops.

That's another thing that Trump could have done, pulled out the troops and torched the drug fields. Maybe the rumors are true and the taliban would do that for us if we were outta there?

[–] 2 pts

Can you talk more about guarding poppie fields? How prevalent was this experience? Does it still happen?

[–] 2 pts

Taliban banned the production of poppy. The United states invaded one year later and poppy production soared. Really makes one think.

[–] 0 pt

I have several friends who served over there and they all said they were basically guarding poppy fields.

Read up on the Opiate Wars. Something not really taught in pulibc education so just more history repeating.

Not a vet but I get along with that crowd.

Basically, there isn't too much to tell. It's all under "COIN Ops" as one friend of mine put it, basically meaning counter-insurgency operations.

And it just so happens to be next to the poppy fields.

Does it still happen? Sure. Why not?

How prevalent? Depends on where you're deployed is what I've gathered.

[–] 1 pt

Afghan poppies are for heroin that goes to Europe. American heroin comes from Mexico. But still..

[–] 0 pt

It comes through Mexico, very often.

They've showed us the "drug routes". You'd be amazed how circuitous they are, starting in Afghanistan, going to Hong Kong, then to Vietnam, then to Russia, then back to Hong Kong, then to Australia, then to South America, and eventually smuggled up through Mexico.

Not a whole lot of poppy grows in Mexico; 90% of the total poppy in the world or more is grown in Afghanistan.