Crimes and MerciesJames Bacque
James Bacque's second book, entitled Crimes and Mercies, which provides
new and hair-raising info (over and above that provided in his 'Other
Losses') on the very little known massacres perpetrated by the victorious
Allies against the prostrate German nation, after the latter's surrender
in 1945. Curiously, Bacque does not categorise this unimaginable horror
as a "holocaust". Yet, his estimate of German victims exceeds by far
the well-known mystical figure of 6 million Jewish holocaust victims
that is fiercely promoted by Zionists and their sycophants.
In the spirit of the times and in a century replete with holocausts,
why should humanity not designate a German Holocaust, especially since
it seems to be far more demonstrable - and morally far more reprehensible
- than the coercively-proclaimed Jewish one?
Bacque estimates the number of murdered Germans - military and civilian,
but for the most part civilian: women, infants and children, as well
as the elderly - at a minimum of 9,300,000 and at a maximum of 13,700,000.
Imagine: these deaths of innocents occurred after the war, in the
period 1945-1950, when the German population surrendered itself
unconditionally
to the tender ministrations of the freedom-and-democracy-loving Allies!
Their numbers exceed by far the German total losses over the entire
period of the war! This holocaust rivals in magnitude even the Stalin-operated
holocaust-by-hunger of Ukrainians in 1933!
How was this possible? Bacque himself expresses puzzlement as to why
and how it could have happened that leading Western democracies, so
naturally prone to humanitarian works of mercy in the Christian tradition,
should have, in this instance, acted knowingly and with frankly enthusiastic
cruelty in the style of one of the greatest mass murderers in history
- J.V. Stalin - to perpetrate against the German people unthinkable
crimes every bit as heinous as Stalin's.
He observes that, in counterpoint, the victors did not act in the
same way against the conquered Japanese enemy. He reports General
MacArthur, as Military Governor of Japan, to have demanded of Washington
enough food to keep civilians alive: "Give me bread or give me bullets",
he asked; and, indeed, Washington gave him bread.
Yet, at the same time, Washington gave the German nation mass starvation
and death through the barbarian Morgenthau Plan, a brutal and senseless
variance in approach which Bacque is at a loss to explain. I guess
maybe Mr. Bacque does not yet fully appreciate the concept of "Talmudic
vengeance".
Fifty years later, this vengeance is apparently not yet at an end.
Bacque writes, in his 1997 work:
"A whole nation was maimed in peacetime, but when the events are even
mentioned by the German survivors, they are immediately hushed up
by their own government.
No one is allowed to dig for the corpses of the murdered prisoners
in Germany. The criminals go free. To defend them, lies are told by
historians who also defame the injured. Free expression of historical
opinion is curbed by legislation that grows ever more stringent as time
passes. No denial of history has ever been so successful".
In the context of this tragedy, and due to their inflicting unrelieved
persecution upon those attempting to set the record straight through
free and open discourse, I see the successive post-war puppet governments
of Germany and their minions as an especially contemptible category
of subhuman sewer-dweller. I cannot even begin to imagine what judgment
of history will, in time, represent just retribution against those
who have betrayed and abused so consistently their own nation, their
own people, in the service of viciously hostile alien interests. Their
actions are a dreadful horror story unto themselves. My heart lies
forever with the victims. My children and grandchildren shall know
their story.
Thought for the Day: "On the June day in 1941 that marked the beginning
of Hitler's assault on Russia, Churchill said with a smile, "If Hitler
invaded hell, I would at least make a favourable reference to the
Devil in the House of Commons." (James Bacque in "Crimes and Mercies,"
Little, Brown and Company, 1997).
This review originally appeared on the ZundelGram e-mail newsletter.
http://www.webcom.com/ezundel/index.html.
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Final Conflict
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