I'm pretty sure anti-Semitism was prevalent in the Catholic parts as well.
In WWII many Catholics were sent to Concentration Camps for sheltering Jews, also they were the largest Jew smuggling organization during World War II
I'm pretty sure anti-Semitism was prevalent in the Catholic parts as well.
Well its not about that really, i think that most Americans dont even know how many countries there are in Europe either
Well its not about that really, i think that most Americans dont even know how many countries there are in Europe either
In WWII many Catholics were sent to Concentration Camps for sheltering Jews, also they were the largest Jew smuggling organization during World War II
In WWII many Catholics were sent to Concentration Camps for sheltering Jews, also they were the largest Jew smuggling organization during World War II
See, guys, just as I told you: Here's Exhibit A, a European who thinks that Americans are stupid and Europeans are clever. I rest my case.
Certainly individual Catholics helped Jews, especially in Spain and Portugal...but do you have any more information on Jew-smuggling activities? I associate this mostly with Denmark and, to some extent, Sweden.
Certainly Pius XII's refusal to condemn the holocaust was of no use.
http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/anti-semitism/piusdef.htmlThe vindication of Pius XII has been established principally by Jewish writers and from Israeli archives. It is now established that the Pope supervised a rescue network which saved 860,000 Jewish lives - more than all the international agencies put together.
At least the football match between US and UK at the world cup ended in a draw or I'm sure some in this thread have seen that as part of the great anti-American conspiracy.
The offending texts have already been adjusted, so get a grip.
I'm going to presume they are talking about the US, what you think Canada is going to save them?
Just read "On the Jews and Their Lies"... it bears remarkable similarity to what hey Nazis did, not only that but most of Germany was Lutheran...
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I have read everything from Martin Luther to which I've had access, which is why I can debate this. I will say two things to this and then be done because I don't think I can convince you otherwise, but I'd like to try.
1. There was no prevailing subscription to Luther's anti-semitic views in Germany in the 18th or 19th century. The statement "most of Germany was Lutheran" is moot in this instance (and I'm not fully sure it's accurate) because "most of Germany" didn't perpetrate the holocaust. The significance lay in the "court of public opinion" in support of the nazi party, which is exactly what the nuremburg rallies were; propaganda. A modern equivalent would be Donald Rumsfeld's propaganda of "WMD's in Iraq", used to steer American public opinion in favor of conflict with Sadam Hussein.
2. It was no novel idea, in regard to a purported "rival faction" to wantonly cause death, impress survivors into forced labor, and seize property. You're using hindsight from a position of relative insulation from such odious violence in the modern era. To say "Nazis got their ideas from Luther" would beg the question, "how did aggressive, conquering cultures ever figure out how to operate previous to the 16th century without some protestant ex-monk explaining how to conduct business?".
wiki said:During the First and Second World War, German leaders used the writings of Luther to support the cause of German nationalism.[20] At the 450th anniversary of Luther's birth, which took place only a few months after the Nazi seizure of power in 1933, there were celebrations conducted on a large scale both by the Protestant Churches and the Nazi Party.[21] At a celebration at Königsberg (which after 1945 became Kaliningrad) Erich Koch, at that time Gauleiter of East Prussia, made a speech which, among other things, compared Adolf Hitler and Martin Luther and claimed that the Nazis fought with Luther's spirit.[21] Such a speech might be dismissed as mere propaganda,[21] but, as Steigmann-Gall points out: "Contemporaries regarded Koch as a bona fide Christian who had attained his position [of the elected president of a provincial Church synod] through a genuine commitment to Protestantism and its institutions."[22]
Just read "On the Jews and Their Lies"... it bears remarkable similarity to what hey Nazis did, not only that but most of Germany was Lutheran...
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Funny, I was just looking at the forums on the civ5 website. There's a thread with almost the exact same title as this one. Instead of complaining about how the site took a supposed jab at America, that thread is complaining about the fact that America's factoid makes us look important, while all the other factoids are kinda dumb pieces of trivia. "ooooh, big important Americans went to the moon, but all they say about China is ice cream??!" (something like that, I'm paraphrasing).
I also am not seeing what's so wrong with adding some light touches to the game like the "fun facts." Some people act like the game is serious business and nothing light or humorous has ever been done before.
On the Ottoman civ description on the Civilization V site:
"Many Americans know very little about the Ottoman Empire (it occupies the blind spot Americans have for pretty much everything between Greece and China)."
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Did this change since you posted it?
I directly think in the opposite way.
The factoids are supposed unimportant but funny aspects.
Most entries do it very well. I like the entry for china about ice cream. Interesting, funny, and i didn't know about it, but sure somehow unimportant.
But the entry for america...haha, an unimportant, not worth no mention tiny little thing which is funny...haha...the first step on the moon? Seriously? This should be insulting to every person in america. It down values one of the biggest american achievements.