vo2Max
Rotation Player
- Joined
- Oct 17, 2024
- Replies
- 331
Cope betterYou owned those libtards!
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Sign Up Now!Cope betterYou owned those libtards!
is that your "before" picture or the "after" one? Dude if its the "After" one you really should demand a refund.....
Get a jobI am not advocating for any one human or political or religious group. All are subject to human corruption. (Only the true God is holy and righteous).
In the U.S. the corruption runs deep through both political parties - Democrats and Republicans.
Trump is a change-agent and disruptor, but Trump is like all of us - fallen people with faults.
I'm thinking there are hurdles for this person.Get a job
Poor Gina went to the Trump dinner and sat at his table even..... USA USA USA....TBH, this is delivering much more than I had hoped
can johsnmith tell me if now that Trump is giving the green light to be corrupt and bribe foreign officials, does this mean that Hunter Biden is now MAGA? that's what he was accused of doing by MAGA yeah? And all along he was a visionary for the movement!
Wow, the leftards have saved Australia...... lolWonder how Sky and the rest of the Murdoch scum will skew this as a loss for Albo.
US President Donald Trump has slapped 25 per cent tariffs on steel and aluminum imports, but will give “great consideration” to an exemption for Australia after a phone call with Anthony Albanese.
Draining the swamp and finally ending the corruption of sleepy joe!
WASHINGTON, Feb 10 (Reuters) - President Donald Trump on Monday planned to sign an executive order that directs the Justice Department to pause prosecutions of Americans accused of bribing foreign government officials while trying to gain business in their countries.
According to a copy of a fact sheet seen by Reuters, the order is aimed at restoring American economic competitiveness by ordering "revised, reasonable enforcement guidelines for the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) of 1977."
That's the thing about diplomacy. Countries don't have friends, they have interests.but will give “great consideration” to an exemption for Australia after a phone call with Anthony Albanese.
Original Paragraph | Verdict & Reasoning |
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In 1923 Adolf Hitler incited an insurrection against the German government. He was tried, given a slap on the wrist, and became a convicted felon. Despite being treated charitably by the judge, Hitler claimed the trial was political persecution and successfully portrayed himself as a victim of the “corrupt" Social Democrats. | Partially True – Hitler did lead the Beer Hall Putsch in 1923, an attempted coup. He was arrested, tried, and sentenced to five years but served only about nine months in comfortable conditions. While he did claim political persecution, his main rhetorical enemies were more often communists rather than Social Democrats. |
Hitler cleverly positioned himself as the voice of the "common man," railing against the "elites," cultural "degeneracy," and the establishment, who he all labeled as "Marxists." He claimed the education system was indoctrinating children to hate Germany, and promised to return Germany to greatness. | Mostly True – Hitler did frame himself as a defender of the "common man" against elites and was vocal about opposing "cultural degeneracy." He broadly labeled his enemies as "Marxists," though his criticisms of the education system were less explicitly about children "hating Germany" and more about rooting out perceived leftist influences. |
To solidify his base, Hitler masterfully scapegoated minorities for the nation's problems, exploiting societal divisions with an "us vs. them" narrative. Many Germans took the bait. Hitler's Nazi Party continued to gain traction, until he became Chancellor in 1933. | True – Hitler and the Nazi Party blamed minorities, particularly Jews, for Germany’s economic and social problems, fueling antisemitic and nationalist rhetoric to gain political support. He was appointed Chancellor in January 1933. |
Hitler appointed German oligarchs as his economic advisors. He proceeded to privatize government-run utilities, solidifying support of the economic elite. | Partially True – Hitler did work with industrialists and privatized some state-owned businesses, but the term "oligarchs" isn't commonly used for his economic advisors. His economic policies were a mix of state control and private industry cooperation. |
With the working class divided along cultural and ethnic lines, the Nazis shut down workers' unions and abolished strikes. | True – The Nazis dismantled trade unions in 1933 and banned strikes, replacing them with the state-controlled German Labor Front. |
Progressives and trade unionists were imprisoned and sent to concentration camps. Corporate profits skyrocketed while working-class Germans lived paycheck to paycheck. | Partially True – Political opponents, including trade unionists and leftists, were indeed imprisoned or sent to concentration camps. Corporate profits increased, but the claim that working-class Germans "lived paycheck to paycheck" is an oversimplification—some benefited from Nazi economic policies while others struggled. |
Hitler, who became a billionaire while in office, knew he and his clan of oligarchs could get away with the scam if they constantly had an "enemy within" to blame while the corporatocracy robbed the country blind. | Partially True – Hitler amassed great wealth through book sales, state gifts, and tax avoidance, but calling him a "billionaire" is likely an exaggeration in modern terms. The Nazis did exploit the economy and used scapegoating to maintain control. |
An easy target was one of the smallest minorities. Hitler removed birthright citizenship rights of Jews and started rounding them up for mass deportations for being "illegally" in the country. | Mostly True – The 1935 Nuremberg Laws stripped Jews of citizenship, but early Nazi policies focused on forced emigration before transitioning to mass extermination rather than "deportation for being illegal." |
The German press under Nazi rule highlighted instances of violence by Jews to convince the public that Jewish immigrants were a danger to the "real Germans." | Partially True – The Nazis used propaganda to vilify Jews, but they mostly framed Jews as conspirators or economic threats rather than emphasizing isolated violent acts. |
Hitler wasted no time dismantling democratic institutions. Loyalty wasn't just encouraged; it was demanded. Opponents were silenced. Media that dared to question him were vilified as "the enemy" and "Marxists." | True – Hitler quickly eliminated democratic institutions, arrested political opponents, and controlled the press, frequently branding dissenters as "Marxists" or enemies of the state. |
Hitler's Propaganda Minister, Joseph Goebbels, bragged about how the Nazis were able to intimidate the media into giving them favorable coverage, and didn't need to give direct orders. | Partially True – Goebbels controlled the media through both direct orders and implicit intimidation, though it's unclear if he explicitly "bragged" about not needing direct orders. |
The Nazi regime and its followers collected all books they saw as promoting "degeneracy" or what would be considered "woke" today, and burned them in large bonfires. They also burned books that promoted class consciousness. | Mostly True – Nazis burned books on topics they deemed "degenerate," including those promoting socialism, communism, or liberal ideas. However, equating it directly to modern "woke" terminology is an anachronism. |
Berlin had a thriving LGBTQ community in the 1920s, and even had the first transgender clinic. The Nazis burned it to the ground. LGBTQ people were sent to concentration camps and forced to wear triangle badges. Many were killed in the Holocaust. | True – Berlin had a flourishing LGBTQ scene in the 1920s. The Nazis shut down the Institut für Sexualwissenschaft, arrested LGBTQ individuals, and forced them to wear pink triangles. Many were persecuted and some perished in concentration camps. |
The Nazis also saw manhood as under threat by independent women who didn't rely on men. In 1934, Hitler proclaimed, “A woman's world is her husband, her family, her children, her house." Laws that had protected women's rights were repealed and new laws were introduced to restrict women to the home and in their roles as wives and mothers. | True – Nazi policies promoted traditional gender roles, and Hitler made statements similar to the one quoted. Laws discouraged women from professional work and emphasized their role as homemakers. |
Reproductive rights were severely rolled back, and doctors who performed abortions could face the death penalty. | Mostly True – Abortion was criminalized under Nazi rule, and doctors who performed illegal abortions could be harshly punished, though the death penalty was more commonly applied in specific cases involving "racial purity" concerns. |
Despite all of this, the German people didn't have a similar historical parallel to look upon as a warning. | True – There was no direct historical precedent for the rise of Nazi Germany at the time. |
Most Germans never acted like the sky was falling. Most just went along with their lives as usual, until many of their lives were snuffed out. | Partially True – While some Germans resisted, many were either indifferent or actively supported the Nazi regime until the consequences became undeniable. |
By the time Hitler's reign was forced to an end by the Allied Powers, 11 million people were murdered in the Holocaust, and 70-85 million were killed in WW2. | True – The Holocaust resulted in approximately 11 million deaths, including 6 million Jews. The total casualties of World War II are estimated between 70-85 million. |