Crimes against Humanity 2004


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Captain Erich Priebke - at 91 the oldest prisoner in Europe
His unjust detention had been decided not in accordance
with the law but rather with the demands of world Jewry.

Date: Sun, 21 Mar 2004 16:25:46 0100
From: N <majxxn@tin.it>
Subject: PRIEBKE: Successful Conference in Trieste

VAE VICTIS!

 

Erich Priebke

 

On the evening of Saturday March 20, in a room of the Centro Letterario in Trieste, 80 persons gathered to express their solidarity with Captain Erich Priebke - at 91 the oldest prisoner in Europe - and their outrage at his unjust detention, which, as the two speakers explained, had been decided not in accordance with the law but rather with the demands of world Jewry.
The meeting was discretely organised and publicised (with wall posters throughout the city*) by the Cercolo Julius Evola, and held not under the name of any particular group but only the theme of VAE VICTIS.
Prof. Umberto Malafronte presented the case of Capt. Priebke as an effect of the present day's dominant "democratic and progressive" ideology, an important part of whose foundation was the myth of the "Holocaust" of the Jews of Europe.
Dr Paolo Giachini, Capt. Priebke's barrister, made it clear that his client's case was symptomatic of a Europe subjected to the ignoble and dangerous international order established at the Yalta conference and the Nuremberg trials: as the demonisation of the defeated German Reich was the very dynamic of that order, it was alas natural that those associated with the Reich during the war and still alive today should be treated like demons, not men. This was a sign of a sick world governed in line with "international legal standards" which the victors of 1945 imposed and had since maintained by overbearing military and economic force, and through mass destruction. Standards that were to be summed up, then as now, in no other terms than VAE VICTIS! The remedy: forthrightness in revising our profoundly falsified history. For a start.

* VAE VICTISLeggi speciali e repressione (il caso Priebke, with photo)


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