Comments by "Tibore Goldberger" (@tiboregoldberger6817) on "Expert analyzes levels of classified documents seized at Trump's home" video.
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@nba1942 to all those Nazi crackheads of America we will not die at the hands of the Nazi Democratic party of anti-semite and racist murderersNazi persecution of political opponents exacted a terrible price in human suffering. Between 1933 and 1939, the criminal courts sentenced tens of thousands of Germans for "political crimes." If the police were confident of a conviction in court, the prisoner was turned over to the justice system for trial. If the police were unsatisfied with the outcome of criminal proceedings they would take the acquitted citizen or the citizen who was sentenced to a suspended sentence into protective detention and incarcerate him or her in a concentration camp. On the eve of World War II, concentration camps held about 25,000 inmates, most of them political prisoners.
Ernst Thaelmann, leader of the German Communist Party, was detained during a mass arrest of Communists following the fire that virtually ... [LCID: 78531]
Communist leader Ernst Thaelmann
Ernst Thaelmann, leader of the German Communist Party, was detained during a mass arrest of Communists following the fire that virtually destroyed the Reichstag (German parliament) building. Germany, date uncertain.
DIZ Muenchen GMBH, Sueddeutscher Verlag Bilderdienst
Anti-Nazi politicians and union workers either fled Germany or faced long-term confinement in a concentration camp. Ernst Thälmann, leader of the German Communist party since 1925 and one-time candidate for the German presidency, for example, had been arrested after the fire that destroyed German parliament building in 1933. He spent more than 11 years in the camps. The SS killed him in Buchenwald concentration camp on August 18, 1944, during an air raid on a nearby factory.
After 1939, with new territorial conquests and larger groups of potential prisoners, the concentration camp system expanded rapidly both in the number of prisoners and in geographic locations. Concentration camps increasingly became sites where the SS killed targeted groups of real or perceived enemies of Nazi Germany. Those used as forced laborers were deliberately undernourished and mistreated with the intent that they be "annihilated by work." Many prisoners died of starvation, disease, mistreatment or accident while at hard labor.
Author(s): United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC
SEE ALSO
Nazi Camps
ARTICLE
Nazi Camps
RELATED LINKS
USC Shoah Foundation—Living Histories: Vera Laska, Political Prisoner (external link)
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Well this sounds exactly what Adolf Hitler would have said after he talked to his Gestapo and SS enforces wasn't the Nazis also had discriminating evidence against opposition leaders Jews and anybody who disagreed with the with the Nazi Adolf Hitler like in the United States today enjoy the last breath of freedom America the the Democratic Nazis are going to choke you to deathNazi persecution of political opponents exacted a terrible price in human suffering. Between 1933 and 1939, the criminal courts sentenced tens of thousands of Germans for "political crimes." If the police were confident of a conviction in court, the prisoner was turned over to the justice system for trial. If the police were unsatisfied with the outcome of criminal proceedings they would take the acquitted citizen or the citizen who was sentenced to a suspended sentence into protective detention and incarcerate him or her in a concentration camp. On the eve of World War II, concentration camps held about 25,000 inmates, most of them political prisoners.
Ernst Thaelmann, leader of the German Communist Party, was detained during a mass arrest of Communists following the fire that virtually ... [LCID: 78531]
Communist leader Ernst Thaelmann
Ernst Thaelmann, leader of the German Communist Party, was detained during a mass arrest of Communists following the fire that virtually destroyed the Reichstag (German parliament) building. Germany, date uncertain.
DIZ Muenchen GMBH, Sueddeutscher Verlag Bilderdienst
Anti-Nazi politicians and union workers either fled Germany or faced long-term confinement in a concentration camp. Ernst Thälmann, leader of the German Communist party since 1925 and one-time candidate for the German presidency, for example, had been arrested after the fire that destroyed German parliament building in 1933. He spent more than 11 years in the camps. The SS killed him in Buchenwald concentration camp on August 18, 1944, during an air raid on a nearby factory.
After 1939, with new territorial conquests and larger groups of potential prisoners, the concentration camp system expanded rapidly both in the number of prisoners and in geographic locations. Concentration camps increasingly became sites where the SS killed targeted groups of real or perceived enemies of Nazi Germany. Those used as forced laborers were deliberately undernourished and mistreated with the intent that they be "annihilated by work." Many prisoners died of starvation, disease, mistreatment or accident while at hard labor.
Author(s): United States Holocaust Memorial Museum, Washington, DC
SEE ALSO
Nazi Camps
ARTICLE
Nazi Camps
RELATED LINKS
USC Shoah Foundation—Living Histories: Vera Laska, Political Prisoner (external link)
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