What General Patton Said About the Germans Was Very Significant

Seen: a clip of the movie “Patton” (1970).

The Germans are “the only decent people left in Europe” — U.S. General George Patton, September 1945. Patton was fired by Supreme Commander Dwight Eisenhower after saying that. 

Far from being “evil,” the Germans were, as a rule, good and honorable men. Did you ever hear the true story about the German pilot who, in the heat of war, helped an American pilot guide his damaged plane back into allied territory? [1].

Patton was critical of America’s Jewish-created-and-led “De-Nazification” program for Germany [2]. Eisenhower was rumored to have been part-Jewish (his friends called him a “Swedish Jew”), and he also hated the Germans with a passion. Patton was killed in a mysterious “accident” two months later in Germany in Dec. 1945. Because Eisenhower “hated” the Germans, he was unfit for command of the European Theater. Then why was he given command of it? Guess! Eisenhower was also the first commander of NATO.

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[1] “The Charlie Brown and Franz Stigler incident” occurred on 20 December 1943.

[2] Four Jews can be credited with creating the “De-Nazification” program for Germany: Hans Habe, a Hungarian immigrant who was trained at the Jewish-filled Camp Sharpe (aka “Camp Shapiro”) in Pennsylvania and who controlled the post-war German press; and the Frankfurt School subversives Herbert Marcuse, Franz Neumann and Otto Kirchheimer, who were Marxists. Marcuse is the “godfather” of the New Left (1964-onward). Strangely, Nazism was treated as a “dangerous sickness” but Soviet communism, which was much more extreme and murderous, wasn’t treated as a dangerous sickness — in fact, the Soviets were our “allies” in WWII!

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