[From an e-list]
12-31-06
Saddam and the Nazis: the Not-Surprising Connection
The almost-meaningless term "crimes against humanity" was invoked at the trial and execution of Saddam Hussein.
But more importantly, that term was first invoked during a more-infamous trial: that of the Nazis, at Nuremberg just after World War II.
What does "crimes against humanity" mean? It's hard to say. It can mean different things to different people. It's one of those vague terms cooked up by Jews [like "hate crime"]. A Jew named Murray C. Bernays dreamed up the original idea of charging the Nazis in court with "crimes against humanity" [1]. His idea was to rope-in not just a few Nazis, but lots of them, under that slogan. And how ironic that Bernays' "mentor" of sorts was another Jew, the author Raphael Lemkin, who invented the term "genocide" and who's ideas inspired Bernays [2]. Bernays drafted the idea of prosecuting Nazis under an "international" law which didn't even exist. [It was actually a very clever plan: it made Jewish/allied vengeance against the Nazis seem "legal," and further, it created a legal precedent for prosecuting future enemies of the Jews, such as Saddam].
Whether illegal, ex post facto law and vague, hearsay "proof" was offered at Nuremberg seemed not to matter. The Jews wanted vengeance against the Nazis and they got it, via the allies. And the Jews wanted vengeance against Saddam for his Scud-missile attacks against Israel during the Gulf War, and they got it, too.
Saddam and the Nazis: victims of Jewish "law."
[Note to newer readers: we were not fans of Saddam Hussein. We simply oppose wars-fought, and Middle-Eastern-dictators-hung, solely for Israel's benefit].
[1] Lt. Colonel Murray C. Bernays [1895-1970], lawyer, U.S. War Department
[2] Lemkin and the idea of "international felonies": http://www.ihr.org/jhr/v02/v02p-19_Martin.html
---------------------------
Blog:
When Victims Rule:
National Alliance:
Books: