I finally got a shiny new scanner/copier/printer, so I can scan it. I got other photos of him being extremely happy, including Hitler excitedly telling some sort of anecdote to someone who I assume was kind of important.
I have yet to see Downfall, though my dad has, and he loved it. I do know that the film's Goebbels was in The Ninth Day with August Diehl, which was based off of Jean Bernard's Nazi-era prison diary.
Goebbels was such a hit with the ladies.
Speaking of Valkyrie, I did not find fault with the German cast of IB and even Eli Roth talking about how they would've loved the chance to kill Nazis and such, yet I found Tom Cruise's statement about his Hitler-killing fantasies a tad deranged.
Over the years, I now find racism and other such bigoted views as absurd, along with my usual outrage. I just can't comprehend how people can be so self-important about their repugnant views and I certainly can't see them as anything other than angry all of the time, because there's a lot out there that probably outrages them. For example, I was googling Zoe Saldana and one of the search results was for the Stormfront forums; they were outraged over seeing Uhura and Spock together in the new Star Trek. Seriously. Then other members called Spock a half-breed and how everyone, including aliens, are after white women. It was hilarious. So basically, I agree; it's just taken me a few years to get to the point where I can find the humor.
I was just discussing that with a co-worker on Monday. She was passing through our government documents section and was distracted by the books we have on the Nuremberg trials, which included an index of scientific experiments and photographic evidence. It's a bit too much for me to comprehend sometimes. Some of the photos I copied from Die Woche were of the kids and young women and enlisted men and there was this great vision of a perfect Aryan world and by the time the war ended, those kids and young adults were barely into their teens and twenties.
Then I thought of Futurama with their parody, The Scary Door. "Why should we believe you? You're Hitler!"
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I have yet to see Downfall, though my dad has, and he loved it. I do know that the film's Goebbels was in The Ninth Day with August Diehl, which was based off of Jean Bernard's Nazi-era prison diary.
Goebbels was such a hit with the ladies.
Speaking of Valkyrie, I did not find fault with the German cast of IB and even Eli Roth talking about how they would've loved the chance to kill Nazis and such, yet I found Tom Cruise's statement about his Hitler-killing fantasies a tad deranged.
Over the years, I now find racism and other such bigoted views as absurd, along with my usual outrage. I just can't comprehend how people can be so self-important about their repugnant views and I certainly can't see them as anything other than angry all of the time, because there's a lot out there that probably outrages them. For example, I was googling Zoe Saldana and one of the search results was for the Stormfront forums; they were outraged over seeing Uhura and Spock together in the new Star Trek. Seriously. Then other members called Spock a half-breed and how everyone, including aliens, are after white women. It was hilarious. So basically, I agree; it's just taken me a few years to get to the point where I can find the humor.
I was just discussing that with a co-worker on Monday. She was passing through our government documents section and was distracted by the books we have on the Nuremberg trials, which included an index of scientific experiments and photographic evidence. It's a bit too much for me to comprehend sometimes. Some of the photos I copied from Die Woche were of the kids and young women and enlisted men and there was this great vision of a perfect Aryan world and by the time the war ended, those kids and young adults were barely into their teens and twenties.
Then I thought of Futurama with their parody, The Scary Door.
"Why should we believe you? You're Hitler!"