Summary of Joseph P. Farrell s Nazi International
81 pages
English

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81 pages
English

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Description

Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book.
Sample Book Insights:
#1 The Nazi International had a comprehensive, coordinated agenda with long-range goals. It intended to exercise significant influence over the fields of exotic physics and technologies, space, economics, and global finance, and the exploitation of conflict.
#2 The grand design of Nazi Party Reichsleiter Martin Bormann was to transform National Socialism into International Fascism, and to infiltrate, and eventually control, key areas of the very nations that had defeated the Third Reich.
#3 The book is about a conspiracy theory, or perhaps better said, a hypothesis. It remains for the reader to judge if it is a plausible and reasonable one. The book does not attempt to construct some sort of Grand Unified Conspiracy Theory of modern history, but rather proposes an extensive but still limited hypothesis to explain events that cannot be explained by other hypotheses.

Sujets

Informations

Publié par
Date de parution 05 avril 2022
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781669377627
Langue English
Poids de l'ouvrage 1 Mo

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0150€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Insights on Joseph P. Farrell's Nazi International
Contents Insights from Chapter 1 Insights from Chapter 2 Insights from Chapter 3 Insights from Chapter 4 Insights from Chapter 5 Insights from Chapter 6 Insights from Chapter 7 Insights from Chapter 8 Insights from Chapter 9 Insights from Chapter 10 Insights from Chapter 11 Insights from Chapter 12 Insights from Chapter 13 Insights from Chapter 14 Insights from Chapter 15 Insights from Chapter 16 Insights from Chapter 17 Insights from Chapter 18 Insights from Chapter 19 Insights from Chapter 20 Insights from Chapter 21 Insights from Chapter 22 Insights from Chapter 23 Insights from Chapter 24 Insights from Chapter 25 Insights from Chapter 26 Insights from Chapter 27 Insights from Chapter 28 Insights from Chapter 29 Insights from Chapter 30 Insights from Chapter 31 Insights from Chapter 32 Insights from Chapter 33 Insights from Chapter 34 Insights from Chapter 35 Insights from Chapter 36 Insights from Chapter 37 Insights from Chapter 38 Insights from Chapter 39 Insights from Chapter 40 Insights from Chapter 41 Insights from Chapter 42
Insights from Chapter 1



#1

The Nazi International had a comprehensive, coordinated agenda with long-range goals. It intended to exercise significant influence over the fields of exotic physics and technologies, space, economics, and global finance, and the exploitation of conflict.

#2

The grand design of Nazi Party Reichsleiter Martin Bormann was to transform National Socialism into International Fascism, and to infiltrate, and eventually control, key areas of the very nations that had defeated the Third Reich.

#3

The book is about a conspiracy theory, or perhaps better said, a hypothesis. It remains for the reader to judge if it is a plausible and reasonable one. The book does not attempt to construct some sort of Grand Unified Conspiracy Theory of modern history, but rather proposes an extensive but still limited hypothesis to explain events that cannot be explained by other hypotheses.
Insights from Chapter 2



#1

After the war, the many Nazis who were confronted with the regime’s crimes struggled to find justification for their continued adherence to the cause. They began to re-write history in the guise of fiction.
Insights from Chapter 3



#1

The Allies faced a similar problem to that faced by the German government in 1918: how to handle Germany’s surrender. The Allied governments did not want to create the opportunity for a Nazi resurgence through a similar propaganda tactic.

#2

The text of the surrender document is as follows: We, acting by command of and in behalf of the Emperor of Japan, the Japanese Government, and the Japanese Imperial General Headquarters, hereby accept the provisions set forth in the declaration issued by the heads of the governments of the United States, China, and Great Britain on 26 July, 1945, at Potsdam, and subsequently adhered to by the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, which four powers are hereafter referred to as the Allied Powers.
Insights from Chapter 4



#1

The terms of the German surrender of May 7, 1945, read as follows: 1. We the undersigned, acting by authority of the German High Command, hereby surrender unconditionally to the Supreme Commander, Allied Expeditionary Force and simultaneously to the Soviet High Command all forces on land, sea, and in the air who are at this date under German control. 2.

#2

The German surrender was signed by the German military, but the Nazi Party was not formally represented in the surrender. The party had constructed itself as a parallel bureaucracy to the agencies of the German government, and had infiltrated all branches of the government while remaining a separate entity.

#3

The Allies missed the golden opportunity to insist that a representative of the Nazi Party sign an instrument of the surrender and abolition of the Party. The German armed forces surrendered, but the Nazi Party did not.

#4

The Allies did not insist on having any high-ranking representative of the Nazi Party present at the surrender, and they signed a protocol that stated the abolition of the Party and its organizations in perpetuity and by law.
Insights from Chapter 5



#1

Wilhelm Landig was a novelist who wrote Neo-Nazi science fiction. He was also a political activist who believed in the Aryan-Nordic mythology. He was a member of the small occult-racist circle that first gathered for discussions at the studio of the designer Wilhelm Landig.

#2

Wilhelm Landig was a Nazi who founded his own nationalist press in 1958. He became the Austrian representative of the World Anti-Communist League in 1970. He was also part of the network of Nazi spies operating in Europe.
Insights from Chapter 6



#1

The novel Götzen gegen Thule, written by Landig, is a allegory of the Landig circle’s attempts to make contact with an esoteric center of Nordic traditions, the legendary realm of Thule, the final bastion of the Germanic world in defeat.

#2

A secret base in the Canadian Arctic, staffed by former SS and Luftwaffe officers, was used to develop advanced technology. This base was intimately involved with the creation of a bloc of nations to offset the geopolitical preponderance of the Soviet Union and the United States.
Insights from Chapter 7



#1

In Landig’s second novel, Wolfszeit um Thule, the narrative follows the adventures of two naval officers, Krall and Hellfeldt, and SS-Major Eyken, formerly stationed at Point 103. They achieve a devastating victory over an Allied naval convoy in the North Atlantic.

#2

The second novel, Landig’s, implies that in spite of Russian and American attempts to corner the market on Nazi technology, the best and most advanced of that technology escaped them and remained under Nazi control.
Insights from Chapter 8



#1

The connection between the Black Sun and Babylon was not just wishful thinking on Landig’s part, but it was part of mainstream German scholarship and Sumerology from the mid-nineteenth century.

#2

The Nazi UFO mythos is based on the idea that flying saucers were an important part of a German plan to create an extraterritorial state prior to a renewed attack on the Allied enemies after 1945. However, there is a deeper problem with Goodrick-Clarke’s dismissal of the origins of the Nazi UFO mythos: it ignores the implications of the myth itself.

#3

The Vril force was the area of covert investigation of the so-called Vril Society, a society that was, in fact, first mentioned by the German rocket engineer Willy Ley. Ley maintained that such a society existed in Berlin.

#4

The Neo-Nazi group the Vril Society claimed that the secret society that formed from the ashes of the Germanenorden was the Vril Society, and that they had developed a time travel machine.

#5

The Bell Project, as described by Jürgen-Ratthofer and Ettl, seems not far-fetched, for all four of its basic implications are true.

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