Thursday, November 25, 2010

“He alone, who owns the youth, gains the future.” – Adolf Hitler | via @FIRETOWN

“He alone, who owns the youth, gains the future.” – Adolf Hitler

  • executive
  • recruiting
  • cctv
  • recruit
  • community
  • pre-existing
  • popularity

“Give me just one generation of youth, and I’ll transform the whole world.”
— Vladimir Lenin

It’s not surprising in the least little bit that everywhere we go we see the targeting and indoctrination of our youth with not just political party memorabilia, but belief in the paradigm and the system as is.

In his first year in office, Barack Obama has been steadily and stealthily building a coalition of forces, including civilians and even our own children, to fulfill his promise of creating a national security force here in the United States. He took it a step further, by Executive Order, when he granted Interpol (International Police) free reign to operate within our country, free from the confines of our laws and our Constitution and with no oversight whatsoever from any American law enforcement agency. Obama has also expanded numerous Civilian Corps programs to include mandatory civil service, many of them targeting and recruiting our children and young adults into “Youth Brigades”. Sound familiar?

If you have not yet done so, I do suggest watching The Wave as it depicts how easy to influence the youth really is:

The setting of the book is Gordon High School in 1969. The plot of the book revolves around a history teacher (Mr. Ben Ross), his high school students, and an experiment he conducts in an attempt to teach them about how it may have been living in Nazi Germany. Unsatisfied with his own inability to answer his students’ earnest questions of how and why, Mr Ross initiates the experiment in hopes that it answers the question of why the Germans allowed Adolf Hitler and the genocidal Nazi Party to rise to power, acting in a manner inconsistent with their own pre-existing moral values. Ben starts by having his history class sit up straight and obey his commands by, at first, standing at attention beside their desks and having to say “Mr. Ross…” before asking or answering questions. After seeing the students’ reactions toward the experiment, he decides to continue it the next day by creating a salute, a symbol and addressing three mottoes he made up: “Strength through discipline, Strength through community, Strength through action.” He calls this movement “The Wave”. At first, students are skeptical about The Wave, but after seeing how everyone becomes equal, and that the stress of making choices is lifted, the class falls into The Wave, and begins to recruit others into it. Robert Billings, the class reject, seems to have changed the most due to The Wave – his physical appearance becomes neater and the students grow to accept him more. He becomes more outgoing and seems to be accepted in this new society.

The above video is for those of you who came here to read about Hitler and haven’t watched this movie yet.

1950′s television documentary special that includes interviews with Hitler’s sister Paula Wolf and a fellow prisoner who was incarcerated with Hitler, actual footage shot by the Nazi’s and Eva Braun’s rare home movies.

http://www.firetown.com/blog/2010/11/24/he-alone-who-owns-the-youth-gains-the...

Posted via email from ElyssaD's Posterous

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