Adolf Hitler, 123 Years - April 21st, 2012

Adolf Hitler's 123rd Birthday Party with Carolyn Yeager, Severus, and Sword Brethren.

William Finck's opening notes:

Adolf Hitler was not a Christian Identist. Like most Nationalists do even today, he also took it for granted that the Old Testament was a jewish book, and often pointed out those qualities in it which seemed to be jewish. Yet Hitler was a Christian, and Hitler understood that Christ was an Aryan if for no other reason than the fact that His very nature was so contrary to the nature of the jews, and so much like the nature of the Aryan. Hitler was not, however, a Judeo-Christian, and while he expressed the importance of the major sects of Christianity in providing a moral foundation for the people of the nation, he really had no care for the clerics, and often pointed out their faults. The major fault Hitler had with the clerics was their missionary work to non-Aryans, as they let Aryans slip into immorality. Hitler certainly understood and insisted that in order to have a healthy folk, it must be a moral folk. Like Hitler, Christian Identists also reject the professional clerics and their missionary activities to alien tribes.

Two Papers by Joseph Goebbels with comments and discussion - 2012-02-04

William Finck presents and comments on two of the works of Joseph Goebbels: The Racial Question and World Propaganda (1933) and The Creators of the World’s Misfortunes (1945). Later Matthew Ott and Carolyn Yeager help discuss the need for our cause today to produce better propaganda of our own, and to be more proactive in its dissemination.

European Misunion, and a sermon from Ezra Pound - 2011-11-26

Click Here for the Article, European Misunion, covered in this podcast.

On this program we also presented the text of the Ezra Pound broadcast below, which was both a dire and prophetic warning to the English people. 

[Pound broadcast at least 120 original editorial and manifestos over Radio Rome in Italy from 1941 to 1943. We are reprinting two of these broadcasts to encourage discussion of them and to point readers toward the entire book. The full text of 120 broadcasts is available in "Ezra Pound Speaking": Radio Speeches of World War II. Ed. Leonard W. Doob. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1978.]