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NEWS AND VIEWS THAT IMPACT LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL GOVERNMENT

"There is danger from all men. The only maxim of a free government ought to be to trust no man living with
power to endanger the public liberty." - - - - John Adams

Friday, November 7, 2014

Vladimir Putin says there was nothing wrong with Soviet Union's pact with Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany



Putin Defends Stalin's Hitler Pact
Actually, Stalin didn't do anything that Britain 
and France had not already done.


(The London Telegraph)  -  Vladimir Putin has said there was nothing bad about the Nazi-Soviet Pact, the non-aggression treaty which led to the carve-up of Poland at the outset of the Second World War, suggesting Britain and France were to blame for Adolf Hitler's march into Europe.
The Russian president made the comments at a meeting with young historians in Moscow, during which he urged them to examine the lead-up to the war, among other subjects.
The comments are likely to cause dismay in eastern Europe, amid wider debate in Russia about growing attempts to use history as a means of shoring up Mr Putin's rule.
Mr Putin said that Western historians today try to "hush up" the 1938 Munich Agreement, in which France and Britain – led by Neville Chamberlain, the prime minister – appeased Adolf Hitler by acquiescing to his occupation of Czechoslovakia's Sudetenland.


Peace in our time.
Putin is dead on that Britain and France were to blame for Hitler.
The insane Treaty of Versailles imposed on Germany after WWI
was intended to grind a proud nation into poverty. That act destroyed
German democracy and created the Nazi movement. Hypocrites
in the West condemned the Russian agreement while Britain and France
carved up Czechoslovakia and gave it away to Hitler.

"Chamberlain came, waved a piece of paper and said, 'I've brought you peace' when he returned to London after the talks," Mr Putin, who is a keen amateur historian, said on Wednesday, according to a Kremlin transcript.
"To which Churchill, I think, said somewhere to a small group of people, 'That's it, now war is inevitable'. Because compromise with an aggressor in the form of Hitlerite Germany was clearly leading to a large-scale future military conflict, and some people understood that."
Mr Putin appeared to think Moscow's own agreement with Hitler – the 1939 Nazi-Soviet or Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact – was fine, however.
"Serious research must show that those were the foreign policy methods then," he said, adding: "The Soviet Union signed a non-aggression treaty with Germany. People say: 'Ach, that's bad.' But what's bad about that if the Soviet Union didn't want to fight, what's bad about it?"
Secret protocols of the pact in which the Nazis and the Communists agreed to divide up Finland, Estonia, Lithuania, Latvia, Romania and Poland into spheres of influence were officially denied by the Kremlin until 1989.
More than 20,000 arrested and captured Poles were executed by the Soviet secret police in the Katyn massacre in 1940. The Nazis began an extermination campaign that would eventually lead to the deaths of three million Jews in Poland alone.
Mr Putin appeared to imply the secret protocols continued to be a matter of dispute today, saying, "people still argue about the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact and accuse the Soviet Union of dividing up Poland".
In 2009, the Russian leader condemned the Nazi-Soviet pact as "immoral" but said France and the UK had destroyed any chance for an anti-fascist front with the Munich Agreement.
Read More . . . .


Stealing Land for Fun and Profit
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Stealing your neighbor's land to enrich yourself is nothing new in human history.  The British, Japan, the U.S., the Arabs or Spain: just about everyone is guilty at one point or another.
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We see political hacks scream on TV about the "injustice" of some land grab or other around the world.  But remember, their country is just as guilty of land grabbing, and they are not planning on returning the land that they took any time soon.
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Poland has been targeted more than most. The Partitions of Poland
 were a series of three partitions that took place towards the end of the 18th century and ended the existence of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, resulting in the elimination of sovereign Poland for 123 years. The partitions were conducted by the Russian Empire, the Kingdom of Prussia and Habsburg Austria, which divided up the Commonwealth lands among themselves progressively in the process of territorial seizures.

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