4 Comments

Excellent.

Expand full comment

And of course going back several years prior, there was the German Revolution of January 1918-19, where a Jewess (Rosa Luxemborg) tried to instigate a Marxist putsch in Berlin to overthrow the nascent post-war state. Luxemborg's capture and execution by the Freikorps kicked off a nationwide wave of violence and labor strikes, backed by Judeo-Bolshevik funding from the Soviet Union.

Two of the last territories to be pacified were the regions of Bremen and Bavaria, in which separatist pseudo-states had been declared by Marxist revolutionaries -- the Bremen Soviet Republic and the People's State of Bavaria. The revolutionary leaders of these republics were, respectively, Johann Knief and Kurt Eisner, both Marxist Jews.

The Bremen Soviet Republic was brought to heel relatively quickly by the Freikorps, costing the life of only 80 men. The Bavarian Soviet Republic was a harder nut to crack. Eisner was assassinated, leading to infighting among various Jewish frontmen (Johannes Hoffmann, Ernst Toller, Eugen Levine, Max Levien), which weakened the Marxist regime sufficiently for it to be overthrown by the Freikorps and German Army, costing the lives of at least 2,000 Germans. Among the dead were German nobles Countess Hella von Westarp and Prince Gustav of Thurn, who had been taken hostage and summarily executed by their Jewish captors.

The suppression of these Marxist revolts marked the beginning of the greater Weimar Republic, launching the German people into a further decade of instability, degeneracy and human suffering, where again excesses of the native Jewry played a crucial role.

Expand full comment

Great stuff

Expand full comment

Is it accurate to refer to Leibbrandt and Stumpp as refugees? Didn't they willingly travel to Germany in the 30s? Or were you just saying that Black Sea Germans made up a class of refugees and not those two in particular?

Expand full comment