Thursday, June 11, 2009

DENYING THE HOLOCAUST ?!

in hebrew we call the holocaust SHO-AH which means calamity.

somewhere between 11 and 17-million people were systematically murdered in europe during the second world war. this genocide committed by nazi germany under adolf hitler and its allies wiped out 6-MILLION JEWS plus soviet prisoners of war plus people with disabilities plus gays and some ethnic poles and romani as well as soviet civilians and jehovahs witnesses and freemasons.

so how in the hell are these anti semitic NEO-NAZI cave dwellers like james von brunn going to actively deny the fact that this actually happened?! 

there were mass shootings there were extermination camps and the majority of these 17-million human lives were taken in gas chambers where people were asphyxiated to death.  there were 8-major concentration camps where victims were put to work and killed off. they were: auschwitz and belzac and chelmno and jasenovac and majdanek and maly trostinets and sobibor and treblinka.

and yesterday afternoon in washington d.c. an elderly white supremacist by the name of james w. von brunn allegedly gunned down a guardsman at the U.S. HOLOCAUST MUSEUM. von brunn's name returns a number of anti semitic websites including his own called holy western empire which boldly denies the existence of the world war-2 calamity. von brunn has already served over 6-years in federal prison for another hate crime involving a citizens arrest.

von brunn is currently in critical condition at the hospital however the security guard whom he shot  died last night. our hearts break for this innocent victim who was killed in the line of duty and his family. 

president obama had this to say about the tragedy:  "i am shocked and saddened by today's shooting at the u.s. holocaust memorial museum. this outrageous act reminds us that we must remain vigilant against antisemitism and prejudice in all its forms. no american institution is more important to this effort than the holocaust museum and no act of violence will diminish our determination to honor those who were lost by building a more peaceful and tolerant world."