Pat Robertson is a wanker. If God existed, and he was the Old Testament God that Robertson seems to feel he is, then don’t you…
Comments closedmark a. rayner Posts

Just sixteen years ago, in 1923, Hitler had stood at the very spot where he spoke now, his voice captivating a nation as he promised an end to the injustices heaped upon the German people.
He thought it was ironic. While the perpetrators of those injustices — the French and the British primarily — marked their maudlin November 11th holiday as a day to remember their soldiers killed in the Great War the proud German people had a celebration. By winning power, Hitler had transmuted the Armistice Day into a victory — the Leader’s Day.
Heydrich could not imagine what might have happened if the revolution had not been successful. What might have become of the Fatherland?
Hitler was warmed up now, and Heydrich allowed himself to be swept away in the Leader’s oratory, as he watched from a distance. He should have been standing next to him, but Himmler had grown suspicious of Heydrich’s popularity with the Leader, and not allowed him on the platform with the other Party officials.
A lot of what Hitler said didn’t really make much sense, but that did not matter. What the Leader had was certainty. Perhaps not sanity, but it was his conviction and confidence that was important.
The certainty that Austria, Czechoslovakia and Poland were not enough.
The German people needed more land, Hitler said. And it was only a matter of time before they took it. So far the war with France and Britain had been quiet, but in the spring, he knew it would explode.
Then a wall of sound assaulted his ears,
1 CommentAll Dr. Tundra wanted for Christmas was an election. And really bad weather. Nothing would make him happier than to watch the political classes forgo…
1 CommentWelcome to the eighth Carnival of Satire, which has an obsession with gay Paree. We invite our regular sinologists to spot the big lie in…
4 Comments
