The trains of the Holocaust.
Brian
2012/06/12 20:05:20
The Final Solution could not have happened without the railways, without the trains making the mass transport possible.
The people were lulled into a false security. They were told that they were going to different places, better conditions, work camps, on and on and on.
The transports were usually cattle cars. At times, the floor of the car had a layer of quick lime which burned the feet of the human cargo.
Being Transported To Death Camps In Cattle Cars.
There was no water. There was no food. There was no toilet, no ventilation. Some boxcars had up to 150 people stuffed into them. It did not matter if it was summer, winter, boiling hot or freezing cold. And an average transport took about four and a half days.
Read a personal account.
Read a moving commentary on this.
Sometimes the Germans did not have enough cars to make it worth their while to do a major shipment of Jews to the camps, so the victims were stuck in a switching yard – "standing room only" – for two and a half days.
The longest transport of the war, from Corfu, took 18 days. When the train got to the camps and the doors were opened, everyone was already dead.
Yes concentration camps are all over the United States.
I pray that we the people will make a stand against the New world order and what's coming down in America!
The people were lulled into a false security. They were told that they were going to different places, better conditions, work camps, on and on and on.
The transports were usually cattle cars. At times, the floor of the car had a layer of quick lime which burned the feet of the human cargo.
Being Transported To Death Camps In Cattle Cars.
There was no water. There was no food. There was no toilet, no ventilation. Some boxcars had up to 150 people stuffed into them. It did not matter if it was summer, winter, boiling hot or freezing cold. And an average transport took about four and a half days.
Read a personal account.
Read a moving commentary on this.
Sometimes the Germans did not have enough cars to make it worth their while to do a major shipment of Jews to the camps, so the victims were stuck in a switching yard – "standing room only" – for two and a half days.
The longest transport of the war, from Corfu, took 18 days. When the train got to the camps and the doors were opened, everyone was already dead.
Yes concentration camps are all over the United States.
I pray that we the people will make a stand against the New world order and what's coming down in America!
Top Opinion
-
☆The Rock☆ * AFCL* The Sher... 2012/06/12 20:31:18+20Oh but the sheeple just ignore what is going on..They actually think our government is looking out for "We The People"?





















"No one is looking to take your guns!"
Let me tell you, it's pretty scary. It was about how to control people, etc., and other spooky stuff......it literally gave me goosebumps.....it's real, people.
Peace to you and yours.
Blessings to you and yours!
It was some time ago when I posted this when, but wow how its falling into place now!
I have heard about those camps and they just didn't get here. I guess people have to see the NWO to become believers and then it will be too late.
What else will some Americans think off!
I very well know you won't believe me, not even considering that you could be wrong with your view on this.
http://www.popularmechanics.c...
What I see is that a lot of US-SH's are very gullible, almost fobic, when they only have to hear a far fetched suspicion of governmental conspiracy.
They are most eager to believe them to be true.
Do you know that outside the U.S. this eagerness to believe conspiracy theories by Americans has become a sort of a stereotype.
I place a link here to contradict this idea placed in this post , but I very well know I can place a 100 links here telling you otherwise.
I very well know you won't believe me, not even considering that you could be wrong with your view on this.
http://www.popularmechanics.c...
More than that, in 1932 when Hitler was making his first moves, my grandfather left Holland and his family behind for America and worked here like a dog to have enough money to bring my Grandmother and their 5 kids over here in 1938. If my grandfather had listened to your foolish drivel, our whold family might have been wiped out - so I could really care less how much of a "conspiracy theorist" you may think I am - I can tell you face to face it is better to be safe than sorry!
Now for some more truth, Marie! I have personally seen the bases that were closed since the 1980's because I lievd there at the time and saw them close - andin 2008/9 they were being restored with no reason for them to be restored. So quite frankly, I could care less what your "Dutch" people over there believe, or anybody else in Europe for that matter - we ARE dealing wit...
More than that, in 1932 when Hitler was making his first moves, my grandfather left Holland and his family behind for America and worked here like a dog to have enough money to bring my Grandmother and their 5 kids over here in 1938. If my grandfather had listened to your foolish drivel, our whold family might have been wiped out - so I could really care less how much of a "conspiracy theorist" you may think I am - I can tell you face to face it is better to be safe than sorry!
Now for some more truth, Marie! I have personally seen the bases that were closed since the 1980's because I lievd there at the time and saw them close - andin 2008/9 they were being restored with no reason for them to be restored. So quite frankly, I could care less what your "Dutch" people over there believe, or anybody else in Europe for that matter - we ARE dealing with something that is very sinister here and totally unwarranted.
So tell me - since you think it is such a joke, what will you do when they start killing off Americans? You think you're immune? What are you going to do when Putin begins to put his plan into effect? Do you have any clue what happened in East Germany when Russia took over after WWII??? Any clue at all???
I suggest you try doing some real research for a change, and maybe you will see you are in just as much of a predicament as wer are. You're sounding and acting just like they did in pre-WWII (1931/32) when Hitler was taking over Poland and his own country of Germany.
There is no place called Heerlund in the Netherlands.
It is possible that you have misspelled it, I don't know.
Maybe you mean Heerlen.
You are about 10 years older than I am.
So you must have been born at the end of WWII or just after it.
You think that I'm to young to remember what you remember.
It is sad that you can't look beyond what you assume.
My parents were young adults when the war broke out.
It took their youth and gave a lot of hardship back.
My father had to go in hiding because he was at the age to be forced to work in Germany. He wasn't alone in that, many had to endure the same.
In my hometown the Germans forced the men to come out of hiding by executing 14 men (among them to 16 year old) after they had to dig their own grave on December 26 th 1944
So because of that and the treat that every man captured would be killed on the spot, the majority of the men came out of hiding.
On December 30th 1944 in the late afternoon they started walking. to Germany.
It was freezing cold, a great deal of snow had fallen.
My hometown is close to the German border.
The hardship he endured, the horrors he saw; he couldn't talk to us about that.
They were to horrible he said. What I know is what my mother told us.
When the war was ending he was very ill, th...
There is no place called Heerlund in the Netherlands.
It is possible that you have misspelled it, I don't know.
Maybe you mean Heerlen.
You are about 10 years older than I am.
So you must have been born at the end of WWII or just after it.
You think that I'm to young to remember what you remember.
It is sad that you can't look beyond what you assume.
My parents were young adults when the war broke out.
It took their youth and gave a lot of hardship back.
My father had to go in hiding because he was at the age to be forced to work in Germany. He wasn't alone in that, many had to endure the same.
In my hometown the Germans forced the men to come out of hiding by executing 14 men (among them to 16 year old) after they had to dig their own grave on December 26 th 1944
So because of that and the treat that every man captured would be killed on the spot, the majority of the men came out of hiding.
On December 30th 1944 in the late afternoon they started walking. to Germany.
It was freezing cold, a great deal of snow had fallen.
My hometown is close to the German border.
The hardship he endured, the horrors he saw; he couldn't talk to us about that.
They were to horrible he said. What I know is what my mother told us.
When the war was ending he was very ill, they feared for his life.
He was malnourished, being ill for months because of a massive infection on his ankle and other several other serious healthproblems.
He survived but it scarred him in body and soul for the rest of his life .
My hometown was a front city back than. On one side of the river Meuse were the Germans, on the other side the allies, mainly Americans.
(In the province I live the liberators were mainly Americans.
In the other parts of the country other allies).
Because of the shelling, shooting, she and her family did live for months in the cellar.
In the beginning of January 1945 the order came to evacuate.
Woman, old men, boys, girls, toddlers, babies, newborns, the sick everybody had to go.
Those that could walk had to walk to a place in Germany, just across the border.
They had to spend the night in a bombed-out factory, cold, hungry and very afraid.
From that place they were transported by cattle train, standing all the time, to the north.
A sigh of relief when the train entered the Netherlands again.
There were several transports, hers was the only one that wasn't attacked by allied planes.
There were deaths on those transports from exhaustion, the mothers didn't have milk to feed their babies, the cold, the air attacks, the journey taking several days, the trains had to stop very often, no water, no toilets, sanitary, nothing.
The ended up in the province of Friesland, in the province capital Leeuwarden.
Her father collapsed, it turned out he had a severe pneumonia, in a place where they had to been seen by a doctor .
After that they were directed to a house where they would live with the family that owned/rented that house.
Her father was transported by foot to the hospital where he stayed for several weeks.
Coming from a predominantly Catholic region and going to a predominantly strict Protestant region wasn't easy for everyone.
Misconceptions, misunderstanding etc.
Months later they could go home again, finding their home plundered, no roof,
the town greatly damaged.
After the war my mother had her own traumas to deal with.
So, please don't talk to me the way you do.
It is derogatory!
I know, from my parents, the people around us, from schools and all the places of remembrance scattered throughout the town.
Blessings!
(Your post here reminded me of this, Brian.)
A POLITICALLY CORRECT GUN SAFE..
http://www.sodahead.com/unite...
US drone attack in Pakistan