The Forum > General Discussion > If We Ban Nazi Symbols - Why Not Soviet Ones As Well?
If We Ban Nazi Symbols - Why Not Soviet Ones As Well?
- Pages:
-
- Page 1
- 2
- 3
- 4
- ...
- 12
- 13
- 14
-
- All
The National Forum | Donate | Your Account | On Line Opinion | Forum | Blogs | Polling | About |
Syndicate RSS/XML |
|
About Us :: Search :: Discuss :: Feedback :: Legals :: Privacy |
Why only choose one select group?
In this case - it was announced that the state of Victoria
has become "the first Australian state or territory to ban
the public display of the Nazi symbols in recognition of its
role in inciting antisemitism and hate."
"Anyone who intentionally displays the Nazi symbol in public
will face penalties of up to almost $22,000, 12 months
imprisonment, or both."
This makes it a criminal offence for any person to intentionally
display the Nazi symbols and the Nazi swastika.
What about the communist hammer and sickle, red star, or the
communist flag?
Both the Nazis and the communists had committed unheard of
cruelties. Concentration camps - on both sides of the
front - operated at a high pitch prior to and during the
war years.
While the USSR policy of mass murder preceded that of Nazi
Germany, most notably with the artificial Ukrainian famine of
1932-33 the wholesale destruction of the Russian
peasantry, and later of the peasantry and intelligensia in the
occupied territories as well.
Stalin admired Hitler and initially the two worked hand in
hand. Therefore it is equally important to be aware of the
accomplishments of the Soviet secret police -who brought
death to at least four times as many as Hitler did in his
years as a leader.
The Nazis have been pursued all over the world for their
crimes, the communist criminals were allowed to go free.
They were in effect given tacit permission to continue
the operation of their concentration camps, to expand their
draconian system to include psychiatric wards, thereby
raising torture, suppression, and murder to a science.
We need only look at what's happening today in the Ukraine.
Communist symbols for many are also painful - and if we are
going to ban Nazi symbols - we should also ban communist ones.
Or it becomes extremely one-sided and selective. .