TheReal_ND wrote: Sun Mar 31, 2019 9:17 am
We need to know where the NSDAP stood on vaccines or the medical industry in general. This is meaningless conjecture at this point. The Nazis are already here right now kicking in your doors and forcibly injecting your children with vaccines manufactured in China out of aluminum and formaldehyde to protect you from chicken pox.
Hitler wouldn't have had to kick anybodies door in over this sort of thing.
Hitler would simply have said "your Fuhrer needs you to get vaccinated" and the public would have done it without questioning it.
Our governments however, do not have that sort of sway.
I could actually see Hitler forcibly vaccinating prisoners of war. We already know he forcibly cut their hair and deloused them in the concentration camps. Would he kick in the doors of his citizens to forcibly inject their children with Chinese heavy metals? No. I think that's a bridge too far for even literally Hitler. What a tragic comedy.
And it's not like his citizens were unarmed either. Imagine Hitler telling the gestapo to dress up like ninjas and kick in the doors during peacetime in the middle of the night. I just can't. Yet we do.
All under the rubric of "protecting the children" no less. You want to protect children but kick in the doors of a house that undoubtedly has children in it in the middle of the night, loaded to bear, knowing the homeowner is legally armed and has every reasonable expectation of shooting at you. Protect the children? Really? Makes ya think
My grandmother in law lived under the rule of the Nazis, she mentioned many privations and grievances, but she never mentioned the government bothering her nor her family.
In fact the way she described it, the government was rather absent most of the time.
Everything was focused on the war effort, the government simply didn't have the resources to be going around SWATing people in Germany.
Obviously if you were dissident, the GESTAPO would round you up, but there wasn't any dissent, so that didn't happen very often apparently.