00:00The interviewer starts by asking Hitler,
00:02why do you call yourself a national socialist
00:05since your party program is the very antithesis
00:08of that commonly accredited to socialism?
00:12Off to a good start.
00:14He literally explains that he's using the term
00:16to mean something racial and exclusionary.
00:19It was a lie, a trick, a swindle, a hoodwink.
00:25He was a Nazi.
00:26He has declined to make a last statement.
00:30Are you ready to tell him?
00:31Yeah.
00:49Pre-count attempted murder in the first degree.
00:53In the name of and by the authority of the state of Florida,
00:56grand jurors of the state of Florida and panel
00:57sworn to inquire and true presumption may
01:00get important evidence of the law.
01:01The first thing we're going to do is we're going to pull out.
01:10We don't know what has just happened right there.
01:13It looks like the police have closed in on him.
01:16We don't know what exactly has transpired.
01:19AFD, a party its leader calls conservative,
01:42but is dogged by allegations of racism,
01:46Islamophobia and right-wing extremism, which it denies.
01:51Its chancellor candidate is former banker Alice Weidel.
01:55She lives in Switzerland with her wife and kids
01:57and has been endorsed by Elon Musk.
02:00I very much hope that the AFD does well
02:06and that Alice Weidel is just become chancellor.
02:10I think that would be very good for Germany.
02:12And then he enforced the envy of the population against these people.
02:23And it was a socialist measure taken against them.
02:28Look at Stalin.
02:30Look at the Soviet Union under Stalin, the very same thing.
02:34So he was nothing else than an antisemitic socialist.
02:38And we are exactly the opposite.
02:40A war to destroy communism has been Hitler's dream for the last 20 years.
02:46The AFD is nominating co-leader Alice Weidel as candidate for chancellor
02:56the first time it's done this.
02:58Her acceptance speech outlines what she wants to do.
03:01Slash taxes and government spending.
03:03Leave EU institutions and light a bonfire of environmental policies.
03:08But it's the red meat of vital speech is immigration.
03:21The issue that above all others defines the AFD's populist message.
03:26And then the moment Weidel very explicitly embraces a word
03:40she has never done publicly before.
03:42The service of Asylbewerber from Geld auf Sachleistung umstellen.
03:49Sozialleistungen für nicht-aufenthaltsberechtigte streichen
03:53und Rückführung im großen Stil durchführen.
03:57Und ich muss Ihnen ganz ehrlich sagen,
04:00wenn es dann Re-Migration heißen soll,
04:03dann heißt es eben Re-Migration.
04:12The elections, they come and go.
04:14Some elections are, you know, important, some are not.
04:18But this one, this one, this one really matters.
04:24And I just want to say thank you for making it happen.
04:28I was just looking for you.
04:30Heil Hitler!
04:33What's going to happen is going to happen.
04:35Just make sure it doesn't happen to you.
04:36Actually, don't you ever say that again.
04:42What's going to happen is going to happen.
05:12You guys ready to make it happen?
05:14What's going to happen?
05:15Let's go.
05:16Let's go.
05:19Let's go.
05:29Oh yeah.
05:30We're on the pilleurs.
05:33Ah yeah.
05:34Let's go.
05:34Help.
05:38Right.
05:40This is London Court.
05:57Here is a news flash.
06:00The German radio has just announced that Hitler is dead.
06:05I repeat that.
06:06The German radio has just announced that Hitler is dead.
06:22Truman announced the official surrender.
06:25This is a solemn but glorious hour.
06:30I wish that Franklin D. Roosevelt had lived to see this day.
06:36General Eisenhower informs me that the forces of Germany have surrendered to the United Nations.
06:45The flags of freedom fly all over Europe.
06:48For this victory, we join in offering our thanks to the Providence, which has guided and sustained us through the dark days of adversity and into light.
07:03United, the peace-loving nations have demonstrated in the West that their arms are stronger by far than the might of dictators or the tyranny of military cliques that once called us soft and weak.
07:24General Eisenhower's battle headquarters in the ancient city of Reims was the business-like setting for Germany's unconditional surrender.
07:33And just before the delegates arrived, a few out of the millions of beaten German soldiers were trudging past the building.
07:39The Allied officers who took their places on either side of Eisenhower's chief of staff, Lieutenant General Bedell Smith, included Admiral Borough and Major General Susloparoff.
07:49It was naturally a brief ceremony, and after Jodl had signed on the dotted line, the other signatories completed the capitulation of Reims at 2.41 a.m.
08:00True, Jodl made a statement about the sufferings of the German armed forces and people, and hoped that the victor will treat them with generosity.
08:09So, you're right here.
09:39Our future. We must forget any idea of comradeship between soldiers. This will be a war of annihilation.
11:55Buchenwald, Bux Forest, was a German Nazi concentration camp established on Ettersburg
12:04Hill near Weimar, Germany, in July 1937.
12:10It was one of the first and the largest of the concentration camps within the Outreich,
12:15Old Reich, territories.
12:18Many actual, or suspected, communists were among the first internees.
12:28Prisoners came from all over Europe and the Soviet Union and included Jews, Poles, and
12:34other Slavs, the mentally ill and physically disabled, political prisoners, Romani people,
12:41Freemasons, and prisoners of war.
12:44There were also ordinary criminals and those perceived as sexual deviants, aka mostly LGBT
12:51people, by the Nazi regime.
12:54All prisoners worked primarily as forced labor in local armaments factories.
13:00The insufficient food and poor conditions, as well as deliberate executions, led to 56,545
13:08deaths at Buchenwald of the 280,000 prisoners who passed through the camp and its 139 sub-camps.
13:18The camp gained notoriety when it was liberated by the United States Army in April 1945.
13:26Allied Commander Dwight D. Eisenhower visited one of its sub-camps from August 1945 to March 1950.
13:35The camp was used by the Soviet occupation authorities as an internment camp, NKVD Special Camp No. 2,
13:43where 28,455 prisoners were held and 7,113 of whom died.
13:50Today, the remains of Buchenwald serve as a memorial and permanent exhibition and museum.
13:57The Schutzdafer established Buchenwald Concentration Camp at the beginning of July 1937.
14:04The camp was to be named Edersburg, after the hill in Thuringia, upon whose north slope the camp was established.
14:14The proposed name was deemed inappropriate because it carried associations with several important figures in German culture,
14:22especially Enlightenment writer Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, who had lived in Weimar.
14:29Instead, the camp was to be named Buchenwald in reference to the beech forest in the area.
14:35However, Holocaust researcher James E. Young wrote that Schutzdafer leaders chose the site of the camp precisely to erase the cultural legacy of the area.
14:46Right there down! Right there down!
14:53After the area of the camp was cleared of trees, only one large oak remained, supposedly one of Goethe's oaks.
15:01The camp, designed to hold 8,000 prisoners, was intended to replace several smaller concentration camps nearby,
15:09including Bad Solze, Sachsenburg, and Liechtenburg.
15:14Compared to these camps, Buchenwald had a greater potential to profit the Schutzdafer,
15:20because the nearby clay deposits could be made into bricks by the forced labor of prisoners.
15:27The first prisoners arrived on July 15th, 1937, and had to clear the area of trees and build the camp's structures.
15:40By September, the population had risen to 2,400.
15:46On the camp's main gate, the motto,
15:53Jiedem das Seine, to each his own, was inscribed.
15:57The Schutzdafer interpreted this to mean that the master race, Garenrasse,
16:03had a right to humiliate and destroy others.
16:07It was designed by Buchenwald prisoner and Bauhaus architect Franz Eichlich,
16:13who used a Bauhaus typeface for it, even though Bauhaus was seen as degenerate art,
16:18by the National Socialists, and were prohibited.
16:21This defiance, however, went unnoticed by the Schutzdafer,
16:25because they're fucking... stupid.
16:28Buchenwald's first commandant,
16:43was Schutzdafer Obersturmbannfuhrer Karl Otto Koch,
16:47who ran the camp from August 1st, 1937, to July 1941.
16:53His second wife, Ilse Koch, became notorious as the Hexe von Buchenwald,
17:03the Witch of Buchenwald, for her cruelty and brutality.
17:08In February 1940, Koch had an indoor riding hall built by the prisoners,
17:14who died by the dozen due to the harsh conditions of the construction site.
17:20The hall was built inside the camp near the canteen,
17:24so that oftentimes Ilse Koch could be seen riding to the morning beat of the prisoner orchestra.
17:32Koch himself was eventually imprisoned at Buchenwald by the Nazi authorities for incitement to murder.
17:41The charges were lodged by Prince Valtek and Judge Konrad Morgan,
17:47to which were later added charges of corruption, embezzlement,
17:51black market dealings, and exploitation of the camp workers for personal gain.
17:58Other camp officials were charged, including Ilse Koch.
18:02The trial resulted in Karl Koch being sentenced to death for disgracing both himself and the Schutzstaffel.
18:11He was executed by firing squad on April 5th, 1945, one week before American troops arrived.
18:20Theifeloware.com
18:22The battle prisely was seized from the camp workers.
18:24The battle had dominated by their areas of the city.
18:26Once were killed, it was one of the Canterbury.
18:28From an unison to a Nazi officer from the boy who was arrested by his military force or a transfer of his military force.
18:30Two of them were persecuted by their military force and destroyed by the senator.
18:33The campaign was taken for him to be murdered.
18:34The effort had been a military force for their heads.
18:37The army was to be murdered by the time of The Ocean Boat.
18:39The multiple the Stars led by a law was arrested and destroyed by his military force.
18:40The entire war did not die in the military force for their weapons in the village of the military camp.
20:12However, she was re-arrested by American occupation authorities in June 1945 and chosen as one of 31 Buchenwald defendants to stand trial before a military commission court at Dachau.
20:27In Dachau wurde im Verlauf des Prozesses gegen das Personal des Konzentrationslagers Buchenwald die Angeklagte Ilse Koch vernommen.
20:39Die Frau des früheren Lagerkommandanten und sogenannte Kommandöse von Buchenwald ist die einzige Frau unter den 31 angeklagten.
20:48Die Anklage wirft ihr schwerste Vergehen gegen die Menschlichkeit vor.
20:51Dazu zählt der Besitz von präparierten Köpfen ermordeter Opfer und von Lampenschirmen aus Menschenhaut.
20:58Die Beweisstücke liegen dem Gericht vor.
21:00Hauptanklagevertreter ist William Denson.
21:04Ilse Koch bestritt im Kreuzverhör alle ihr zur Last gelegten Anklagepunkte, trotz gegenteiliger Zeugenaussagen.
21:12Dieser erste Buchenwald-Prozess ist der Auftakt eines Verfahrens gegen mehr als 6000 Personen, die zu den Wachmannschaften von Buchenwald und seinen Außenlagern gehören.
21:22The life sentence imposed by the Dachau court was reduced to four years upon review.
21:30Upon her release from U.S. custody in October 1949, she was arrested by West German authorities, tried at Augsburg, and again sentenced to life imprisonment.
21:42She committed suicide in Eichach, Bavaria, prison in September 1967.
21:52The second commandant of the camp between 1942 and 1945 was Hermann Pister.
22:00He was tried in 1947 in the Dachau trials and sentenced to death.
22:07Hang him!
22:08Shoot him!
22:08Hit him with a rock!
22:10But on September 28, 1948, he died in Landsberg prison of a heart attack.
22:17In the official report, the Buchenwald camp is termed an extermination factory.
22:22The means of extermination, starvation, complicated by hard work, abuse, beatings, and tortures, incredibly crowded sleeping conditions, and sicknesses of all types.
22:32By these means, the report continues, many tens of thousands of the best leadership personnel of Europe have been exterminated.
22:39The Buchenwald and the Buchenwald have beenrav Thataly is a ubiquitable student of the pc, they have been
22:55in the province of a migrator station while in the California central commission fá axis, and of Boom Axsh감을 was they are in the location of the C.
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