On Apr 12, 2:26 am, Andreas Leitgeb <a...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
wrote:
> Totzbaer <totzb...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> > gerti wrod:
> >> lich reif fia Staahof - wauns des no gibt
Swastika symbolism http://rexcurry.net/swastika-audi-logo.JPG
and Audi
logo
expose frightening chapters of history and symbology.
The Audo and the Volkswagen logo expose the swastika as intertwined
"S"
shapes symbolizing "Socialism" for the monstrous National Socialist
German
Workers' Party, and provides more proof in sup****t of discoveries by
the
noted Symbologist Dr. Rex Curry.
http://rexcurry.net/bookchapter4a1a2a1.html
The following is another graphic example of the symbolism of the
swastika
http://rexcurry.net/swastika3clear.jpg
The following is an additional graphic examples of the symbolism of
the
swastika http://rexcurry.net/swastika-vw-logo.JPG
Trabant also sup****ts Dr. Curry's discoveries.
http://rexcurry.net/trabant-sachsenring-rex-curry.html
Audi also sup****ts Dr. Curry's discoveries.
http://rexcurry.net/bookchapter4a1a2a1.html
Dr. Curry's work has been announced and verified on Wikipedia. A
recent
article at opinioneditorials.com re****ts on the many references to Dr.
Curry's research and discoveries on Wikipedia. Even Wikipedia founder
Jimbo
Wales has publicly noted Dr. Curry's influence on Wikipedia. Wikipedia
writers use Dr. Curry's work without attribution in apparent attempts
to
bolster their own credibility.
Everyone concedes that the swastika was the symbol of the National
Socialist
German Workers' Party (NSGWP). In that sense, the swastika was a
symbol of
socialism, at least for the NSGWP.
The remaining question is the question that everyone else overlooked.
Did
the NSGWP (or its leader), in using the swastika symbol for the
National
Socialist German Workers' Party, ever see it as S-letters for their
"socialism"? The Volkswagen symbol answers that question in the
affirmative.
Today, Audi is a wholly-owned subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group.
Germany in the 1930's often used symbols for letters and words. Common
symbols under the National Socialist German Workers' Party often used
the
"S" shape, including the side-by-side use in the "SS" Division and the
overlapping use in the swastika. The German word was not "swastika,"
but
"Hakenkreuz" ("hooked cross" or "armed cross").
Hitler was aware of the practice, and perhaps the source of the
practice, in
that he evolved "Adolf Hitler" into "S Hitler" in his own signature.
It was
a manner of declaring his socialism every time he signed his name and
it was
equivalent to signing "Socialist Hitler."
http://rexcurry.net/bookchapter4a1a4.html
It is part of growing evidence that sup****ts the discovery by the
historian
Rex Curry (in the book "Swastika Secrets") that the Hakenkreuz,
although an
ancient symbol, was used also to represent "S" shapes for "Socialism"
and
its victory under the horrid National Socialists.
http://rexcurry.net/book1a1contents-swastika.html
Dr. Curry is also famous for proving that the USA's early Pledge of
Allegiance was the origin of the straight-arm salute adopted later by
the
National Socialist German Workers' Party.
http://rexcurry.net/book1a1contents-pledge.html
The following is a frightening example of a photograph of the early
Pledge
of Allegiance http://rexcurry.net/pledge-allegiance-pledge-allegiance.jpg
The following page shows more examples of the stiff-arm salute of the
early
Pledge of Allegiance http://rexcurry.net/pledge2.html


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