Today is Rudolf Hess's Birthday

Please share your thoughts.

http://en.metapedia.org/wiki/Rudolf_Hess

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Walking in Spandau Prison – an enigmatic figure.

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Where’s my cake?

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@ReinhardHeydrich1 Herr Obergruppenführer Heydrich: Did Hess fly to Scotland with the Führer’s permission, or did he do it of his own accord?

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Hess’ imprisonment and death is symptomatic of why we need to fight for the truth, and expose those evil kike bastards and their lies.Rudolph%20Hess%20Quote%203Hitler%20and%20Hess

Angry%20Cat

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I don´t know. I guess not. On the other hand Hitler was very anglophile.

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That’s a million dollar question - and I’ve read both sides of this issue.

IMHO?

I think Hitler knew - Hitler wanted peace, remember…

http://tomatobubble.com/id570.html

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A man who sought to end a fratricidal war should be honored by all.

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It’s not clear whether Hitler knew in advance of Hess’s mission. I’ve been watching these videos of David Irving speaking about Rudolf Hess, and here are some notes.

[14:06] Hitler sent for Rudolf Hess in the last week of August 1940, and asked whether he could contact his aristocratic friends in “England”, and say that Germany wants nothing from the British, apart from peace and an end to the war. Hess flew to Scotland in an attempt to see the Duke of Hamilton, who according to Irving [14:56] had sent Hess a signed photograph in 1938.

[17:38] The German peace offer - Hitler wanted nothing from Britain. Even though Britain had declared war on Germany, and had done severe damage by bombing raids on Germany, Hitler was not even going to demand compensation for damages. He just wanted peace with Britain, and even said that he would help to defend the British Empire if it was threatened by Japan or the Soviets!

Hess wrote a letter containing the German peace offer, addressed to the Duke of Hamilton in Scotland, which was sent off in December 1940. However, it was sent via a Mrs. Wilson [21:24] in Lisbon, who turned out to be an MI6 agent, and so the letter never reached the Duke. (In other reports, “Wilson” is Mrs. Violet Roberts.) After many weeks, Hess got no reply, and realised the letter must have been intercepted or lost. Then Hess decided to fly to Scotland.

[26:30] Irving asks how much did Hitler know of the Hess mission. Hitler may have only learned of it retrospectively, when he realised the significance of a later discussion with Hess (first week in May, 1941), who asked him if his views on Britain had changed since August 1940, and Hitler said no. However, if the two of them did discuss the mission, Hitler would have said that Germany would have to disown Hess if the mission failed.

Karlheinz Pintsch told the Gestapo that Hess had talked with the Führer about his plan (Hess, The Missing Years, 1941-1945, pp. 337-8). However, Pintsch told his colleagues that he hoped Hitler would not be upset by Hess’s move (p. 339), suggesting that Hitler was oblivious to the plan.

[6:07] Irving describes how an accidental bomb that landed in Greater London, causing no casualties and very little damage, after the bomber lost its way in fog and came too far up the Thames when it was supposed to target an oil refinery, gave Churchill the pretext he needed to order bombing of Berlin. He knew his attacks on Berlin would eventually leave Hitler with no option but reprisals against London, killing the peace movement, and satisfying the war aims of Churchill and his Jewish backers.

At first Hitler refused to respond, even after repeated British attacks on Berlin. But then he delivered his speech of September 4, 1940, and hostilities shortly commenced in earnest.

“And should the Royal Air Force drop two thousand, or three thousand, or four thousand kilograms of bombs, then we will now drop 150,000; 180,000; 230,000; 300,000; 400,000; yes, one million kilograms in a single night. And should they declare they will greatly increase their attacks on our cities, then we will erase their cities! We will put these nighttime pirates out of business, God help us! The hour will come that one of us will crack, and it will not be National Socialist Germany!”

In Part Two of that David Irving video series [15:00-17:00], Irving says he thinks Hess managed to complete his mission, in that he met the Duke of Hamilton, gave him the letter with Hitler’s peace offer, and two days later the Duke handed the letter to the King. Alas, it was Churchill, not the King, who was running the country. Churchill was delighted that Hess had been “intercepted”. And so the mission failed to stop the war.

Part Three, Irving says the autopsy - after the British welded a steel coffin shut and the son had it opened with oxyacetylene torches - showed that Hess was murdered, rather than “suicide” as per the official narrative. The scar on the neck is horizontal, consistent with strangling from behind, as opposed to the diagonal scar typical of a hanging. The “suicide” thesis is further discredited by a classified police report, stating that British surgeon Hugh Thomas provided Detective Chief Superintendent Howard Jones with the names of two suspects - British agents believed to have murdered Hess to stop him talking about a plot to overthrow the Churchill government in the event of his release.

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A nigger guard murdered him, I’ve read in Hess’ attendant’s testimony. I wish I could find it.

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I certainly wouldn’t want to call Hess a plane thief.

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Irving mentions the “Negro guard” Tony Jordan, who evidently hated Hess, here [23:17]:

Jordan is also mentioned in the news reports where they pretend it was “suicide” - which doesn’t explain the obvious signs of a struggle when Hess’s friend, the male nurse who helped him with dressing, etc., came back from lunch. Lol, they try to explain the debris “strewn over the cabin floor” as caused by “the guards’ frantic efforts to revive” Hess.

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