100
100
Nov 10, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 100
favorite 0
quote 1
the "hitler reign of terror" was panned. it was called heavy handed, and they dismissed the notion that hitler could be any global threat. and then vanderbilt's movie faced the kind of pressure that document aariens would never imagine. hollywood gave hitler's "reign of terror" the cold shoulder. >> in the 1930s motion pictures had no first amendment rights. that seems incredible to us today, but in 1915 the u.s. supreme court ruled that movies were, quote a business pure and simple and as a business movies could be regulated the same way that food and drug administration regulated a quality of meat. in the same way that it could demand a film or that it film be cut. motion picture makers had to go through a series of obstacles, a real hurdle to get controversial films played in the 19 30's which is one of the main reasons that the hollywood studios stayed away from that kind of controversial content. >> reporter: so in chicago the title was clipped to "hitler's reign." no terror. a san francisco theater manager was arrested
the "hitler reign of terror" was panned. it was called heavy handed, and they dismissed the notion that hitler could be any global threat. and then vanderbilt's movie faced the kind of pressure that document aariens would never imagine. hollywood gave hitler's "reign of terror" the cold shoulder. >> in the 1930s motion pictures had no first amendment rights. that seems incredible to us today, but in 1915 the u.s. supreme court ruled that movies were, quote a business...
81
81
Nov 9, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 81
favorite 0
quote 0
and hitler figure japan did not. >> with the fdr solid relationship with the u.s. support of propaganda with the depiction of ogle joe but did you learn anything in the research what he thought truthfully? >> i never encountered stolid in this research. he does not have a presence of the book. but basically he had divided poland then hitler invaded the soviet union but russia does not play a role. you are a knowledgeable audience. [laughter] >> this is a theoretical and asking all said and this same question what would have happened given the isolationism in this country had hitler not declared war on the united states after pearl harbor? >> of course, we do not go up to pearl harbor but it is a fascinating question and especially because during 1940 and 8041 hitler did not want to antagonize the united states. and roosevelt did not think the country was ready. the southern democrats wary central to support roosevelt to get legislation to prepare this do you get to into that at all? >> that is true. roosevelt had a lot of support from some other democrats that is t
and hitler figure japan did not. >> with the fdr solid relationship with the u.s. support of propaganda with the depiction of ogle joe but did you learn anything in the research what he thought truthfully? >> i never encountered stolid in this research. he does not have a presence of the book. but basically he had divided poland then hitler invaded the soviet union but russia does not play a role. you are a knowledgeable audience. [laughter] >> this is a theoretical and asking...
97
97
Nov 8, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 97
favorite 0
quote 1
. >> in the hour and a half that hitler spoke to the packed audience that night. as sign of one of america's wealthiest and most powerful families va vanderbilt set out make his own expose. before i-phones and snap chat videos van de van der van der bn expensive fil film camera and a well known name that gave him key access to well known people in germany. >> what message do you have for the american people? >> vanderbilt understood the power of draw drama. a chilling conversation they had with the translation of the killing views. >> tell them adolph hitler is the man of that power. tell them that adolph hitter his been sent by the almighty . what about the jews, your lesson ex- ex-sy. >> tom doroth doherty. he finds it quite remarkable. when you look at the film with modern eyes how profetic the film is. at that time 1933 doherty points out that america was more concerned about issues at home. >> they were far away and not on many people's radar. on on this film you have corneil us vanderbilt. they are clear eyed about persecution of the jews. which brought up i
. >> in the hour and a half that hitler spoke to the packed audience that night. as sign of one of america's wealthiest and most powerful families va vanderbilt set out make his own expose. before i-phones and snap chat videos van de van der van der bn expensive fil film camera and a well known name that gave him key access to well known people in germany. >> what message do you have for the american people? >> vanderbilt understood the power of draw drama. a chilling...
98
98
Nov 8, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 98
favorite 0
quote 0
early signs of hi hitler's northwesmostevil vision. good evening and thanks for being with us i'm joie chen. >> at is this time o last year e people on the eastern seaboard were still reeling. the american red cross sprang to the aid of victims armed with donated dollars. >> the red cross promised to help them recover from the disaster. disaster. you a ias it turns out many of e left wanting. one year on. this is breezy point. one. new york communities most deaf devastated we hurricane sandy churned up the east cost waves crashed into homes and the power went out and then more than 100 houses burned. visible scars left in piles of drifting sand. straighpeople in new york beachs like this. some homeses are so damagedded they'll never be inhabited again. you will here story after story of peep trying t people trying . sandy cost new york $42 billion. it will be a personal cost to bear for many years. >> up-and-down the coastal the dough bridough briedebris has b. the long nigh nightmare of destd or damaged homes is not yet over. thesteth
early signs of hi hitler's northwesmostevil vision. good evening and thanks for being with us i'm joie chen. >> at is this time o last year e people on the eastern seaboard were still reeling. the american red cross sprang to the aid of victims armed with donated dollars. >> the red cross promised to help them recover from the disaster. disaster. you a ias it turns out many of e left wanting. one year on. this is breezy point. one. new york communities most deaf devastated we...
111
111
Nov 30, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 111
favorite 0
quote 0
hitler had -- >> hitler? >> yeah. >> he saw a massacre and fainted nearly. >> yes. >> a german in 1942 and heard that in east prussia they were machine gunning mental patients to clear bed space for people who'd gone mad while killing women and chirp in the east -- and children in the east. and i thought something is not quite right in germany. >> no. but on the other hand, in the same city in '45 after the liberation russian troops, often teenagers, raided hospitals and raped people sometimes on their death beds, patients. so we have to be a little careful, the two of us. when you write about violation, there is, of course -- violence, there is, of course, the danger of the por nothing the by of violence. we're frightened of it and, therefore, fascinated by it. and one as a writer -- >> excited by it. >> i don't know how you feel, but one always has to be a bit careful that you don't start to revel in descriptions of it, because there is a pornographic element. and how one guards against that, i have no clea
hitler had -- >> hitler? >> yeah. >> he saw a massacre and fainted nearly. >> yes. >> a german in 1942 and heard that in east prussia they were machine gunning mental patients to clear bed space for people who'd gone mad while killing women and chirp in the east -- and children in the east. and i thought something is not quite right in germany. >> no. but on the other hand, in the same city in '45 after the liberation russian troops, often teenagers, raided...
130
130
Nov 9, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 130
favorite 0
quote 0
he will tell you about the jews. >> reporter: film professor wrote "hollywood and hitler," and i finds vanderbilt's clarity quite remarkable. >> when you look at the film with modern eyes you're struck by the menace of naziism. >> it was a box office bomb called heavy handed and ridiculed for suggesting that hitler might be a global threat. the film was thought to all but disappear until a championships, what is believed to be the copy of hitler reign of terror, they're accusing hollywood that effectively stretch the reach of the hitler propaganda campaign to movie houses. >> they demanded that the hollywood studios fired 2005 their jewish sales men in germany. >> reporter: but this film is challenged by the reminder that the 1930s in germany and the united states was a very different time. >> words like collaboration and complicit is ove overblown. we have to remember this is a post-war construct. >> a dark past reemerging to the light. joie chen, al jazeera. >> a decision on detroit's bacy status will be announced in the coming days. the results will determine whether detroit will be
he will tell you about the jews. >> reporter: film professor wrote "hollywood and hitler," and i finds vanderbilt's clarity quite remarkable. >> when you look at the film with modern eyes you're struck by the menace of naziism. >> it was a box office bomb called heavy handed and ridiculed for suggesting that hitler might be a global threat. the film was thought to all but disappear until a championships, what is believed to be the copy of hitler reign of terror,...
135
135
Nov 25, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 135
favorite 0
quote 0
do not see party bss and hitler. there was no equivalent to the nazi party and there was no in fact. there was an enormous amount of killing china particularly also southeast asia but there was no deliberate systematic attempt to exterminate an entire people so there had to be another explanation. in japan the explanation was precisely the spirit militarism and something deeply wrong with our japanese culture so while in germany you could denounce a fine revived the best of culture feeling rather ignorant allies after the war is there something so wrong about the japanese culture that it's feudalistic and warrior like. the whole culture was turned upside down. the kabuki plays about feudalism and to democratize japan along american lines they had to be really sort of educated in a very fundamental way which were some comical instances of this. there was one man anything from kansas, the officer in charge of the town somewhere in japan, in rural japan to thought that square dancing was the answer because square dancin
do not see party bss and hitler. there was no equivalent to the nazi party and there was no in fact. there was an enormous amount of killing china particularly also southeast asia but there was no deliberate systematic attempt to exterminate an entire people so there had to be another explanation. in japan the explanation was precisely the spirit militarism and something deeply wrong with our japanese culture so while in germany you could denounce a fine revived the best of culture feeling...
95
95
Nov 27, 2013
11/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
hitler is what you say when you're losing an argument. the six big powers has many of the flaws of munich calling the interim deal with iran one of those rare occasions when comparison with munich in 1938 was valid. but -- some version of godwin's law. >> this is a sham from beginning to end, it's the worst deal since munich. >> osama bin laden and his terrorists allies have made their intentions as clear as lenin and hitler before them. the question is, will we listen? >> we have got chavez in venezuela with a lot of oil money, he's a person who was elected legally, just as adolf hitler was elected legally. >> i have often used that precise analogy of hitler and munich as a reason why we should take rhetoric seriously. >> if every bit of diplomacy is appeasement, we must be as a people in perpetual war. luckily, americans have largely rejected that world view. but i'm -- paul wolfowitz was the deputy secretary of defense under george w. bush. he joins me now, mr. wolfowitz, my first question to you was given the fact that there was a kin
hitler is what you say when you're losing an argument. the six big powers has many of the flaws of munich calling the interim deal with iran one of those rare occasions when comparison with munich in 1938 was valid. but -- some version of godwin's law. >> this is a sham from beginning to end, it's the worst deal since munich. >> osama bin laden and his terrorists allies have made their intentions as clear as lenin and hitler before them. the question is, will we listen? >> we...
127
127
Nov 17, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 127
favorite 0
quote 0
i thought you got hitler station there. in these regional archives. i can start to understand what happened locally and whether or not hitler had a direct influence on that. in the early 90s, the big question of historiography with the decision-making question. when did the holocaust began? that was really what i was thinking when i went out there. i was naÏve enough to think may be some of the most important material is not turned. and the horde quarters. and someone gets copied on a file at a lower level, it ends up in a regional archives. maybe i'm going to find some important high-level directives that are going to tell us more about how the holocaust started in hitler's direct influence on not. when i got to the archives, i was astounded because there is a significant collection of material, things don't have looked at before. these were files that have bitterly footprints on the documents. the judges were burned. i could imagine when the red army came in at the end of 1943 to reoccupy that they were picking stuff up because there was warfare in
i thought you got hitler station there. in these regional archives. i can start to understand what happened locally and whether or not hitler had a direct influence on that. in the early 90s, the big question of historiography with the decision-making question. when did the holocaust began? that was really what i was thinking when i went out there. i was naÏve enough to think may be some of the most important material is not turned. and the horde quarters. and someone gets copied on a file at...
132
132
Nov 6, 2013
11/13
by
KQED
tv
eye 132
favorite 0
quote 0
later on, gurlit became an art agent, an art dealer for adolf hitler and helped hitler construct the collection for the museum hitler planned for his hometown in austria. and gurlit had special privileges. he could travel to the german occupied countries in france and the netherlands. he had access to foreign currency. evidently, it was during the war when he was buying art for hitler and other nazi leaders, hildebrand gurlit kept them for himself. >> what was objectional about these paintings, these works of art? >> adolf hitler resolved the debate personally about expressionism and modern art, and adolf hitler thought that modern art was, a., created by people who were physically inferior, who couldn't see colors as they were and shapes as they were, and this was a sign of racial inferiority. or, b., they were political subversives, that this was international art, and art that was sold by jewish art dealers, and for either racial reasons, or political reasons, hitler defamed this modern art, in order that it be removed from german state collections and partly because hitler and mo
later on, gurlit became an art agent, an art dealer for adolf hitler and helped hitler construct the collection for the museum hitler planned for his hometown in austria. and gurlit had special privileges. he could travel to the german occupied countries in france and the netherlands. he had access to foreign currency. evidently, it was during the war when he was buying art for hitler and other nazi leaders, hildebrand gurlit kept them for himself. >> what was objectional about these...
73
73
Nov 4, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 73
favorite 0
quote 0
you have hitler and himmler stationed there a high concentration maybe there is german documentation from these regional archives to understand what happens locally of whether or not hitler and himmler had a direct influence. in the early '90s the decision making process can we find a smoking gun? that is what i was thinking i was naive the nafta think maybe i would find because sometimes the important material does not turn up in the headquarters but because somebody copies of file at a lower-level it is a bad of regional archives. i thought i would find high-level directives how it started with hitler and himmler's direct but when i got to the archives i was astounded because there was a significant collection of material things i do nobody has looked at. files literally footprints on the documents cover the edges were burned bright kid imagine when the red are be caved in every occupied they were picking this up off the streets because there was more fair and shoving them id files the archivist was incredibly gracious because of this moment in time the ukraine is just establishing
you have hitler and himmler stationed there a high concentration maybe there is german documentation from these regional archives to understand what happens locally of whether or not hitler and himmler had a direct influence. in the early '90s the decision making process can we find a smoking gun? that is what i was thinking i was naive the nafta think maybe i would find because sometimes the important material does not turn up in the headquarters but because somebody copies of file at a...
118
118
Nov 30, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 118
favorite 0
quote 0
c-span: here's a photo of adolf hitler. what was him--his impact on this century. >> guest: remind me what page you're on because i absolutely--oh, i can look here. page one sixt--what i am--this is, i think, one of the most stunning pictures in the book and one of the most stunning pictures i have ever seen of hitler. there are a couple of others, by the way, of hitler posing in a--in a--in a studio as he practiced his picture--but here's a picture of such clarity taken at a rally in berlin in 1934 that you can look deeply into the faces of all the people. we were talking the other day about, you know, h--all these years after the war, there are still books coming out all the time reconsidering hitler and his place in life and--and re--reconsidering the german involvement in hitler and reconsidering how he came to power, which we'll do in--in at least one of the hours in the television news. i think you can accomplish an enormous amount just by looking at this picture... c-span: what was his impact, in your opinion? >> gue
c-span: here's a photo of adolf hitler. what was him--his impact on this century. >> guest: remind me what page you're on because i absolutely--oh, i can look here. page one sixt--what i am--this is, i think, one of the most stunning pictures in the book and one of the most stunning pictures i have ever seen of hitler. there are a couple of others, by the way, of hitler posing in a--in a--in a studio as he practiced his picture--but here's a picture of such clarity taken at a rally in...
69
69
Nov 30, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 69
favorite 0
quote 0
that hitler had the headquarter there. and that hitler 4 -- about 50 miles due south. so i thought here is an interesting place. it's in the heart of settlement. which was important for jewish -- russian-jewish history. katherine the great set up this population to this particular. it was the heart land of jewish history as far as empire, obviously, a large population of jews. the communities had concentrations of jews. sometimes 30 to 50% in towns of course around kia. i thought, okay, you've got hitler stationed there, a high concentration of jews, maybe there's german documentation from the war in the regional archive and i can start to understand what happened locally and whether or not hitler had a direct influence on that. in early '90s the big question hole cast was the decision making question. when did the holocaust begin? can we find a smoking gun a hitler order? that have thinking when i went went out there. i was naive to think maybe i can find. often some of the most important material doesn't turn up in the headquarter but because someone gets copied on a
that hitler had the headquarter there. and that hitler 4 -- about 50 miles due south. so i thought here is an interesting place. it's in the heart of settlement. which was important for jewish -- russian-jewish history. katherine the great set up this population to this particular. it was the heart land of jewish history as far as empire, obviously, a large population of jews. the communities had concentrations of jews. sometimes 30 to 50% in towns of course around kia. i thought, okay, you've...
87
87
Nov 30, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 87
favorite 0
quote 0
the question is, why didn't hitler crossed the channel into england? and if he had done so, with the english have used gas? >> host: okay, we'll ask that question as well. 202-585-3890 in the eastern and central time zones. 202-585-3891 for those of you in the mountain and pacific time zones. we are joined now by rick atkinson he's been listening to in the history and biography tent. thank you for being with us. fred in pennsylvania called a minute ago and he wondered about the italian campaign. he thought that was the biggest disaster of the war and specifically about mark clark, general clark. i told him that in the day of battle you spend quite a bit of time on mark clark. if you would, recount. >> guest: mark clark has been hit hard by many historians. i'm a generous to him than most. it is that he actually is a pretty capable battle commander among other things. there's 23,000 soldiers killed in italy in world war ii and not every commander is cut out to take those casualties and be able to sustain the kind of emotional weight that ratings. clark
the question is, why didn't hitler crossed the channel into england? and if he had done so, with the english have used gas? >> host: okay, we'll ask that question as well. 202-585-3890 in the eastern and central time zones. 202-585-3891 for those of you in the mountain and pacific time zones. we are joined now by rick atkinson he's been listening to in the history and biography tent. thank you for being with us. fred in pennsylvania called a minute ago and he wondered about the italian...
16
16
Nov 8, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
quote
eye 16
favorite 0
quote 1
. >> it emerged as film historians are keeping a lid on hitler in the 1930s. this author accuses hollywood for forging a pact to us movie houses.
. >> it emerged as film historians are keeping a lid on hitler in the 1930s. this author accuses hollywood for forging a pact to us movie houses.
83
83
Nov 9, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 83
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> our story begins with this failed artist and art architect, adolf hitler, who had applied to the vienna academy of fine arts and was rejected. art became a weapon of propaganda for the nazis as he rose to power, and the story begins in may 1938 with hitler and the nazi leaders visit, first state visit to italy beginning in rome. they walked through the coliseum with mussolini accompanying them, they looked at this wonderful sculpture by canova, and after four or five days they made it to florence on their last day. they only had ten hours, but more than two were allocated to visit the great museums of florence. they walked through the quarter starting at the pity palace and then made it to the museum. hitler felt like an artist walking among artists, having a chance to see masterpieces he'd only seen in books or had studied in galleries. he was fascinated with all of these things, and it really showed him the art of what was possible concerning his dream of building a museum in his hometown. it was going to be known as the lens museum or the fuhrer museum. he made these drawings
. >> our story begins with this failed artist and art architect, adolf hitler, who had applied to the vienna academy of fine arts and was rejected. art became a weapon of propaganda for the nazis as he rose to power, and the story begins in may 1938 with hitler and the nazi leaders visit, first state visit to italy beginning in rome. they walked through the coliseum with mussolini accompanying them, they looked at this wonderful sculpture by canova, and after four or five days they made...
92
92
Nov 27, 2013
11/13
by
KQEH
tv
eye 92
favorite 0
quote 0
akin to hitler. inler wanted to put people concentration camps. obama wants to give pap smears. i don't understand. more americans have died of this than all the wars that have ever been fought. it is really more dangerous to live under our flag and to fight extend toat would everything. >> while i take your point that people can get bored with the , i think withers is -- thisam seeing is part of the narrative writing. it is the folk on the left who are disappointed that this was not what they expected. i think you ain't got to be clairvoyant to see the writing on the wall. they are going to write a narrative that is going to try to make him a failed president. extent witho some what you are saying. we have always looked for symbols of success. he do a large part of the world was our diploma. he was everybody's saying, look how far we have come. he was as much a symbol to a lot of people as he was a president. they gave him a nobel peace prize on the assumption -- obama done killed a few people. i th
akin to hitler. inler wanted to put people concentration camps. obama wants to give pap smears. i don't understand. more americans have died of this than all the wars that have ever been fought. it is really more dangerous to live under our flag and to fight extend toat would everything. >> while i take your point that people can get bored with the , i think withers is -- thisam seeing is part of the narrative writing. it is the folk on the left who are disappointed that this was not what...
907
907
Nov 21, 2013
11/13
by
COM
tv
eye 907
favorite 0
quote 0
i agree, not cool, hitler, not cool. i'm sorry, this is where i get off. we'll be right back. ( cheers and applause ) ( cheers and applause ). >> stephen: welcome back, everybody. my guest tonight is the acclaimed rapper behind the albums "arular, "kala," "maya," and "matangi." either that, or my teleprompter is on the fritz again. please welcome m.i.a.! ( cheers and applause ) nice to meet you. thanks so much for coming on. all right, let me-- am i pronouncing that correctly, m.i.a.? >> yes. >> stephen: i didn't know, it could have been mia. you have another name, right? >> >> uh-huh. >> stephen: help me out. >> metangy. >> stephen: metangy. >> yes. >> stephen: and your last name. >> aropragasm? >> stephen: is that your real name? a lot of women fake the aropragasm. you have a new album. you're a big musician. and you are a visual artist, too, aren't you? >> yes. >> stephen: did you design all the stuff? >> yes. >> stephen: you did? >> yes. ( cheers and applause ). >> stephen: i'm impressed. why not stick to one thing? why do more than one thing at a time
i agree, not cool, hitler, not cool. i'm sorry, this is where i get off. we'll be right back. ( cheers and applause ) ( cheers and applause ). >> stephen: welcome back, everybody. my guest tonight is the acclaimed rapper behind the albums "arular, "kala," "maya," and "matangi." either that, or my teleprompter is on the fritz again. please welcome m.i.a.! ( cheers and applause ) nice to meet you. thanks so much for coming on. all right, let me-- am i...
60
60
Nov 28, 2013
11/13
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 60
favorite 0
quote 0
hitler's fury is a finalist for the book of nonfiction. this event is about one hour and 20 minutes. >> thank you very much and i want to thank the los angeles museum of the holocaust for giving me this opportunity to speak today to you. can you hear me in the back? i should speak more loudly? is this better? i also want to make sure that i don't speak too quickly. i get very excited about my research and sometimes i start speaking too quickly so i hope that you're going to give me a signal in the back both in terms of your ability to hear me and whether or not i should slow down a little bit. i'm really happy to be here. the doctor and i have done research in the field in ukraine. we worked on the project together, the diary of samuel can and do as a special project that took many years to produce, not as long as this one but a completely different perspective on the holocaust from the eyes of one jewish man who found himself in the maelstrom of the mass murder, so i just wanted to mention that contribution to that particular project was
hitler's fury is a finalist for the book of nonfiction. this event is about one hour and 20 minutes. >> thank you very much and i want to thank the los angeles museum of the holocaust for giving me this opportunity to speak today to you. can you hear me in the back? i should speak more loudly? is this better? i also want to make sure that i don't speak too quickly. i get very excited about my research and sometimes i start speaking too quickly so i hope that you're going to give me a...
237
237
Nov 29, 2013
11/13
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 237
favorite 0
quote 0
months later hitler committed suicide and germany surrendered. it would take another four months for japan to do the same, and only after the u.s. dropped atomic bombs on hiroshima and nagasaki. in the end over 400,000 americans were killed and nearly 700,000 wounded but some 15 million returned home. the department of veterans affairs now estimates a little over 1 million world war ii veterans are still alive. this past veterans day our country's oldest known service member from world war ii was honored with a standing ovation at arlington national cemetery. 107-year-old richard overton then returned home where he was greeted with cheers, handshakes, and hugs. just one of the ways a hometown and a nation pays respect to those who changed the course of history. [ cheers and applause ] >> wow. well, my next guest is a member of the greatest generation. just 17 years old when he joined the u.s. marines and fought in the battle of okinawa. more than 250,000 u.s. troops were engaged and the allies forces lost 12,000 men in a battle that lasted more t
months later hitler committed suicide and germany surrendered. it would take another four months for japan to do the same, and only after the u.s. dropped atomic bombs on hiroshima and nagasaki. in the end over 400,000 americans were killed and nearly 700,000 wounded but some 15 million returned home. the department of veterans affairs now estimates a little over 1 million world war ii veterans are still alive. this past veterans day our country's oldest known service member from world war ii...
109
109
Nov 13, 2013
11/13
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 109
favorite 0
quote 0
stalin in russia, hitler in germany, reviled modern art as degenerate, decadent, and elitist, and they sought to replace it forcibly by an art portraying the proletarian glories of their new order-- a kind of heroic social realism, in which, ultimately, the political meaning was absolutely unambiguous and totally controllable, which it could never be in modernism. for hitler himself, the modern artists were babblers, dilettantes, and art swindlers, who should be abolished in favor of the creative power of the masses. as the nazi director of the museum in essen put it, "the most perfect artifact of the last era "did not come from modern artists. it is the steel helmet." spain, immersed in civil war, offered the opportunity for the nazis to test germany's war readiness. in a show of fascist solidarity with franco, the luftwaffe tore apart the little basque town of guernica. this was a signal for picasso to offer a response to the savagery of the times. in a period of just a few weeks, he painted the canvas guernica to hang in the spanish pavilion at the 1937 paris exhibition. extreme dis
stalin in russia, hitler in germany, reviled modern art as degenerate, decadent, and elitist, and they sought to replace it forcibly by an art portraying the proletarian glories of their new order-- a kind of heroic social realism, in which, ultimately, the political meaning was absolutely unambiguous and totally controllable, which it could never be in modernism. for hitler himself, the modern artists were babblers, dilettantes, and art swindlers, who should be abolished in favor of the...
189
189
Nov 13, 2013
11/13
by
KNTV
tv
eye 189
favorite 0
quote 0
go back to saudi arabia, hitler!" - "y're buying a bike but not a helmet? "theead is where the child's brain is. why don't you t educated, double hitler?" i was gonna buy a heet. - "helme inhibit brain delopment. "you mights well give yourarling child vaccines, which studies show cause homoseality." - "so what? my two-year-old is super gay,
go back to saudi arabia, hitler!" - "y're buying a bike but not a helmet? "theead is where the child's brain is. why don't you t educated, double hitler?" i was gonna buy a heet. - "helme inhibit brain delopment. "you mights well give yourarling child vaccines, which studies show cause homoseality." - "so what? my two-year-old is super gay,
11
11
tv
eye 11
favorite 0
quote 0
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is engine air and yet in the aftermath of the i think it was small town shooting and you were engaged in that kind that the courts program i think to teach children and solve defense do you think those skills would bear out how cool if they were faced with somebody who was armed to the well first of all i wasn't teaching children than themselves i was teaching what's called the posse which are sworn officers to come in and defend schools. and so these are people that have had training with firearms and they have had police training there just not on my level but they are you know sworn in but you still
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is...
21
21
tv
eye 21
favorite 0
quote 0
would hitler got use a lot of it got a lot of his power from the people because he was wailing about terrorists is germany always they talk about terrorists that justifies authoritarian state it's always the first method in george orwell's ninety four it's always about terrorists even carthy only nut cases joe because the terrorists communists planted in our schools and our government so who is creates this fear in the american people. to stay with us for the interview with all of a stone later in the day here on our say but for now the israeli military is refusing to confirm or deny reports that its warplanes have yet again breached syria's sovereignty and bombed local targets there according to u.s. media reports citing a white house official israeli air force attacked a military base storing a missile arsenal apparently destined for the lebanese group hezbollah now the incident happened near syria's port city of latakia and it's not the first time though that israel has been blamed for blatantly ignoring international laws by launching air strikes in the state similar attacks whic
would hitler got use a lot of it got a lot of his power from the people because he was wailing about terrorists is germany always they talk about terrorists that justifies authoritarian state it's always the first method in george orwell's ninety four it's always about terrorists even carthy only nut cases joe because the terrorists communists planted in our schools and our government so who is creates this fear in the american people. to stay with us for the interview with all of a stone later...
17
17
tv
eye 17
favorite 0
quote 0
would hitler god use a lot of it got a lot of his power from the people because he was wailing about terrorists is germany always they talk about terrorists that's just a first. it's always the first method in george orwell's ninety four it's always about terrorists even in the car thielemann nut cases drove a car of the terrorists communists planted in our schools and our government so who's creates this fear that in american people. our thanks for joining us here on r.t. today the israeli military is refusing to confirm or deny reports that its warplanes have yet again breached syria's sovereignty embalmed of multiple targets there according to u.s. media reports citing a white house official the israeli air force attacked a military base storing a missile arsenal apparently destined for the lebanese group hezbollah the incident happened near syria's port city of latakia and it's not the first time though that israel has been blamed for blatantly ignoring international laws by launching air strikes in the state a similar attacks which the israeli leadership refused to confirm took
would hitler god use a lot of it got a lot of his power from the people because he was wailing about terrorists is germany always they talk about terrorists that's just a first. it's always the first method in george orwell's ninety four it's always about terrorists even in the car thielemann nut cases drove a car of the terrorists communists planted in our schools and our government so who's creates this fear that in american people. our thanks for joining us here on r.t. today the israeli...
110
110
Nov 11, 2013
11/13
by
KCSM
tv
eye 110
favorite 0
quote 0
nineteen thirty eight to nineteen forty one for the nazis finding buyers for confiscated works that hitler considered quote t generate now the discovery's already raising questions why did the german authorities weeks along to the why are they now refusing to publish the full list of all the works they found. am i guess today on the show is that christina collect welcome. you were a historian and a senior lecturer at university of paris to obviously here in paris. and you specialize really enough to start the quilt rural heritage and the people concerned with the cultural heritage honor in war time on some of my new art historian but you are a specialist in cultural heritage to the story definitely applies. i wanna ask you right away you just heard me say that the germans discovered them. these are works in this munich apartment. a year and a half ago. we've just found out about it this week. why did the weeks along. this was top secret been missing this case was cooler to men in top secret and has had the attorney off and the battery i wanted. stu wanted to do that. did the investigation
nineteen thirty eight to nineteen forty one for the nazis finding buyers for confiscated works that hitler considered quote t generate now the discovery's already raising questions why did the german authorities weeks along to the why are they now refusing to publish the full list of all the works they found. am i guess today on the show is that christina collect welcome. you were a historian and a senior lecturer at university of paris to obviously here in paris. and you specialize really...
25
25
tv
eye 25
favorite 0
quote 0
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is engine air and yet in the aftermath of the i think it was small town shooting and you were engaged in that kind that program i think to teach children and solve defense do you think those skills would bear out how cool if they were faced with somebody who was armed to the well first of all i wasn't teaching children just as in themselves i was teaching what's called the posse which are sworn officers to come in and defend schools and so these are people that have had training with firearms they have had police training they're just not on my level but they are you know sworn but you still thought. it
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is...
2,063
2.1K
Nov 28, 2013
11/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 2,063
favorite 0
quote 8
it is just like hitler. it's not anything like hitler. munich. or appeasment, or i mean that happened once in history. every other comparison is a bad one. this i think any normal person would say, is a huge, the american people, in a approximately poll today, 2 to 1. a stunning diplomatic success like syria was. they called that a debacle. tell me how getting some one to disarm without firing a shot is a debacle. >> to get up in arms, you have to argue there is a long term consequence that may, may not kick in. bah because the it is quite clear. what they have to do, iranians, bring everything to a stand still. more importantly the transparency, the amount of inspections are going to go up to such a degree that if they were to cheat, it would be the minimal amount of cheating they probably could get away with. so if you think, we're getting a bad deal here. it's because you say well this is going to deteriorate sanctions over time. or, after this is over. in six months time. they can kick in again. start going faster and developing a nuclear wea
it is just like hitler. it's not anything like hitler. munich. or appeasment, or i mean that happened once in history. every other comparison is a bad one. this i think any normal person would say, is a huge, the american people, in a approximately poll today, 2 to 1. a stunning diplomatic success like syria was. they called that a debacle. tell me how getting some one to disarm without firing a shot is a debacle. >> to get up in arms, you have to argue there is a long term consequence...
100
100
Nov 9, 2013
11/13
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 100
favorite 0
quote 0
hitler was a hunter. how did i happen? because god allowed it to happen. why? because god said, my top priority for the jewish people is to get them to come back to the land of israel. >> god sent hitler to get the jews into israel, so it was a good thing? wow. this guy's a big influential texas tell van jellist megachurch guy and so, john mccain went and sought his endorsement when he was running for president and he got it and then ultimately, john mccain had to give it back when it turned out he's the god sent hitler back. you can't take that guy's endorsement and it turns out his whole idea of defend iing israe is just getting all the jews there at once so god can zap them all at one time. these guys exist. they are still around. they've not gone anywhere. last year, a group called the messianic bible institute held a meeting to talk about their strategy. their plan to hasten those end days is to -- jewish people. to convert jewish people, they hope by the millions, convert jewish people to accept jesus as their messiah. this is how they're trying to trigge
hitler was a hunter. how did i happen? because god allowed it to happen. why? because god said, my top priority for the jewish people is to get them to come back to the land of israel. >> god sent hitler to get the jews into israel, so it was a good thing? wow. this guy's a big influential texas tell van jellist megachurch guy and so, john mccain went and sought his endorsement when he was running for president and he got it and then ultimately, john mccain had to give it back when it...
114
114
Nov 9, 2013
11/13
by
MSNBC
tv
eye 114
favorite 0
quote 0
hitler was a hunter. how did it happen? because god allowed it to happen. why? because god said, my top priority for the jewish people is to get them to come back to the land of israel. >> god sent hitler to get the jews into israel, so it was a good thing? wow. this guy's a big influential texas tell aoe advantage televangelist megachurch guy and so, john mccain went and sought his endorsement when he was running for president and he got it and then ultimately, john mccain had to give it back when it turned out he's the god sent hitler back. you can't take that guy's endorsement and it turns out his whole idea of defending israel is just getting all the jews there at once so god can zap them all at one time. these guys exist. they are still around. they've not gone anywhere. last year, a group called the messianic bible institute held a meeting to talk about their strategy. their plan to hasten those end days is to -- jewish people. to convert jewish people, they hope by the millions, convert jewish people to accept jesus as their messiah. this is how they're t
hitler was a hunter. how did it happen? because god allowed it to happen. why? because god said, my top priority for the jewish people is to get them to come back to the land of israel. >> god sent hitler to get the jews into israel, so it was a good thing? wow. this guy's a big influential texas tell aoe advantage televangelist megachurch guy and so, john mccain went and sought his endorsement when he was running for president and he got it and then ultimately, john mccain had to give it...
324
324
Nov 9, 2013
11/13
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 324
favorite 0
quote 0
a film uncovers hitler's rise to power. joey chan reports. >> i have never heard a man so able to sway people. >> the production seems crude by today's standards, but in his 1933 film neil vaneder vild tried to warn the world of the threat of hitler. haven't der veldt carried two items. a film camera and his great grandfather's well-known name giving him access in pre-war germany. >> i'm an american business map, what message do you have. >> he translated and receiptated a chilling conversation. >> what about the jews? >> she this man here -- see this man here, he'll tell you about the jews. >> the university film professor tom dory wrote "hollywood and hitler", and finds it remarkable. >> when you look at the film with modern eyes, you'll be struck. >> for all the effort "hitler reign of terror was a bomb", called heavy-handed and ridiculed to suggesting hilt ler may be a global threat. it all but disappeared until a chance discovery in the stack of the royal belgium film archive. the only surviving copy of hitler's rain o
a film uncovers hitler's rise to power. joey chan reports. >> i have never heard a man so able to sway people. >> the production seems crude by today's standards, but in his 1933 film neil vaneder vild tried to warn the world of the threat of hitler. haven't der veldt carried two items. a film camera and his great grandfather's well-known name giving him access in pre-war germany. >> i'm an american business map, what message do you have. >> he translated and receiptated...
35
35
tv
eye 35
favorite 0
quote 1
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was a protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as a human being so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is engine air and yet in the aftermath of the i think it was a small town shooting and you were engaged in that kind that the court's going to teach children and do you think those skills would get how cool if they were faced with somebody who was armed to the well first of all i wasn't teaching children just as in themselves i was teaching what's called the posse which are sworn officers to come in and defend schools. and so these are people that have had training with firearms they have had police training they're just not on my level but they are you know sworn in but you still see. that there's some
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was a protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as a human being so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is...
24
24
tv
eye 24
favorite 0
quote 0
what hitler got used a lot of it got a lot of his power from the people because he was wailing about terrorists inside germany always they talk about terrorists that justifies a totalitarian state it's always the first method in george orwell's nine hundred eighty four it's always about terrorists even because the only nutcases joba current the terrorists communists planted in our schools in our government so who is creates this fear that the american people i love when gorbachev left and the end of the day we will have to use technology so this is very scary very scary unless we educate people not to be scared to be beyond their fear to accept that uncertainty exists in life that terrorism does happen it did exist in europe for thirty years i was over in europe it was bombs in england the ira france there was cafes blown up in downtown paris for algeria there's all kinds of issues iraq iran italy japan spain terrorism they dealt with. with good police work detective work they found the terrorists you don't have to put out a this mega alert system that we have with a national securit
what hitler got used a lot of it got a lot of his power from the people because he was wailing about terrorists inside germany always they talk about terrorists that justifies a totalitarian state it's always the first method in george orwell's nine hundred eighty four it's always about terrorists even because the only nutcases joba current the terrorists communists planted in our schools in our government so who is creates this fear that the american people i love when gorbachev left and the...
20
20
tv
eye 20
favorite 0
quote 0
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is engine air and yet in the aftermath of the i think it was small town shooting if you were engaged in that kind that program i think to teach children or in self-defense do you think those skills would be or how cool if they were faced with somebody who was armed to the well first of all i wasn't teaching children just as in themselves i was teaching what's called the posse which are sworn officers to come in and defend schools. and so these are people that have had training with firearms they have had police training they're just not on my level but they are you know sworn in but you still see. that
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is...
16
16
tv
eye 16
favorite 0
quote 0
when hitler got used a lot of it got a lot of his power from the people because he was wailing about terrorists inside germany always they talk about terrorists that justifies a totalitarian state it's always the first method in george orwell's nine hundred eighty four it's always about terrorists even i mean because the only nut cases still mccarthy terrorists communists planted in our schools and our government so who is creates this fear in the american people i love when gorbachev left and they were adamant they that we will have to use technology so this is very scary very scary unless we educate people not to be scared to be beyond their fear to accept that uncertainty exists in life but terrorism does happen it did exist in europe for thirty years i was over in europe it was bombs in england the ira france there was cafes blown up in downtown paris for algeria there's all kinds of issues iraq iran italy japan spain terrorism they dealt with it with good police work detective work they found the terrorists you don't have to put out a this mega alert system that we have with a n
when hitler got used a lot of it got a lot of his power from the people because he was wailing about terrorists inside germany always they talk about terrorists that justifies a totalitarian state it's always the first method in george orwell's nine hundred eighty four it's always about terrorists even i mean because the only nut cases still mccarthy terrorists communists planted in our schools and our government so who is creates this fear in the american people i love when gorbachev left and...
12
12
tv
eye 12
favorite 0
quote 0
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is engine air and yet in the aftermath of the i think it should and you were engaged in that come out to court program i think to teach children and solve defense do you think those skills would be or how cool if they were faced with somebody who was a little first of all i wasn't teaching children just as in themselves i was teaching what's called the posse which are sworn officers to come in and defend schools. and so these are people that have had training with firearms they have had police training they're just not on my level but they are you know sworn in but you still see. that there's something
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is...
15
15
tv
eye 15
favorite 0
quote 0
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments in anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is engine air and yet in the aftermath of the i think it was small town shooting you were engaged in that kind that took with program i think to teach children and solve defense do you think those skills would be helpful if they were faced with somebody who was armed to the well first of all i wasn't teaching children just as in themselves i was teaching what's called the posse which are sworn officers to come in and defend schools and so these are people that have had training with firearms they have had police training they're just not on my level but they are you know sworn but you still thought. it was i
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments in anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is engine...
13
13
tv
eye 13
favorite 0
quote 0
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is engine air and yet in the aftermath of the i think. you were engaged in that kind that program i think to teach children in self-defense do you think those skills would be or how cool if they were faced with somebody who was armed with a little first of all i wasn't teaching children to defend themselves i was teaching what's called the posse which are sworn officers to come in and defend schools. and so these are people that have had training with firearms they have had police training they're just not on my level but they are you know sworn in but you still see. that there's something has to be don
adolf hitler for example when he wanted to annihilate the people of germany the first thing he did was take away their guns and the rights to bear arms wasn't just to protect the people from foreign invaders it was to protect them against evil governments and anyone that would violate their inherent rights as human beings so i believe in the second amendment and i believe that i hate to say this a lot of these mass murders and all this funny stuff that's going on i believe a lot of this is...