Monday, 24 January 2011

Hitler the über-self-hating Jew



Yet more Jewish psychologists
who believes Hitler was convinced his grandfather was a Jew, and how this influenced not only Hitler's treatment of the Jews, but his personal choices including never to marry or have children.

Professor Arno Gruen (Jew) contributor
Professor Carl Goldberg (Jew) contributor
Professor Sander J. Breiner (Jew) contributor
Professor Benjamin Beit-Hallahmi (Jew) contributor
Professor Jerry S. Piven - pictured (Jew) edited the 2002 book:

Judaism & Genocide: Psychological Undercurrents of History

"Officially Hitler's parents were Catholics, but his father had been an illegitimate child whose father's identity remains unknown. By rumor, Hitler's unknown grandfather was a Jew—a rumor that haunted him. He had it investigated, obtaining evidence that it was true. How strong the evidence was is less important here than that Hitler accepted it as valid and an explanation of what he considered to be his own evil nature. And he projected the idea onto the nation, seeing it as being ruined by "Jewish blood."

From völkisch theory Hitler took the idea that "Jewish blood" was genetically dominant—that the offspring of a Jew and a non-Jew was always biologically a Jew. That made his father and himself Jews. In addition Hitler developed the delusion that both his father and he had syphilis. This was behind his demands that his doctors bleed him and, when that failed to "cure" him, his decision not to marry or have children—not to propagate the evil he carried. Hitler combined these ideas with social Darwinism—which was sweeping Germany—into a delusion shared by many: the nation's afflictions were caused by biological and moral pollution from "Jewish blood."
quickview: here


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