Title: The Mystery of Jahbulon—Strange God of Rothschild, the Masonic Lodge, and the Khazar Jews Who Rule the World Source:
[None] URL Source:[None] Published:Nov 2, 2011 Author:Trxe Marrs Post Date:2011-11-02 09:24:06 by Itistoolate Keywords:None Views:534 Comments:29
The Mystery of JahbulonStrange God of Rothschild, the Masonic Lodge, and the Khazar Jews Who Rule the World
Someone posted this Wickstrom clip here about two months ago. He never identifies this "Rabbi Abie Finkelstein" beyond saying that he is "on the East Coast" - not a word on his rabbinic training, affiliation or congregation. No luck finding him with Google, and that vaudeville Yiddish accent and some of the incredibly stupid comments persuade me this is another Wickstrom hoax -- as though someone who has his photo taken with a Nazi flag would have any credibility.
as though someone who has his photo taken with a Nazi flag would have any credibility.
Back when I worked for the State of Illinois, we had a foreman who was a Swabian German. That is the territory along the border of the old Chechoslovakia. When Germany annexed the land, he volunteered for the Wehrmacht. His father protested to the camp commander that he was being treated too harshly. He was arrested and sent to the camps in Germany as a "dissenter". Last I heard, he still had not found a trace of him. Many people disappeared in those camps.
Once, when we were working on a job, I said to him "Vetter Deutcheland, Morgen, Der Velt", (the headline on the Nazi Party newspaper the day after Hitler was elected Chancellor of Germany) which translates as "Today Germany, Tomorrow, The World". The foreman said, "I don't know what you are talking about." ;)
The foreman said, "I don't know what you are talking about."
Probably because you were blabbering nonsense. "Vetter" means cousin.
The saying comes from the refrain to a nazi-era song that goes, "Denn heute gehört uns Deutschland und morgen die ganze Welt." - For today Germany belongs to us, tomorrow the whole world. Also, you are probably confusing the Sudetenland with Swabia (Schwabenland).
"I don't know what you are talking about." is a typically German way of inoffensively saying "You don't know what you are talking about."