@PJavierOR Con todo respeto cura, es un pendejo.
SODOMIA;Los mexicas castigaban severamente la Sodomia,mientras que en europa lugares como Italia,Venecia y belgica eran sodomitas,organizaban orgías gay y prácticas zoofilia.
SACRIFICIOS: sí se prácticaba y ¿dónde queda su quema de brujas?
@PJavierOR Padre, en la CDMX erigieron en un pilar a la diosa pagana Victoria, guardiana de Zeus y Roma.
Tenemos que destruir tan horripilante idolatria! De un imperio que practicaba: incesto, sodomía, sacrificios...
O solo le molesta el paganismo indigena y las tradiciones mexicanas?
⚽🇲🇽🇺🇸🇨🇦 THIRD-POSITIONIST WORLD CUP
🇳🇱🇯🇵: Anton Mussert’s Resentment Toward Japan
Anton Mussert, leader and founder of the Nationaal-Socialistische Beweging (NSB), the main Dutch fascist movement, held an ambivalent but clearly resentful stance toward Imperial Japan during the 1930s and World War II. Although he admired certain aspects of Japanese fascism, Mussert viewed Japan as a direct threat to the Dutch colonial empire — particularly the Dutch East Indies (present-day Indonesia) — which he regarded as the economic and strategic pillar of a Greater Netherlands under fascist rule.
Mussert was a Dutch nationalist who passionately defended the preservation of the colonial empire. For him, the East Indies were not only a source of wealth (the “milch cow” of the empire) but an essential element of Dutch identity and power. Japanese expansion in Asia directly endangered this project.
Anton Mussert’s resentment toward Japan consisted of:
- Obsessive defense of the Dutch East Indies: Mussert repeatedly warned of the Japanese danger and demanded that the Netherlands strengthen its military defenses in the colonies. He considered Japan an existential threat to Dutch control in Southeast Asia.
- Criticism of Western powers for enabling Japan’s rise: He accused Britain and France of having facilitated, through policies of appeasement and postwar treaties, Japan’s emergence as a major regional power capable of threatening European colonies, including the Dutch ones.
- Partial but subordinate admiration: Mussert acknowledged that Japan had become a “good fascist” by freeing itself from Anglo-American influence and modernizing in an authoritarian manner. However, this admiration was completely overshadowed by his priority of preserving the Dutch empire.
- Opposition to Germany’s alliance with Japan: When Nazi Germany signed the Tripartite Pact with Japan in 1940, Mussert felt betrayed in his aspirations. The NSB desired a fascist European unity directed against Japan, but Hitler prioritized the alliance with Tokyo. Mussert attempted on several occasions to convince Hitler to protect Dutch colonial interests in Asia, without success.
- Final blow with the Japanese invasion of 1942: The Japanese occupation of the Dutch East Indies in March 1942 represented the realization of Mussert’s worst nightmare. The fact that an Axis ally had seized Dutch colonies was seen as both a humiliation and a strategic failure of his vision of a fascist Dutch empire within a German-dominated Europe.
Although Mussert collaborated closely with Nazi Germany, his resentment toward Japan never disappeared. For him, the war in Asia was not only a struggle against the Allies but also a threat to the survival of the Dutch colonial empire, which he considered inseparable from national greatness.
⚽️🇲🇽🇺🇸🇨🇦 THIRD-POSITIONIST WORLD CUP
🇩🇪🇨🇼: Bombardment of Curaçao
During World War II, the German submarine U-130 carried out an attempt to bomb the oil storage facilities on the Caribbean island of Curaçao, then a Dutch colony. The objective was to set fire to the fuel tanks and damage the Allies’ ability to process and export Venezuelan oil, which was vital to the war effort.
This episode was part of the German U-boat campaign in the Caribbean (known as the Battle of the Caribbean), in which the Kriegsmarine sought to disrupt the Allied fuel supply by attacking refineries, storage tanks, and oil tankers on the islands of Aruba and Curaçao — home to some of the largest oil facilities in the Western Hemisphere.
The bombing of Curaçao consisted of:
- Deck gun attack: On April 19, 1942, around 02:15 in the morning, the U-130 (Type IXC), under the command of Kapitänleutnant Ernst Kals, surfaced in front of Bullen Baai (west of Willemstad) and fired at least five shells from its 10.5 cm deck gun at the oil storage tank farm belonging to the Shell company.
- Strategic objective: The goal was to cause a massive fire in the crude oil and fuel tanks in order to destroy vital reserves and create both a logistical and psychological impact against the Allies. Curaçao was a key target because it processed much of the Venezuelan oil that powered the Allied war machine.
- Dutch coastal defense response: The explosions from the shells (which missed the tanks) alerted the Dutch coastal artillery battery, equipped with two 120 mm naval guns. The defenders responded with a single shot that completely missed the submarine.
- Immediate withdrawal: Upon detecting the coastal artillery fire, Commander Kals ordered the attack to be aborted, the submarine to dive, and the area to be abandoned. The U-130 escaped without suffering any damage or casualties.
- Total failure: The bombing was a complete failure. No damage was inflicted on the oil facilities, there were no casualties on either side, and the attempt did not disrupt the Allied fuel supply in the Caribbean.
This attack formed part of the broader German submarine offensive in the Caribbean that began in February 1942 (Operation Neuland), which included earlier strikes against Aruba and Curaçao. Although German U-boats sank numerous oil tankers and caused significant losses, direct attempts against land-based refineries and storage tanks were generally unsuccessful due to coastal defenses and rapid Allied responses.
⚽️🇲🇽🇺🇸🇨🇦 THIRD-POSITIONIST WORLD CUP
🇦🇺🇹🇷: The Case of Adem Somyurek and the Grey Wolves in Australia
Adem Somyurek, an Australian Labor politician of Turkish origin and former minister in the Victorian government, was publicly linked to the Grey Wolves (Ulku Ocaklari or Bozkurtlar), Turkey’s far-right ultranationalist organization. The connection gained significant attention in 2020, when Somyurek was expelled from the Australian Labor Party following major scandals involving branch stacking and leaked recordings containing misogynistic and homophobic comments.
The Grey Wolves are a Turkish ultranationalist and paramilitary organization historically tied to the MHP (Nationalist Movement Party). They promote pan-Turkism and have been associated with political violence, attacks on Kurds, Armenians, and leftists, as well as denial of the Armenian Genocide. The group has been linked to terrorist acts, most notably the 1981 assassination attempt on Pope John Paul II by member Mehmet Ali Ağca.
Adem Somyurek’s connection to the Grey Wolves consisted of:
- Inauguration of their melbourne headquarters: In June 2014, Somyurek participated in the official opening of the Grey Wolves’ offices in Melbourne’s southeastern suburbs. The event was covered and photographed by the Greek-Australian newspaper Neos Kosmos, which published images of him at the ceremony.
- Public and symbolic support: As a prominent Turkish-Australian figure and influential Labor politician in areas with large Turkish communities, his presence at the inauguration was widely interpreted as political endorsement of the ultranationalist group on Australian soil.
- Use of associated community networks: His extensive branch-stacking operations (registering large numbers of paid or fake members to control party branches) were concentrated in Melbourne’s southeastern suburbs — the same area where the Grey Wolves maintained their headquarters. This raised suspicions that he leveraged networks linked to the organization to consolidate power within the Victorian Labor Party.
- Strong criticism from the armenian community: The Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-Australia) was one of the most vocal critics. Following his dismissal in June 2020, the organization issued a statement welcoming the move and explicitly highlighting his ties to the Grey Wolves, describing them as an ultranationalist group with ideological roots in the Young Turks responsible for the Armenian Genocide of 1915.
The Somyurek case sparked debate in Australia about the influence of foreign ultranationalist organizations within mainstream political parties, particularly through ethnic community structures. While Somyurek was never a formal member of the Grey Wolves, his participation in the inauguration of their offices and the political use of associated networks were enough for Armenian organizations and media outlets to label him as a supporter of the group.
⚽️🇲🇽🇺🇸🇨🇦 THIRD-POSITIONIST WORLD CUP
🇭🇹🏴: Comparison between François Duvalier & William Weir Gillmour
- Supremacy: Duvalier was a Black supremacist and a practicing Voodoo practitioner who promoted the exclusion of mulattos, whites, foreigners, and Catholics. Gillmour was a Protestant supremacist who opposed Catholicism and Irish immigration.
- Anti-Catholicism: Both were staunchly anti-Catholic; Duvalier was a Voodoo advocate, and Gillmour was a Protestant nationalist.
- They were not military men: Papa Doc was a doctor, and Gillmour was a miner, photographer, and businessman.
Si México fuera un país racional y con conciencia hubiéramos exterminado a esa colonia, ojo no lo digo por una estupidez marica de "muh ay que matar fachos y nazis", me da igual eso, lo digo porque odiaban a México y la población local, además de que nunca se asimilaron.
@Macario541452 Chad y sigma, pero mejor si llenemos Israel de prostitutas trans para que su sociedad se degrade más de lo que ya están y los Árabes vayan a violarlos y ganen ya, pero ojo, solo a Israel, a Gaza y Cisjordania no