Here at Vlad the Impaler’s tomb…
Folks, this reminds me that cultures have historically been marred by illegal aliens.
One moment you’re enjoying your hard fought societal traditions and values, the next invaders decide your land and your people should look like theirs.
The Prince of Walachia wasn’t some cartoon villain, he was a great hero to his people.
When the Turks came rolling in, he did what was necessary to protect his culture and way of life.
Sometimes the only thing standing between your civilization and the next wave of invaders is a motivated PATRIOT willing to do what it takes. Respect
@nicksortor@StephenM@LaurenWitzkeDE@GavinNewsom@JBPritzker@ZohranKMamdani
Europeans and American patriots!
Tomorrow, the courts of my country, France, may decide to send me to prison for daring to say on television that “the main danger to women in France is Black African and Arab immigrant men.”
Meanwhile, my own attacker, a Tunisian migrant, is still at large.
I need your help to generate media pressure and hope to be acquitted.
They cannot silence the truth!
Thank you for your support 💪🏻🇫🇷
When people talk about the crimes of Sweden they mean Sami colonialism or some shit and not that one time they killed 1/3rd of Poland's population and enslaved the survivors to work in labor camps
A contemporary account from a swedish soldier during the deluge states "After entering the village we killed all the men, but left the women and children. The finns killed those."
85 years ago today, the sky over Crete went black with parachutes.
It was May 20, 1941. Hitler had just unleashed Operation Mercury, the largest airborne invasion the world had ever seen. 22,000 elite Fallschirmjäger, the pride of the Reich, dropped onto an island most of them couldn't find on a map.
What happened next horrified him.
Cretan villagers swarmed the paratroopers as they hit the ground, armed with scythes, kitchen knives, hunting shotguns, and antique rifles older than their grandfathers. Priests fought. 12-year-old boys fought. Old women fought. One German account describes being chased through an olive grove by a grandmother with a meat cleaver.
Hundreds of paratroopers were killed before they could unhook from their harnesses. Others were shot dangling in trees. Entire elite battalions ceased to exist in a single afternoon.
The Germans won the battle. It took them 10 brutal days. They lost roughly 4,000 of their best airborne troops, more Fallschirmjäger than they had lost in every previous campaign of the war combined.
Hitler was so shaken that he summoned General Student, the father of the German airborne, and told him: "The day of the parachute troops is over."
He never authorized a major airborne assault again.
The cruel irony: Churchill watched the same battle and drew the opposite conclusion. Britain immediately accelerated its own airborne program. Three years later, those lessons fell from the sky over Normandy.
Crete won the war it lost.