| I take back everything bad I've said about Jonas Brothers. Haha, they're not that gross afterall:) |
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| What was seen in the cinemas was controlled. "Hitlerjunge Quex" was made in 1933. This film told the story of a boy brought up in a communist family in Germany who broke away from this background, joined the Hitler Youth and was murdered by the Communists in Germany for doing so. "The Eternal Jew" was a film that vilified the Jews - comparing the Jews in Europe to a hoard of rats, spreading disease etc. "Tarzan" films were banned because the Nazis frowned on so little clothing being worn especially by women. One film that celebrated the might of the German Navy was not screened as it showed a drunken German sailor. However, the cinemas were not full of serious films with a political message. Goebbels ordered that many comedies should be made to give Germany a 'lighter' look.
Hitler oh Hitler
California's Attorney-General was Earl Warren. He stated that law enforcement officers had concluded that the Nisei were more dangerous to America's security than their parents. State newspapers printed lurid claims that plots had been discovered. Some bordered on the absurd - that Japanese farmers had planted tomato crops that when the plants blossomed, they would point like an arrow to military installations to assist Japanese bombers. Reports were published that the FBI had found hidden radio transmitters (they had not).
HAHAHAHA, WTH. |
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See lian, I updated. |
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