More than a decade before Hitler and his Nazi Party came to power, Britain had its own monsters who planned to get rid of the poor and other ‘undesirables’ and form a ‘master-race’
Read the incredible story of
More than a decade before Hitler and his Nazi Party came to power, Britain had its own monsters who planned to get rid of the poor and other ‘undesirables’ and form a ‘master-race’
Read the incredible story of
A new play celebrating the life of the infamous Nazi eugenics-supporting, anti-Catholic bigot, Marie Stopes has been funded by the Arts Council England and is setting out on tour.
Stopes, founder of the Society for Constructive Birth Control and Racial Progress, attended the 1935 International Congress for Population Science in Nazi Germany, sponsored by its German branch and by the Society for Racial Hygiene.
“Catholics, Prussians, Jews and Russians, all are a curse, or something worse,” wrote Stopes in 1942.
Polite, but strongly worded, complaints should be send to theatres hosting this new play celebrating the life and views of a vile and monstrous woman, who is praised by today’s Neo-Nazis for her anti-life beliefs and activities. Stopes advocated forced sterilisation of people she considered unfit for parenthood and she even disinherited her son because he married a girl who needed glasses!
After being betrayed by the British to be butchered by invading Nazi barbarians in 1939.
And after being betrayed by the British again at the Yalta Conference in 1945 and left at the mercy of Soviet Communist barbarity.
All the while imprisoned and suffering in Nazi concentration camps and Soviet gulags because of British perfidy, whilst Polish airmen valiantly and decisively gave their lives successfully defending Britain’s shores in the Battle of Britain, it seems almost impossible to imagine that the British political class could yet again betray the memory of the brave Poles who fought against Nazi and Communism barbarity.
But that is exactly what has happened with a small Polish commemoration that has taken place over the past few years in Rusilip, West London, where the Polish War Memorial is located.