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LBRY Claims • Dresden-Part-1

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Anonymous
Created On
13 Feb 2024 00:42:13 UTC
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Free
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Dresden Holocaust 1945: An Apology to Germany is Due - Part 1
When Queen Elizabeth II opened a memorial to the 55,000 members of the Royal Air Force Bomber Command who died during the Second World War, increasing numbers of Britons questioned the history and legacy of that conflict. <br />The political leaders (principally Prime Minister Winston Churchill) who sent those men of Bomber Command to their deaths – as well as condemning 500,000 German civilians to be burned alive (literally a Holocaust across sixty towns and cities that were devastated) in a deliberate bombing strategy to target unarmed civilians and Soviet-fleeing Russian refugees – are now recognised by some as war criminals. <br />Moreover, the influence of these criminal policies can be seen in the approach of today’s Washington-London-Jerusalem axis, with American and British bombers again sent into foreign skies to torch civilians with inextinguishable phosphorus, in pursuit of an alien agenda that does nothing to enhance the security or morality of the USA or the UK. <br />Telling Films call the criminal politicians to account and sets the record straight. In the process the film celebrates the small but significant group of influential Britons who even during the Second World War condemned the terror bombing policy. <br />This heroic band of true beacons of justice included George Bell, Bishop of Chichester; Lord Hankey, founding father of the 20th century British government machinery; Sir Charles Snow, government scientist and author; and the Rt. Hon. Richard Stokes MP, England’s leading Roman Catholic politician of the 1940s, a socialist patriot who combined his condemnation of terror bombing with insights into the insidious threat of international usury, communist/Bolshevistic expansion and World Zionist subversion. <br /> <br />Dresden Holocaust 1945: An Apology to Germany is Due, combines archive material and footage from the 1940s; a Dresden anniversary commemoration outside the Houses of Parliament and Westminster Abbey; archival insights on Churchill's bombing policy by the historian David Irving, author of the ground-breaking history of the Dresden holocaust, Apocalypse 1945: The Destruction of Dresden; and commentary from veteran political activist Richard Edmonds, retired architect and peace campaigner Dr. James Thring, and media studies pioneer and documentary creator Lady Michèle Renouf.
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video/mp4
Language
English
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