What's new

ICE Shooting in Minnesota

View attachment 19938
I wear glasses, but I’m not blind. And my eyes are not lying to me at all. What do I see? A fleeing driver, and law officers of all stripes are forbidden to fire at a fleeing car. Here my eyes say I am seeing an ICE agent aiming and firing at the woman’s head, in this, his third shot. She’s leaving, and he’s blowing her brains out. And that is the plain truth, no lie. As any damn fool can see! Is he in danger when firing those last two shots? Well, what do your eyes see? Does he look like he’s about to be hurt or killed by her car?

The only liars, one and all, are speaking for the Trump administration. And Trump supporters are obeying Trump, Vance, and Noem’s orders to not believe their own eyes.

View attachment 19939

All his shots:

View attachment 19940


View attachment 19941E

View attachment 19942


Of course, you can always go the Chumps for Trump route. Our trolls do:

View attachment 19943
It makes perfect sense that you guys are confused. Your news sources haven't shown you the body cameras (plus your insane TDS). Crystal clear that she hit the guy and he fired in self-defense.
 

To be fair it isn't really a slogan that was ever used word for word in Nazi germany. Hitler did take a policy stance of "1 for 100", meaning a single death will be met with 100 deaths, sometimes expressed as 1 for 1000, but that was obviously metaphorical, but the intent is very clear. But I did hear this uttered in my college german classes in the german (Einer von uns, alle von ihnen) as basically a rallying quote of sorts among the military leadership and soldiers, not really even a rallying cry specifically, just a means of stating "this is how we do business", specifically in the SS, in Nazi germany. Kind of like "all for one and one for all" but specifically intended to imply deaths will occur. So the claims this is a word for word quote from Nazi germany is wrong, but the sentiment was rampant among the german military leaders all the way to Hitler. Still disturbing to see something that obviously has its origins in Nazi ideology displayed that prominently.
 
  • Like
Reactions: Red
To be fair it isn't really a slogan that was ever used word for word in Nazi germany. Hitler did take a policy stance of "1 for 100", meaning a single death will be met with 100 deaths, sometimes expressed as 1 for 1000, but that was obviously metaphorical, but the intent is very clear. But I did hear this uttered in my college german classes in the german (Einer von uns, alle von ihnen) as basically a rallying quote of sorts among the military leadership and soldiers, not really even a rallying cry specifically, just a means of stating "this is how we do business", specifically in the SS, in Nazi germany. Kind of like "all for one and one for all" but specifically intended to imply deaths will occur. So the claims this is a word for word quote from Nazi germany is wrong, but the sentiment was rampant among the german military leaders all the way to Hitler. Still disturbing to see something that obviously has its origins in Nazi ideology displayed that prominently.
Thanks for the clarification. I also found this:

The phrase "one of ours, all of yours" was a rallying cry used by the Spanish fascist movement Falange Española in the 1930s, and it embodies the principle of collective punishment that was widely practiced by the Nazis, rather than being an official Nazi slogan itself. The sentiment translates to "one of ours is worth many of yours".

While the exact English phrase was not a direct German slogan, the underlying principle of brutal retaliation and collective punishment was a hallmark of the Nazi regime's actions, particularly in occupied territories.
 
Back
Top