Hitler survivor tells Americans: 'Buy more guns!'
Warns Nazi tyranny began with
simple concessions
The government required people to
register their guns, insisting it was for their own protection, a way of
tracking down criminals that was supposed to cut down on crime.
In reality, however, it was merely
a ruse to track down those patriots who might resist the coming tyranny.
So explains Kitty Werthmann in a
speech going viral on the Internet, a story of her life in Austria right
before the Nazi occupation of her home country in 1938. As she explains, her
nation’s surrender to Nazi tyranny didn’t begin with the Anschluss, but with
little steps like acquiescing to gun-control laws:
“Dictatorship didn’t happen
overnight. I took five years, gradually, little by little, to escalate up to a
dictatorship,” she said. “When the people fear the government, that’s tyranny.
When the government fears the people, that’s you, that’s liberty. Keep your
guns, keep your guns and buy more guns!”
(Editor’s note: The following
video was not produced by WND and contains several spelling and grammatical
errors in its text overlays)
Werthmann’s speech, delivered at
the “Let Freedom Ring” tea-party rally in Woodstown,
N.J., on June 28, 2011, has been
frequently circulated via YouTube and other online channels for years, but
picked up steam again after the National Rifle Association reposted it recently
under the title “Hitler Survivor Condemns Gun Control.”
The clear implication in her
speech is that modern-day Americans should beware gun-control laws that strip
them of their ability to resist an overbearing government.
“In 1938, the media reported that
Hitler rolled into Austria
with tanks and guns and took us over. Not true at all,” she said. “The Austrian
people elected Hitler by 98 percent of the vote, by means of the ballot box.
“You might ask, ‘How could a
Christian nation … elect a monster like Hitler?’” she concinued. “The truth is,
at the beginning Hitler didn’t look like or talk like a monster at all. He
talked like an American politician.”
Heed the warnings of a former
Hitler Youth member as well in Hilmar von Campe’s riveting book, “Defeating the
Totalitarian Lie.”
Werthmann, who is president of the
South Dakota Eagle Forum, opposes national identification cards with the same
vehemence she opposes gun control, recalling how Germany’s National Socialists,
known by the abbreviation “Nazis,” used the innocuous-sounding initiatives to
crush individual liberties during the World War II era.
“I lived in Austria under
Adolf Hitler’s regime for seven years,” Werthmann writes on the Eagle Forum
website. “Dictatorship did not happen overnight. It was a gradual process
starting with national identification cards, which we had to carry with us at
all times.
“We could not board a bus or train
without our ID card,” she continues. “Gun registration followed, with a lot of
talk about gun safety and hunting accidents. Since the government already knew
who owned firearms, confiscation followed under threat of capital punishment.”
Now, Werthmann laments, “The
liberal mindset in America
has promoted gun control for a long time and is beginning to advocate national
identification cards. Law-abiding American citizens should not have to carry
national identification cards. … We have to protect our civil liberties. While
some people need power to secure our freedom, we must be ever-vigilant to
maintain a system of checks and balances.”
Her story of arrival in America in 1950, printed in South Dakota’s Argus Leader, reveals why the
protection of individual liberty still remains so dear to her, now 64 years
later.
“I was processed in New York. I stayed in a
hotel the first night, and the next morning asked the concierge for directions
to the nearest police station. I asked if it was in walking distance, and it
was,” she recalls.
“I walked in and told the desk
sergeant I wanted to register. He said,’What are you talking about?’ I said I
wanted to register, so they’d know where I was. How would they find me if I
broke the law? He said don’t worry, they’d find me. And then he said, ‘Lady,
get the hell out of here.’
“I walked outside and it was a
January day with a blue sky,” Werthmann recalls. “I looked up and said, ‘What
kind of country is this?’ All of a sudden it dawned on me. It’s freedom.”
See the entirety of Werthmann’s
2011 speech (Click on link above)
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