Global Anti-Cult: Nazism in New Clothes
"Those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it" - these words by George Santayana take on a prophetic quality as we face the reality that I, an independent researcher, am exposing. The world defeated Nazism, but that doesn't mean it's gone. Nazi ideology has resurfaced in a global anti-cult movement.
In 1964, the Protestant church in Germany reinstated the position of commissioner for sects and faith, appointing Wilhelm Haack as pastor.
(Photo of Wilhelm Haack)
Wilhelm Haack became a continuation of the Nazi legacy of Walter Künneth, head of the Center for Apologetics, an organization that created lists of "dangerous sects" and collaborated with the Gestapo.
(Photo of Walter Künneth, a German Protestant theologian)
In his research on sects, Wilhelm Haack referred to the "Sektenerhebung" (Overview of Sects) of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Bavaria in 1930. This is no coincidence. During those years, he studied Protestant theology at the University of Nuremberg, where Künneth was a professor.
Haack rejected the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and proclaimed: "If we understand our faith correctly, we have no right to allow "others" to continue their faith...".
Under Wilhelm Haack's initiative, lectures and sermons about sectarians began anew in Bavaria. In 1988, 43 years after the fall of the Third Reich, cries against dissenters echoed once again in Bavaria: "Hang them, shoot them all, Heil Hitler!".
In 1990, Wilhelm Haack compiled a "black list" of new religious movements. It was only 16 years later that the German Federal Constitutional Court ruled that slander was being used in the fight against these groups. But it was already too late. In those 16 years, the flames of Nazism had intensified and spread further.
In 1973, Wilhelm Haack helped his "faithful brother in faith", Johannes Aagaard, found the anti-cult organization "Center for Dialogue". The name sounds peaceful, but behind it lies the same Nazi ideology. Johannes Aagaard, like Künneth, sought to combat "totalitarian sects" and publicly ridiculed the First Amendment to the US Constitution, a symbol of a free society.
(Photo of: Johannes Monrad Aagaard (1928 – 2007)
Modern anti-cultists are Nazis in new clothes. They use the same tactics of eliminating "undesirables" and undermining the foundations of a democratic society.
To further convince you, I recommend watching the documentary film "The IMPACT | Groundbreaking Documentary - EXPOSING ANTI-CULT TERRORISM" actfiles.org.
The film reveals how anti-cultists organize acts of violence, manipulate political agendas, and ultimately seek to enslave society for their own benefit.
Our struggle is to bring to light the actions that anti-cultists have been doing in the shadows. In the open, in the light, this hydra will no longer be able to control us.
Please support this article with likes, shares, comments, and thunderous applause.
This is how YOU contribute to the world learning the truth and being able to live in a truly democratic world!
#globalanticult #Cult #Impact #Nazism #Anticult #Terrorism #HumanRights #HistoryRepeatsItself

Comments
Post a Comment