Grey Wolf - The Escape Of Adolf Hitler (2013)

5 months ago
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History tells us that Hitler died on April 30th 1945 by committing suicide with a single gunshot to the head; but what if history is wrong? Based on interviews with eye witnesses and years of dedicated research, this film dramatisation explores the possibility that Hitler didn't die in Germany at the end of the war, but instead escaped from Berlin by air and made his way to Argentina. This is the gripping story of what might have happened; the CIA s possible involvement, his life in Patagonia, the escape routes and the astonishing fact that Hitler may have had two daughters.

Did Adolf Hitler really died in the bunker in Berlin, or did he died in Argentina on February 13th, 1962?

Did Hitler (code name 'Grey Wolf') really die in 1945?

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SOURCE: https://old.bitchute.com/video/im8DsRjZgFdh/

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The Other Europe

EUROPE isn’t doing so well these days.

It may be difficult to remember now, in the aftermath of Angela Merkel and George Soros’ manufactured “Refugee” Crisis of 2015, but prior to the open borders mania that was thrust upon Europe that year, the Old World was suffering from a litany of other crises — the Greek crisis, the education crisis, the youth unemployment crisis, the Euro crisis, and so on. Brexit was a child originally conceived in this period, long before the Calais migrant jungle or visa-free travel from Turkey was an issue.

With all that madness in tow, one might be tempted to lament the death of European civilization. Ah, well, it was a good run to say the least. But did you know there was another Europe you could visit? Not America or Australia, settled by Anglophone British islanders, but another Europe settled by continentals, with classical European architecture, a temperate climate, and pale-skinned people speaking European languages that Americans learn in school with difficulty?

Welcome to the Southern Cone of South America.

This region, including Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, and the southernmost portion of Brazil, was overwhelmingly settled by European colonists and immigrants from the last few hundred years. Its estimated population is north of 130 million people, descended largely from Spain and Italy, followed by Germany and Eastern Europe. The official languages of Spanish and Portuguese are complemented by rural communities of Italian, German, and Croatian-speakers.

The main area around Buenos Aires and Montevideo has a humid subtropical climate according to the Köppen climate classification system, a climate shared with northern Italy, Croatia, Serbia, Montenegro, and the U.S. South. It’s true that DNA studies show notable Amerindian and African admixture among the Whites of the Southern Cone, but I’ll let you judge for yourself how impactful that is.

Discounting Chile, surveys indicate the region is between 80-95% White, depending on the precise area in question. That could make many parts of the Southern Cone tremendously whiter than London, Paris, Brussels, or Amsterdam. There are no Blacks and no Muslims.

U.S. State Department reports indicate that Argentina and Uruguay are hotspots for thieves, burglars, and pickpockets, but Mexico it ain’t. No terroristic drug cartels or criminal gangs usually associated with Central America. With regards to crime, the area sounds a lot more like Naples in southern Italy. None of the political executives in the region attended Harvard John F. Kennedy School of Government, although the President of Argentina took business classes at Wharton and the President of Uruguay studied in Paris (his Vice President studied in Cuba). The local universities tend to be “pontifical” i.e. Roman Catholic.

The lack of Harvard Crimson among the elite of the Southern Cone is not an accident. Although the so-called “International Community,” under the aegis of the U.S. government, has been making inroads into the local power, the area south of the Amazon rainforest was traditionally cut off from American influence. Northern and Western Europeans would migrate to and settle North America, while Southern and Central Europeans would migrate to and settle South America — south of the Amazon.

Geopolitically speaking, the region north of the Amazon rainforest and the Andes mountains is an American lake. Although the entire globe, save for a few exceptions, is now de facto an American lake, the Southern Cone avoided American encroachment as late as World War II thanks to its distance from Washington and isolation behind the world’s largest rain-forest and one of its longest and tallest mountain ranges. It wasn’t until World War II that the dictatorial regimes of Argentina and Brazil cut off ties with the arch-contintental European Axis powers. The massive German and Italian diaspora in the Cone ensured that the countries stayed neutral and sympathetic for as long as possible — and then some.

The famous Juan Peron of Argentina studied at Turin in Benito Mussolini’s fascist Italy, although he was not a vocal supporter. The post-war Argentina-National Socialist connection is well-known too, primarily because…

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