My Polish ancestors know very well what the word "Nazi" means. Many of
them
met the real ones sixty years ago and didn't survive. You seem to use the
word with abandon, without having a single clue as to what it *really*
means, and to whom it refers.
Arnie -
KT4ST
AH, that was what you were referring to... well, youre definition of
"abandon"
seems to differ from mine, as I used it once and only once and that was
referring to the really extreme, hardline CW pro-testing crowd.
Um, you said your polish ANCESTORS knew the national socialists in wwII
germany... as in, not *you*... so, therefore, I will assume you don't know
what it *really* means, nor do you have a clue or to whom it refers;
by the very same definition; therefore, YOU are disqualified as the
judge of same.
If you have been hiding in a cave for the last many years and didn't bring
yourself out into the sunlight and fresh oxegen long enough to know
what the reference means, then i'll educate you. It was a symbolic
reference to any group, such as the brown shirts of the aforementioned
group, and ultimately the national socialist party itself that ascended to
power, of ramming thier radical ideas down people throats without
regard to anything but it's own desire and wishes, no matter how
useful, unuseful or down right malevolent.
/education
Clint
KB5ZHT
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