Eric Perroud
96.7K posts

Eric Perroud
@EricPerroud
The Doors - The End https://t.co/SZlmzisK9Y… La FRANCE est appelée à disparaître en tant que nation entre les mains des européistes du NWO



🇫🇷 Dimanche, à Rennes, le jeune Théo, âgé de seulement 11 ans, a été étranglé le long des rives de la Vilaine par deux adolescents de 15 et 16 ans alors qu'il était parti pêcher. Selon les premiers éléments de l'enquête, Théo a été étranglé avec une serviette, tandis qu'un autre l'empêchait de crier. Les deux meurtriers auraient agi ainsi pour récupérer du matériel de pêche. L'un des suspects était suivi par l'Aide sociale à l'enfance, tandis que l'autre était encadré par un Institut thérapeutique, éducatif et pédagogique (ITEP).

A Texas resident rips an Indian flag in front of city hall as Americans voice their anger against the mass Indian invasion in north Dallas. This was always going to happen. White people were only going to tolerate so much & it seems that White people are now all out of tolerance.



Hé les amis ! 😊 Regardez-moi ces mobylettes des années 80-90... Ça vous rappelle rien ? Moi, ça me replonge direct dans les balades , le vent dans la tronche et les copains derrière. C’était simple, c’était libre, c’était notre monde. Et toi, c’était quoi ta mob ? Tu en as eu plusieurs ?


Documents on the Expulsion of the German Population from the Territories East of the Oder-Neisse Line (Vol. I) This volume documents, in raw detail drawn from thousands of firsthand accounts, the mass flight, Soviet atrocities, and subsequent expulsions of millions of Germans from their ancestral homes in East Prussia, Pomerania, Silesia, East Brandenburg, and related territories east of the new Oder-Neisse line the border redrawn after WWII and assigned to Polish (and some Soviet) administration. The Flight and Treks (late 1944 – early 1945, peaking January–February 1945): As the Red Army launched its massive Vistula-Oder offensive, panic gripped civilian populations. Evacuation orders often came too late or were chaotic. Mostly women, children, elderly, and the infirm fled westward in massive columns and treks. In brutal winter conditions bitter cold, blizzards, roads buried in snow they moved on foot or overloaded horse-drawn carts with whatever possessions they could grab. Families were separated in the chaos. Eyewitnesses describe endless misery, suicides among those who could not continue, and the constant dread as the front overtook them. Large numbers never made it west; hundreds of thousands were encircled, captured, or killed in the process. Soviet Troop Atrocities (as they advanced and occupied, October 1944 onward, intensifying with the 1945 offensive): • Mass rapes: Often public or repeated. Women and girls of all ages from young children (reports of 8-year-olds and up) to elderly grandmothers in their 70s–80s were raped, frequently by multiple soldiers in succession, sometimes in front of family members or in groups. Many victims were murdered or mutilated afterward! • Looting, plunder, and destruction: Homes and farms stripped bare of food, livestock, valuables, and clothing. Villages looted and often burned. Deportations of civilians (especially women and able-bodied) to the Soviet interior for forced labor also began, with high mortality from starvation, cold, and abuse in transit and camps. Polish-administered expulsions and “transfers” (summer 1945 peaking in 1946, continuing into 1947): After the fighting ended and the Potsdam Conference (July–August 1945) formalized the Oder-Neisse border and sanctioned population transfers (intended to be “orderly and humane” but rarely so in practice), Polish communist authorities, security forces (UB), and militias took control. Germans were often given minutes to hours to leave homes sometimes at night with only what they could carry on their backs or small carts. Militias beat, robbed, and abused people during roundups and marches. Many were herded into squalid internment camps (e.g., Potulice, Lamsdorf/Grottkau area, others) where conditions were dire: starvation, forced labor, torture, and sadistic treatment by guards. Mortality was high, especially among children, elderly, and the infirm. Forced marches and overloaded rail transports westward across the Oder/Neisse followed, with further deaths from exposure, hunger, disease, and violence en route. “Wild expulsions” in 1945 were especially chaotic and brutal; later organized waves still involved immense suffering, family separations, and humiliation. Eyewitnesses describe columns of exhausted, starved people driven like cattle, with Polish settlers attacking or plundering them. Scale and context in the documentation: The volume covers several million Germans in these specific eastern territories. Broader Eastern European expulsions/flights affected 12–14 million ethnic Germans overall, with deaths from all causes (violence, exposure, starvation, disease, camps). The book stands as a detailed primary-source record of events that were politically inconvenient to emphasize for decades in both East and West. ia601705.us.archive.org/23/items/in.er…

@EricPerroud ps : la véritable charia a été importée à hauteur d'environ 50% du code civil par Napoléon, de retour d'Égypte qui a ramené la moitié d'un des 5 Corans du calife Othman isamveri.org/pdfdrg/D00064/… Personne ne s'en est jamais plaint !



“The genius of the jew is to live off people, not off land, nor off the production of commodities from raw materials, but off people.” - Henry Ford











