Louis Theroux and the Nazis (2003), Nazi Pop Twins (2007)
- Type:
- Video > Movies
- Files:
- 3
- Size:
- 1.35 GiB (1445330290 Bytes)
- Info:
- IMDB
- Spoken language(s):
- English
- Tag(s):
- Theroux Nazi White power racism segregation
- Uploaded:
- 2008-07-01 19:12:11 GMT
- By:
- PommyBastard
- Seeders:
- 1
- Leechers:
- 1
- Comments
- 5
- Info Hash: 7389C0B16B135DB590E285427FB77E500CC2D2C3
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1. Louis Theroux - Louis And The Nazis (2003, 79min): Louis Theroux, innocently looking explorer of social phenomena and fringe groups in the USA, this time ventures into the world of "White Pride/Separatism" (Neo-Nazism). He visits Tom Metzger, a former leading member of the Ku Kux Klan in California who feels himself more in tune now with the Skinhead movement and has ideas about becoming someone of international significance in the right-wing scene. Louis Theroux's second investigation explores the life of April Gaede and her two twin daughters Lynx and Lamb who form the "White Power" duo "Prussian Blue" (the lack of this chemical in the gas chambers of Nazi slaughter camps was explained by Holocaust deniers to be proof of their viewpoint that no industrial scale executions could have happened there). In the end Louis Theroux confronts Tom Metzger and April Gaede with his own take on their somewhat extraordinary view of the world. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0395644/ 2. Nazi Pop Twins - Prussian Blue (2007, 49min): Unlike "Louis and the Nazis" this documentary focuses exclusively on the Gaede family with April Gaede as the Arian activist mother and her daughters Lynx and Lamb at the center. This allows James Quinn to dig a little deeper than Theroux and reveal serious tensions in the family when it becomes more and more apparent that the pop duo does not share their mother's passion for openly expressing extremly divisive views on ethnic issues. http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1073131/ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nazi_Pop_Twins http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prussian_Blue_(American_duo)
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Thanks a lot for sharing!
exactly HOW is National Socialism a right wing movement, and not a left wing socialist movement ???
This guy, is he really serious, asking why Nazis are considered rightwing?
Don't be fooled by the word "socialism" in "National Socialism". To put it very, very, very basically, the political spectrum runs from fascism on the extreme right to communism on the extreme left.
Free market capitalism and individualist economic policies, as well as conservative social policies, are generally considered right-wing ideals.
Tax-funded public institutions (libraries, schools, etc.) and support programs for the needy, as well as liberal social policies, are generally considered left-wing ideals.
However, real-life examples of governments of both extremes (i.e. Nazi Germany on the right and Soviet Russia on the left) shared some characteristics - especially authoritarian rule and, to put it lightly, a heavy-handed judicial system.
Very few people lie on either extreme, and those who do are often marginalized by the rest of society. WWII and the Cold War dampened enthusiasm for those extremes in all but the most deranged.
Many people (myself included) object to one single axis as a model for defining political beliefs. Having one axis for economic policies and another for social policies allows for more nuanced definition and categorization of political beliefs.
The two parties in America's two-party political system is an almost perfect example of the single-axis political model in action. (Theoretically, at least. In reality America has a one-party system, and that party is money.)
---
Thus concludes this impromptu lecture about the single-axis model of the political spectrum. I'll now take any questions anyone might have, although it's unlikely I'll ever give any answers.
Free market capitalism and individualist economic policies, as well as conservative social policies, are generally considered right-wing ideals.
Tax-funded public institutions (libraries, schools, etc.) and support programs for the needy, as well as liberal social policies, are generally considered left-wing ideals.
However, real-life examples of governments of both extremes (i.e. Nazi Germany on the right and Soviet Russia on the left) shared some characteristics - especially authoritarian rule and, to put it lightly, a heavy-handed judicial system.
Very few people lie on either extreme, and those who do are often marginalized by the rest of society. WWII and the Cold War dampened enthusiasm for those extremes in all but the most deranged.
Many people (myself included) object to one single axis as a model for defining political beliefs. Having one axis for economic policies and another for social policies allows for more nuanced definition and categorization of political beliefs.
The two parties in America's two-party political system is an almost perfect example of the single-axis political model in action. (Theoretically, at least. In reality America has a one-party system, and that party is money.)
---
Thus concludes this impromptu lecture about the single-axis model of the political spectrum. I'll now take any questions anyone might have, although it's unlikely I'll ever give any answers.
Oh yeah, one more thing:
Thanks for the upload, @PommyBastard!
Thanks for the upload, @PommyBastard!
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