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Other #689 The ss

AskSatanOperator

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Why on The ss there is the sentence In god we trust I mean I thought Himmler believed in Norse religion?
 
Why on The ss there is the sentence In god we trust I mean I thought Himmler believed in Norse religion?

If when someone uses the word "God," among all the Gods of the Gentiles, the false Jewish "god" comes to mind first, it is a basic psychological problem and means that the person is too indoctrinated with the Abrahamic lies. Our God is Satan.
 
Why on The ss there is the sentence In god we trust I mean I thought Himmler believed in Norse religion?

There is no such sentence in the SS. "In god we trust" is American, not German.

If you mean "Gott mit Uns", that's an old Prussian motto used on the belt buckles of the German soldiers since the 19th century, long before Hitler.

The National Socialists had different mottoes, "Meine Ehre Heisst Treue" (My Honor Is My Loyalty" and "Blut und Ehre" (Blood and Honor).

From a xian site debunking this common myth:
This is why much of the supposed “evidence” of church support for the Nazis is patent misrepresentation. For example, German soldiers did indeed have the motto “Gott Mit Uns” (God With Us) on their belt buckles. But they had carried this motto for about 60 years before the Nazis ever existed. It had been a heraldic motto in Prussia for centuries and so became the motto of the unified Germany’s Imperial standard in 1871 and had been inscribed on German helmets in the First World War. Nazi belt buckles, on the other hand, had no religious slogans. Those of the Waffen SS carried their motto “Meine Ehre heißt Treue” (My Honour is Loyalty) while those of the Hitler Youth read “Blut und Ehre” (Blood and Honour). And the photo of Pius XII supposedly being honoured by Nazi guards, which was used on the covers of most editions of Cornwell’s Hitler’s Pope, was actually taken in 1927 when the then Papal Nuncio Pacelli was visiting President von Hindenburg. The “Nazi guards” are actually soldiers of the democratic Weimar Republic, though the covers of Cornwell’s book artfully retouch the photo to highlight Pacelli and blur the soldiers to make it easier to mistake them for SS guards. The distortion here is quite literal.

 

Al Jilwah: Chapter IV

"It is my desire that all my followers unite in a bond of unity, lest those who are without prevail against them." - Satan

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