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D-Day
June 6, 1944: The Allies invade Europe.
Letter to editors of all U.S. newspapers:
It is shocking that
if this sentence was printed in most newspapers, then in most newspapers
it would be the first use ever of the phrase "National Socialist German Workers'
Party." Please grant me the honor of being perhaps the first person to cause
the actual name of the horrid Party to appear in your newspaper. The public
needs to know.
Google News showed no result in a search for the phrase "National Socialist
German Workers' Party" on D-Day of 2004 (June 6th), and a dumbfounding five
results for the same search on any date (Google News is often the 4th button
from the left on any Google page or at
http://news.google.com/ and the search
was restricted by using quotation marks). Google News indicated 1040 results
for the shorthand "Nazi" on D-Day, and 9320 results for all dates. D-Day
media coverage deserved a grade of D- based on the Google News search engine.
Those results are supported by similar word-searches performed on the
archive search engines at the homepages of many newspapers and media outlets.
The searches usually show that the full phrase has never been used for any
purpose, and that the shorthand is over-used, thoughtlessly.
On D-Day, Libertarians joined with everyone to remember the friends of
freedom, and freedom's foes. I know that your newspaper joined with everyone
to remember friends, and I hope your newspaper will help everyone to remember
foes, and help end rampant ignorance about the word "Nazi."
***********************
The above is about 250 words, and served as a popular
letter to the editor. For m
ore details on the above and for a
longer version, please see http://rexcurry.net/Dday.html or
below.
***********************
On D-Day, Libertarians join with everyone to remember
those who defended freedom and fought socialism.
It is also a day to remember that the word "Nazi" is
short for "National Socialist German Workers' Party." Many people
forget the meaning of the word "Nazi" and that the U.S. helped end a war
that began when the National Socialist German Workers’ Party and the Union
of Soviet Socialist Republics invaded Poland in a pact to divide up Eastern
Europe.
http://rexcurry.net/socialistwar.html
The media can help the public remember through the
many articles and editorials that commemorate the June 6, 1944 Allied invasion
of Europe in WWII.
Google Inc., helps the public remember through its
"News search" which enables anyone to locate any news items that use the
full phrase "National Socialist German Worker' Party" or even the over-used
"Nazi."
It is shocking that on D-Day 2004, a Google News search
showed that the media had not used the full phrase "National Socialist German
Workers' Party" a single time. The media had used the abbreviation
538 times before noon. D-Day media coverage deserves a grade of D-.
A Google News search (for any use on any date) of the
full phrase revealed a dumbfounding total of four results. One of those
results was an excerpt from a book posted as a review, and was not a "news"
item. All three of the other uses were by the journalist Rex Curry, writing
about this very topic of media bias.
http://news.google.com/news?q=%22national%20socialist%20german%20workers%20party%22&hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&safe=off&sa=N&tab=wn
The search above can be replicated on any date by comparing the Google
search results for "Nazi" with the search results for the full phrase "National
Socialist German Workers' Party." For example, a recent search on a
random date gave 5,740 uses of "Nazi" and only 3 uses of the full phrase.
In comparison to the above, Google news indicates that on the same random
date as above, the abbreviation "U.S.S.R." gave 486 uses and the full phrase
"Union of Soviet Socialist Republics" gave 103 uses.
The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics killed 62 million people, three
times as many millions of people as did the National Socialist German Workers'
Party (21 million). However, any Google news search on any date will show
similar results to the random date above: that the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics is referenced 486 times, or one-twelfth the number of times (5,740)
of the National Socialist German Workers' Party. The use of the full
phrase "Union of Soviet Socialist Republics" is once in every five uses of
the abbreviation "U.S.S.R." The use of the full phrase "National Socialist
German Workers' Party" is once in every 1900 uses of the abbreviation "Nazi."
The search above can be replicated on any date by comparing
the Google search results for "Nazi" with the search results for the full
phrase "National Socialist German Workers' Party." For example, a
recent search on a random date gave 5,740 uses of "Nazi" and only 3 uses
of the full phrase.
Google Inc., helps the public remember through its
free "News Alerts" which enable anyone to receive instantaneous email alerts
for any topic, including the full phrase "National Socialist German Worker'
Party" or even the over-used "Nazi." The public should be warned
against requesting alerts for the abbreviation "Nazi," as any receiving inbox
will be flooded with repetitious media cliches. The public should be
confident in requesting alerts for the full phrase, as any receiving inbox
will be unlikely to ever receive an alert (and if an alert comes, it will
probably be about something I wrote, such as this article).
Many newspapers have websites with archive search engines
that reveal how often the full phrase has been used (if ever) for comparison
with a newspaper’s hackneyed use of the horrid words “Nazi,” “Nazis” and
“Nazism.” Some media outlets have never written the full phrase, but
use the abbreviations so often that their search engines cannot display all
the results. For example, recent searches of the websites at the Seattle
Times, the New York Times and the St. Petersburg Times, showed either no
incidents or hardly any incidences of their writers having written in their
papers: National Socialist German Workers' Party.
D-Day is a reminder of our libertarian victory in the
ongoing struggle against socialism.
contest to expose
media cover-ups for atrocities
http://rexcurry.net/mediacover.html
Everyone is asked to help research and expose how some
newspapers use the horrid “Nazi” abbreviation to cover-up for the monstrous
National Socialist German Workers’ Party, in a vain effort to rehabilitate
socialism.
CONTEST: There is also a contest for
the most shocking research results, and for the most shocking responses
from the media about the results, and for the best letters to the editor
exposing guilty newspapers.
Some media are anti libertarian, and their authoritarian
bias is so great that they use the horrid word “Nazi” exclusively and never
inform the public of the full phrase of the monstrous group.
Or to put it into the words that the media prefer, they are word nazis about
the word "Nazi." They use it to cover-up for the nasty National Socialist
German Workers' Party.
The media’s widespread dishonest practice is
so extensive that most people no longer know that “Nazi” is an abbreviation
for “National Socialist German
Workers’ Party.” Government schools and the media have covered-up
for so long that even most journalists do not know what the hackneyed abbreviation
abbreviates. It is more proof that government schools must end, and
that government schools (socialized schools) teach lies for socialism.
The media exploit and perpetuate the rampant ignorance.
Please report the results (in plain text) with the
website url addresses to rexy@ij.net at
http://rexcurry.net
without attachments. Please also send the results as a letter
to the editor to the newspapers along with a letter such as the one below,
calling each newspaper’s attention to its dishonest practice and exposing
it.
CLICK
HERE OR ON THE RIGHT PHOTO FOR A LARGER IMAGE
OF THE ORIGINAL STRAIGHT-ARM SALUTE IN THE U.S.
http://rexcurry.net/nazi%20salute%209.jpg
Sample Letter to the Editor:
"Nazi" is an abbreviation for the horrid "National Socialist German Workers'
Party" as every dictionary states. I hope that you will inform the
public about the meaning of the horrid abbreviation. Some media outlets cover-up
for the monstrous "National Socialist German Workers' Party" via exclusive
use of the hackneyed abbreviation.
A news-making court case about the Pledge of Allegiance went before the
U.S. Supreme Court. The history of the pledge is suppressed because
it is so unlibertarian. Some media outlets are already covering up the fact
that the original salute to the U.S. flag resembled the salute of the National
Socialist German Workers' Party, that the pledge's author (Francis Bellamy)
was a famous National Socialist in the U.S. in 1892, and that the U.S. Pledge
of Allegiance is the origin of the salute of the National Socialist
German Workers' Party, which some media outlets refuse to identify fully.
http://rexcurry.net/pledgesalute.html
There are many other ominous parallels about the Pledge of Allegiance.
(astounding historic photos and information about the pledge are at
http://rexcurry.net/pledge2.html
).
Francis Bellamy was the cousin and cohort of Edward Bellamy, the author
of the book "Looking Backward." The book promoted totalitarian socialism
and was an international bestseller that helped to inspire the Holocaust
and the socialist "Wholecaust" of the socialist trio of atrocities: the National
Socialist German Workers' Party (21 million killed), the Union of Soviet
Socialist Republics (62 million killed); and the People's Republic of China
(35 million killed). (numbers from Professor R. J. Rummel's article in the
Encyclopedia of Genocide (1999)).
http://rexcurry.net/socialists.jpg
If a writer uses an abbreviation (such as "Nazi"), then the abbreviation
should be fully identified at it's first use in an article (even parenthetically)
if not more often (for example: National Socialist German Workers' Party).
This letter is sent to ask you to fully inform the public about the history
of the Pledge of Allegiance and to fully expose the horrid National Socialist
German Workers' Party.
Of the times when your paper printed the word "Nazi" I can not recall
a single time when your paper identified the abbreviation as the "National
Socialist German Workers' Party." In fact, I cannot recall your paper
ever writing "National Socialist German Workers' Party." Is it an official
policy of your paper to never write "National Socialist German Workers' Party"?
Your website search tool for your archives indicates that you have never
used, or almost never used, the full phrase. In comparison, the words "Nazi"
and "Nazis" and "Nazism" have so many hits that your search program cannot
display them all. Or to put it into the words you prefer, you are word nazis
about the word "Nazi." You use it to cover-up for the nasty National Socialist
German Workers' Party.
How many of your writers have written the full phrase ever in their lives?
If you print my letter, I might be the first person in your paper to inform
the public of the full phrase.
Please confirm that I am correct about all of the above.
And the pledge court case is ongoing, and each year provides V-E Day, Memorial
Day, D-Day, Flag Day and many other opportunities in the future to write
about the horrid National Socialist German Workers' Party issues and to show
the public whether you will or won't ever be truthful about the full phrase.
We'll all be watching.
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If you would like to own the historic collectible
out-of-print book "Twenty-Three Words" by Margarette S. Miller, one is
available here for $100. The book is in mint condition, never used.
This may be the only opportunity to obtain this eye-popping book
Just use the donation button below at left to purchase the book and communicate
with this website at lawyer AT RexCurry.net
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more eye-popping expose' of the pledge of allegiance at
http://rexcurry.net/pledge1.html