With Hitler hungry for war, will Chamberlain manage to appease him?
As Laurence Rees shows in his frightening study The Nazi Mind, the psychological tricks used in 1930s Germany have never gone away
The far right is celebrating what it views as a clear signal from the X owner and Donald Trump associate, who made the gestures onstage Monday.
It has been said that the Weimar Republic died twice,” Timothy Ryback writes. “It was murdered, and it committed suicide.” In his new book, “Takeover: Hitler’s Final Rise to Power,” we know who the murderer is.
Memorial plaque outside Victor Klemperer’s former apartment building in Berlin. The text below his name reads: “In his diaries from the time of the National-Socialist dictatorship, he left behind a unique testimony about the everyday persecution of Jews in a German city.” Source: Author’s photo, 26 January 2025.
Who nominates people for the Nobel Peace Prize? It's one of the five Nobel Prizes established by Alfred Nobel, a Swedish chemist and inventor.
Trump’s second term (2025-2028) policies are speculative at this point, as they haven’t been fully defined, but we can draw some connections based on the broader themes of his first term and his public statements regarding potential future policies.
“Elon Musk is falsely smeared,” the Israeli prime minister wrote on X, adding that the tech mogul “is a great friend of Israel”. According to the Times of Israel, Netanyahu avoided addressing the issue of Musk’s salutes. But the newspaper did add that Musk posted his Holocaust jokes just one hour after Bibi’s comments appeared online.
Despite his absurd comments, Ultimate Fighting Championship 145-pound contender Bryce Mitchell will still be on the roster going forward.
Copypasta shared in the wake of President Trump's Inauguration Day pardon of Jan. 6 defendants likens it to Hitler's actions.
Readers discuss the Auschwitz anniversary and a Musk speech. Also: Threats against Dr. Fauci; resign, or else; police use of tasers; aging women; an invitation to letter writers.
German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier on Wednesday said Germans must "take the enemies of democracy seriously" in a speech to commemorate the victims of the Nazi regime. "Let us not go back to a dark time.