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Walter Curt

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Investigative Journalist | Columnist | Political Strategist | X-Space Host | Subscribe at https://t.co/JgBhIr5bQO

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What am I watching? Why was this famous? And how quickly did this business go under?

What am I watching? Why was this famous? And how quickly did this business go under?

50,515 views

Every now and then, you hear something that snaps the reality of a situation into sharp focus. I don’t enjoy engaging in drama, but I do pay attention to what people say. Here, Candace Owens says something that not only exposes her ignorance but also reveals she shares a fundamental flaw with the left: the inability to grasp what true evil is capable of. For the record, what she dismisses as “unbelievable” was a well-documented practice in both Nazi and Japanese experimental camps known as “vivisections.” The horrific procedures—surgical operations on live, often unanesthetized human subjects, were conducted for “medical research.” In fact, modern medicine kept these records, and much of it led to future, (and obviously more ethical) medical research. It is a widely known rule to not actually cite them due to ethical concerns, but they are still used. The Nazis’ actions were meticulously recorded by the perpetrators themselves and discussed extensively during the Nuremberg Trials. Unit 731’s atrocities were equally well-documented, in the Khabarovsk Trials, though less widely discussed in the West. Candace, however, seems fixated on dismissing atrocities as “propaganda,” claiming no one would commit such acts because they “serve no purpose.” If she believes that, I recommend she read about Unit 731 to understand the depths of evil and depravity possible when humanity is abandoned in the name of “research.” The horrors of the 1st division and Dr. Yoshimura’s experiments should be enough. Dismissing evil because you don’t believe it’s possible isn’t just naive, it’s stupidly dangerous. 🇺🇸

Every now and then, you hear something that snaps the reality of a situation into sharp focus. I don’t enjoy engaging in drama, but I do pay attention to what people say. Here, Candace Owens says something that not only exposes her ignorance but also reveals she shares a fundamental flaw with the left: the inability to grasp what true evil is capable of. For the record, what she dismisses as “unbelievable” was a well-documented practice in both Nazi and Japanese experimental camps known as “vivisections.” The horrific procedures—surgical operations on live, often unanesthetized human subjects, were conducted for “medical research.” In fact, modern medicine kept these records, and much of it led to future, (and obviously more ethical) medical research. It is a widely known rule to not actually cite them due to ethical concerns, but they are still used. The Nazis’ actions were meticulously recorded by the perpetrators themselves and discussed extensively during the Nuremberg Trials. Unit 731’s atrocities were equally well-documented, in the Khabarovsk Trials, though less widely discussed in the West. Candace, however, seems fixated on dismissing atrocities as “propaganda,” claiming no one would commit such acts because they “serve no purpose.” If she believes that, I recommend she read about Unit 731 to understand the depths of evil and depravity possible when humanity is abandoned in the name of “research.” The horrors of the 1st division and Dr. Yoshimura’s experiments should be enough. Dismissing evil because you don’t believe it’s possible isn’t just naive, it’s stupidly dangerous. 🇺🇸

40,795 views

No matter your feelings on the events of this weekend, I think we can all thank God in heaven that we have a Commander-in-Chief that isn’t a vegetable or a Vin-diagram imbecile. Goodnight, America. 🇺🇸

No matter your feelings on the events of this weekend, I think we can all thank God in heaven that we have a Commander-in-Chief that isn’t a vegetable or a Vin-diagram imbecile. Goodnight, America. 🇺🇸

12,992 views

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Okay maybe the $20M we spent on the Iraqi Sesame Street wasn’t all that bad.
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