| | #11 (permalink) | ||
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Jan 2007
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![]() | Quote:
The same claim, incidentally, continues to be made about Mussolini by several authors, despite the evidence of his doctors and post-mortem analysis showing that there wasn't a trace of any venereal disease. In 1945 the Americans, however, refused to accept this, being convinced that Mussolini was 'mad' and that his insanity was due to longstanding syphilis. R.J.B. Bosworth in Mussolini states Quote:
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| | #12 (permalink) | |
| Partisan ![]() Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Cheshire, England
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![]() | Quote:
But if wrong Peter, of course I am happy to stand corrected! ![]()
__________________ ![]() The Motherland, bent over her daughter's ashes, Sings this tender maternal song About Zoya, the girl, who has become a legend, Who died and was born for eternal life. Dimitri Shostakovich Song for Zoya (1944) The War in the East | |
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| | #13 (permalink) | |||
| Partisan ![]() Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Cheshire, England
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![]() | There is a very interesting article here Culture Wars: Pox Review which goes into this subject in some depth. You need to go halfway down the page to find the references to Hitler, but the whole article is certainly worth reading. I have lifted these two paragraphs, for example: Quote:
Quote:
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__________________ ![]() The Motherland, bent over her daughter's ashes, Sings this tender maternal song About Zoya, the girl, who has become a legend, Who died and was born for eternal life. Dimitri Shostakovich Song for Zoya (1944) The War in the East | |||
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| | #14 (permalink) | |||
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Jan 2007
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![]() | Quote:
Over the years I have read a great deal about Hitler, including all the major biographies, those of Bullock, Domarus, Fest, Haman, Hauner, Kershaw, Spotts, and Toland. None of these eminent historians, both British and German, accept for a moment that Hitler had syphilis or any other venereal infection. Hitler first visited Vienna in 1906 when he was 17. At that time he was infatuated with a 17 year old Linz girl called Stephanie, spending all his time writing poems to her yet he never dared to tell her or approach her. These initial weeks he spent in Vienna were taken up visiting museums and the theatre. He went to Vienna again in 1907 to prepare himself for the entrance examination to the Academy of Fine Arts, returning there for the third time in 1908 and stayed there until May 1913, when he left Austria for good and moved to Munich. You also have to bear in mind that before WW2 syphilis was incurable. It has three stages and death was inevitable. In the second stage, which comes 1 to 6 months in untreated syphilis (but occasionally up to 2 years) after the primary infection, it is quite impossible to hide it. It is characterised by extensive ulceration of the feet and hands with a severe body rash. This is the very least of it, as there is constant fever, weight loss, severe headaches, and enlarged lymph nodes. The mercury treatment that was then thought to be beneficial actually made matters worse. Tertiary syphilis came 1 to 10 years after the initial infection. This is characterised with unsightly soft tumour-like swellings known as gummas caused by a breakdown of the immune system. It is at this stage that insanity develops, followed by dementia, and death. There is simply no way that a syphilitic man would have been accepted into the German army in 1914 and passed as fit for service. And anyone contracting a venereal disease during service, rendering himself unfit for front line duty, would have been severely punished. I haven't read R.G.L. Waite's book, it belongs to a genre which is popular in America but frowned upon in Europe, the psychoanalysis of dead historical figures. I have read reviews of which this is a short one Quote:
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Peter
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| | #15 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Jan 2007
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![]() | Zoya I did not read your further post until after I had replied to your earlier post. But this sentence you quote is approaching lunacy: Quote:
Incidentally in the 1930s and 1940s the Wasserman test was the only test available. It was reliable, but even if it failed the visible symptoms of secondary syphilis didn't magically not appear. If you had syphilis it was patently obvious that you had it, the Wasserman test was carried out at the primary stage. Peter
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| | #16 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Jan 2007
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![]() | Zoya I have just taken a look at the site you referred to and waded through the entire diatribe. This is history gone mad, I quote the entire paragraph devoted to Hitler, highlighting in red particular absurdities and and underlining unproven assumptions: Quote:
Peter
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| | #17 (permalink) |
| Partisan ![]() Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Cheshire, England
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![]() | As I can't come up with a reasonable argument against your posts, I'll leave it at that then!
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| | #18 (permalink) |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Jan 2007
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![]() | Zoya Just a final last word. If Hitler had syphilis it would follow that Eva Braun was also syphilitic. One would then have to explain how she managed to appear fit and healthy. Best wishes, Peter
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| | #19 (permalink) | ||
| Partisan ![]() Join Date: Mar 2008 Location: Cheshire, England
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![]() | Quote:
I was going to leave it there, too, but it is interesting to note that this was a focus of the The Royal College Of Psychiatrists Annual Meeting in Edinburgh in 2007: Quote:
I hope I have made myself clear! Best wishes to you too! ![]() Zoya x
__________________ ![]() The Motherland, bent over her daughter's ashes, Sings this tender maternal song About Zoya, the girl, who has become a legend, Who died and was born for eternal life. Dimitri Shostakovich Song for Zoya (1944) The War in the East Last edited by Zoya; 27-04-2008 at 08:33 PM. | ||
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| | #20 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member ![]() Join Date: Jan 2007
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![]() | Trust a bunch of psychiatrists! They always of course know better than anyone else. What encounter with a Jewish prostitute in 1908? Hitler arrived in Vienna for the second time on 14 February 1908 and on 22 February he was joined by his close friend Kubizek. At that date both were working on a Wagnerian-style opera Wieland the Smith, with which Hitler hoped to achieve world fame. He neither drank nor smoked and never went in taverns. He was obsessive about his health to the point of hypochondria. Indeed, the only witness to his time in Vienna in 1908 is August Kubizek, known to Hitler as Kustl - Reinhold Hanisch is a later witness. This is what Professor Ian Kershaw, in his massive two-volume biography says Quote:
I have the 1939 edition of Mein Kampf. In 567 pages of text Hitler refers to syphilis in pages 209-216 in a rant about it being a scourge polluting the purity of the race. Syphilis was a dreadful disease in the 19th and early 20th centuries, it aroused fears much like AIDS does today. It was also then far more virulent than it is now, having mutated since penicillin was discovered. Peter
__________________ http://www.petergh.f2s.com/flashes.html Last edited by PeterG; 27-04-2008 at 09:22 PM. Reason: Typo: Schöneer corrected to Schönerer | |
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