“I won’t be a spoil sport to any of my men.
If I demand the utmost of them, I must permit them to let off steam as they see fit, not as it suit’s a lot of elderly church-hens.
My lads are no angels… nor are they expected to be.
I’ve no use for goody-goodies and League of Virtutes.” – Adolf Hitler
Homosexuality has its roots in Satanism/pre-Christian Paganism.
It is also known that anti-homosexuality is rooted in:
- Judaism
- Christianity
- Islam
Persecution of homosexuality isn’t Aryan.
It is Jewish.
Communists Agree with Christians regarding Homosexuality (basecamp.com)
Christianity, Communism & Homosexuality (basecamp.com)
Communists & Christians (basecamp.com)
GAY IN THE GULAG (basecamp.com)
The Real Attitude of Communism towards Gays (basecamp.com)
How Communism Really Feels About the Third Sex (basecamp.com)
This recent movie Child 44 (2015) is very realistic in depicting life under communist Russia:
It starts with an orphan survivor of the mass murder by starvation known as Holodomor, his ascension in the MGB and how people had to deal with delating their own loved ones and that being “investigated” was the same as a death sentence.
How they had to be always lying to others and themselves due the constant fear, such as the denial of a serial killing of boys by a maniac, because they had to agree that “there is no crime in the USSR”, or then disagree and be killed…
Since it’s a common Jewish crime, the movie hints that Communism would protect such a kind of psychopathic Jew.
It also shows how homosexuality, or even a suspect of homosexual act, was considered a crime punishable of death of slave labor in the Gulag, under Jewish Communism.
A maxim of the film: “You know what people get here when they demand truth?
They get terror.”
Citizen X is a documentary about real historical serial maniac [Andrei Chikatilo, 52 women and children between 1978 and 1990] who can’t be set in prison because he is a “party member”, while a number of innocent homosexuals are arrested, interrogated and some commit suicide.
Andrei Romanovich Chikatilo (Russian: Андре́й Рома́нович Чикати́ло, romanized: Andréy Románovich Chikatílo; Ukrainian: Андрій Романович Чикатило, romanized: Andriy Romanovych Chykatylo; 16 October 1936 – 14 February 1994) was a Soviet serial killer nicknamed The Butcher of Rostov, The Rostov Ripper, and The Red Ripper who sexually assaulted, murdered, and mutilated at least fifty-two women and children between 1978 and 1990 in the Russian SFSR, the Ukrainian SSR, and the Uzbek SSR. Chikatilo confessed to fifty-six murders; he was tried for fifty-three murders in April 1992. He was convicted and sentenced to death for fifty-two of these murders in October 1992, although the Supreme Court of Russia ruled in 1993 that insufficient evidence existed to prove his guilt in nine of those killings. Chikatilo was executed by gunshot in February 1994. Chikatilo was known as the “Rostov Ripper” and the “Butcher of Rostov” because he committed most of his murders in the Rostov Oblast of the Russian SFSR.
Andrei Chikatilo – Wikipedia
Persecution of homosexuals under communism in Cuba:
Full Documentary in Spanish with English subs [1:51:29]