The Truth About Hitler
The phrase “history is written by the victors” rings especially true when it comes to the mainstream portrayal of Adolf Hitler and pre-WWII Germany. Far from the monstrous image that has been widely accepted, Hitler was actually a vegetarian, an animal lover, an author, an artist, a political activist, an economic reformer, and was even nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize. He introduced the world’s first laws against animal cruelty, pollution, and smoking. Contrary to the widely accepted narrative, Hitler was deeply supported by his people and publicly advocated for peace.
After World War I, the 1919 Treaty of Versailles, pushed by the League of Nations, imposed crushing reparations on Germany. These demands were so extreme that even U.S. President Woodrow Wilson remarked, “If I were a German, I should think I would never sign it.” British Prime Minister David Lloyd George warned, “We have written a document that guarantees war in 20 years… When you place conditions on a people that they cannot possibly meet, you force them into either breaking the agreement or going to war.”
By 1920, international Jewish bankers—some of whom were connected to the creation of the League of Nations and the U.S. Federal Reserve—began lending money to Germany at high interest. By 1923, the country was economically crippled and unable to pay the 270 billion Reichsmark war reparations. German factories closed, and thousands lost their jobs. In 1924, when Germany halted payments to these bankers, the German Papiermark currency was hyperinflated in retaliation. Soon, it took a wheelbarrow of money to buy a single loaf of bread. Millions of German families couldn’t afford basic needs, and starvation claimed many lives.
At the same time, Stalin and the Bolsheviks were constructing concentration camps and using Poland and surrounding nations as launchpads for expansion into German territory. This ongoing threat was a major factor in Hitler’s rise to power. Between 1933 and 1940, Hitler made numerous attempts at peaceful negotiation with both Jewish leaders and the Allied powers. He even proposed complete global disarmament. Despite this, in 1939—the same year he was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize—war was declared against Germany following Hitler’s repeated calls for diplomacy.
In 1936, an overwhelming 99% of German registered voters turned out to vote, with 98.8% of them casting their ballots in favour of Hitler. Yet since then, the mainstream media—predominantly owned and influenced by powerful interests—has relentlessly demonised him. Today, 18 European countries have laws that restrict open discussion about Judaism and the Holocaust.