Living rooms in the chair waiting for the hate and revenge
The Simon Wiesenthal Center announced yesterday the way to new business hunting ex-Nazi leaders in Nuremberg escaped. The first on the list released yesterday by the Jews of the Centre is 93 years and is called Aribert Heim. Assuming he is still alive, what sense does it make in prison to 63 years after the case of a man 93 years?
Perhaps the same way they had at the time, the dual, shameful trial of Erich Priebke: tried, convicted of murder (with the extinction of the offense for prescription), was re-arrested at the request of the then Justice Minister Giovanni Maria Flick bent so that the diktat, the screams and the fury of a group of Jewish extremists who had stormed a military court in Rome. What did
Flick, trampling and in violation of Italian laws, to accommodate some troublemakers of the Jewish community, has never happened anywhere else in the world and will remain engraved forever, among the worst atrocities committed in the name of ideology. Here
http://www.antonellaricciardi.it/articoli.asp?id=14 for people who want to look at the history of those days without bias is the story of how it was built in the sentencing table.
How sad to think that there are people who spend their entire life enjoying the growing hatred and revenge.
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