
Brian wrote, "You print this all year for Christmas. I'm never tired of reading it. Scream it out of the roofs! It clearly shows that people mostly do not want to start a war with each another if they halt for a while and think for themselves. Like Smedley Butler erstwhile he no longer followed orders blindly. erstwhile you travel, you realize that people are more alike than different. They love their children, their culture, their traditions, and they prosecute peace as we do. And finally, this communicative leads to reflection.
Why Christian nations should take arms against another Christian nations. The answer is: war is arranged by globalist bankers for their own purposes. This isn't about media narratives. We hope that intertwined alliances and meaningless treaties will not draw us into another conflicts, specified as the war in Ukraine.
May all men who have stopped for a minute of peace remainder in peace. And all leaders who want war get what they deserve."
On Christmas 1914, British and German soldiers made friends and refused to kill each other.
God. Christmas reminded them they hadmore in common with Jesus Christ and the Gospel of Love than with cabalists (satanist) bankers who
He invented this war to kill them.
"To the consternation of the command field on both sides, any soldiers reluctantly returned to fighting. In respective areas soldiers were ordered to resume military action under threat of military court."
Listen, erstwhile you read this article
---Wikipedia
"The government of Western states, whether monarchic or republican, has passed into the invisible hands of the plutocracy, global in power and influence. It was, I dare say,, that semi-occultistic power that... She pushed the masses of Americans into the planet War I boiler."
Maj-Gen J.F.C. Fuller (1878-1966) The Deciding Battles of the United States, 1776-1918, (1942) p.396
of 25 December 2019
, author: Kieran Dunn
(henrymakow.com)
It's a communicative worth telling again.. fewer realize that a small over a century ago the Christian nations of the planet were at war.
Catholics, Protestants, Orthodox and Coptic Christians took arms against each other. They put aside Jesus' teachings in which he said, "Love your enemy," and now they were engaged in a tragic war.
By Christmas it was clear that this "fast war" would not end shortly as the politicians promised. Pope Benedict XV proposed a vacation break, but both sides rejected it as "impossible".
Alfred Anderson of the British Expeditionary Force was only 18 years old and was at the front on Christmas Eve 1914 erstwhile something unimaginable happened. German and British soldiers began singing carols, hiding in their trenches. shortly there was a truce between the fighting parties and men who were enemies a fewer hours earlier began to greet and exchange gifts.
In another areas on the front, German troops set tiny trees on the windowsill of their trenches, adorned them with candles and began singing carols. Soon, many British soldiers on the front in the area began singing with them. British and French troops began to see Germans putting up plaques with the inscription, "DO NOT FIGHT; WE DON'T WORRY."
Some British units improvised banners with the inscription "Happy Christmas" and waited for an answer. In a short time, what the governments of the fighting parties could not do, clusters of German, French and British troops spontaneously concluded a truce and soldiers left their trenches.
(British and German soldiers standing together)
Across the line, men who tried to kill each another a fewer hours earlier met in 'nobody' to shake hands, share food rations, chocolate cake, cognac, postcards, newspapers, tobacco and (more solemnly) bury their dead.
Kurt Zehmisch, another BEF eyewitness, noted in his journal: "The English brought football from the trenches and a live game shortly began. How wonderfully wonderful, and at the same time how unusual it was; Christmas, celebrating love, being able to unite mortal enemies as friends for a while."
This informal ceasefire, which was besides attended by French and Belgian troops, ended mostly by the fresh Year. German and British soldiers reluctantly divided up, as Private Percy Jones of the Westminster Brigade said, "with a large handshake and common kindness."
January 1, 1915 London Times published a letter from the Major of the Medical Corps, in which he reported that in his sector the British had played a match with Germany and were defeated 3–2. Men exchanged gifts and buttons. Soldiers who were barbers received hairstyles for free. 1 German, a juggler, spontaneously made his arrangement in the mediate of "no one's land".
Commanders
German and Allied tried to cover up a abrupt ceasefire. French generals could not realize why their soldiers disobeyed orders and joined the forbidden Christmas truce. To the surprise of field commanders on both sides, any soldiers reluctantly returned to battle. In respective areas, soldiers were ordered to resume war under the threat of a military court.
In Germany, it did not gain widespread publicity and the Chief Command quietly replaced most front units active in the ceasefire. Though amazed and embarrassed by the spontaneous truce, Allied commanders took care not to repeat the 1914 Christmas truce, and during the following holidays their troops clashed with the enemy at Christmas.

of 25 December 2019
, author: Kieran Dunn
(henrymakow.com)
It's a communicative worth telling again.. fewer realize that a small over a century ago the Christian nations of the planet were at war.
Catholics, Protestants, Orthodox and Coptic Christians took arms against each other. They put aside Jesus' teachings in which he said, "Love your enemy," and now they were engaged in a tragic war.
By Christmas it was clear that this "fast war" would not end shortly as the politicians promised. Pope Benedict XV proposed a vacation break, but both sides rejected it as "impossible".
Alfred Anderson of the British Expeditionary Force was only 18 years old and was at the front on Christmas Eve 1914 erstwhile something unimaginable happened. German and British soldiers began singing carols, hiding in their trenches. shortly there was a truce between the fighting parties and men who were enemies a fewer hours earlier began to greet and exchange gifts.
In another areas on the front, German troops set tiny trees on the windowsill of their trenches, adorned them with candles and began singing carols. Soon, many British soldiers on the front in the area began singing with them. British and French troops began to see Germans putting up plaques with the inscription, "DO NOT FIGHT; WE DON'T WORRY."
Some British units improvised banners with the inscription "Happy Christmas" and waited for an answer. In a short time, what the governments of the fighting parties could not do, clusters of German, French and British troops spontaneously concluded a truce and soldiers left their trenches.
(British and German soldiers standing together)
Across the line, men who tried to kill each another a fewer hours earlier met in 'nobody' to shake hands, share food rations, chocolate cake, cognac, postcards, newspapers, tobacco and (more solemnly) bury their dead.
Kurt Zehmisch, another BEF eyewitness, noted in his journal: "The English brought football from the trenches and a live game shortly began. How wonderfully wonderful, and at the same time how unusual it was; Christmas, celebrating love, being able to unite mortal enemies as friends for a while."
This informal ceasefire, which was besides attended by French and Belgian troops, ended mostly by the fresh Year. German and British soldiers reluctantly divided up, as Private Percy Jones of the Westminster Brigade said, "with a large handshake and common kindness."
January 1, 1915 London Times published a letter from the Major of the Medical Corps, in which he reported that in his sector the British had played a match with Germany and were defeated 3–2. Men exchanged gifts and buttons. Soldiers who were barbers received hairstyles for free. 1 German, a juggler, spontaneously made his arrangement in the mediate of "no one's land".
Commanders
German and Allied tried to cover up a abrupt ceasefire. French generals could not realize why their soldiers disobeyed orders and joined the forbidden Christmas truce. To the surprise of field commanders on both sides, any soldiers reluctantly returned to battle. In respective areas, soldiers were ordered to resume war under the threat of a military court.
In Germany, it did not gain widespread publicity and the Chief Command quietly replaced most front units active in the ceasefire. Though amazed and embarrassed by the spontaneous truce, Allied commanders took care not to repeat the 1914 Christmas truce, and during the following holidays their troops clashed with the enemy at Christmas.

The 1914 Christmas truce shows how a common belief in the Savior born in Bethlehem, divided among his enemies, can make even the most fierce enemies friends.
When the British heard the Germans singing a song about a tiny kid born in a stable, they joined them singing "Silent Night".
It's amazing how a song about a baby baby can get enemies to put down their weapons and hug each another like friends.
When those on both sides of the trenches realized that Christ, whom they knew, was besides Christ, whom their adversary knew, what another reaction could have been than the establishment of peace among the brethren?
Therefore, it is worth telling this communicative all Christmas. Christ came to bring peace and forgiveness of sins to a troubled world. Knowing Christ continues to bring freedom and peace to all who meet him.
The 1914 Christmas truce is simply a dazzling evidence of the words spoken by the angel on that first Christmas, so many years ago: "Peace on earth, good will toward all." Merry Christmas, everybody!
------------
Related –moving advertising about this event
When the British heard the Germans singing a song about a tiny kid born in a stable, they joined them singing "Silent Night".
It's amazing how a song about a baby baby can get enemies to put down their weapons and hug each another like friends.
When those on both sides of the trenches realized that Christ, whom they knew, was besides Christ, whom their adversary knew, what another reaction could have been than the establishment of peace among the brethren?
Therefore, it is worth telling this communicative all Christmas. Christ came to bring peace and forgiveness of sins to a troubled world. Knowing Christ continues to bring freedom and peace to all who meet him.
The 1914 Christmas truce is simply a dazzling evidence of the words spoken by the angel on that first Christmas, so many years ago: "Peace on earth, good will toward all." Merry Christmas, everybody!
------------
Related –moving advertising about this event
----------- First planet War – First Christian Holocaust
------------ Illuminati bankers called I
World War -----------Mass killings on Somma 100 years ago
British and German troops in Afghanistan celebrate the 1914 truce (of course they didn't realize the point)
--
------------ Illuminati bankers called I
World War -----------Mass killings on Somma 100 years ago
British and German troops in Afghanistan celebrate the 1914 truce (of course they didn't realize the point)
--
CB wrote-
My dad was a planet War II U.S. Army veteran in the Pacific. He participated in the conflict of Leyte Bay and Okinawa. He didn't believe in why we were fighting propaganda distributed by the government. It is not widely publicized, but the morale of the army was low erstwhile the conflict of Okinawa began; and I remember that 1 U.S. Army unit broke up in Okinawa
He said the morale in Okinawa was breaking down due to the fact that men were tired of fighting and dying. A moral officer walked quietly around, watching soldiers. 1 of the questions was, are you ready to end this war? Dad said no! The officer was amazed and pressed: why not? He said he didn't care who won the war due to the fact that he lost health, reason and youth. Dad said the cop was clearly upset by his answer, and what bothered him even more was the same thing he heard from the men in the full line! erstwhile I visited the planet War II exhibition at the U.S. National Archives in 1995, I saw on the exhibition an action study that accidentally confirmed what my dad told me.
After reading Dave Grossman's book "On Killing: The intellectual Cost of Learning to Kill in War and Society" It became clear to me that most men on the line do not want to kill another men. 1 of the church members told me he was in the conflict of Ardeny. He spent many days locked in a trench, where he suffered frostbite. He definitely said he had made a decision not to kill another man. He'd alternatively be captured or killed. He wasn't going to shoot. I wonder how many another men believed the same thing (the wide Eddie Slovakiak is simply a good example of how a man refused to fight and a bad example of how not to get caught).
Do I think these men are lazy or unpatriots? NO! As many veterans say, you should be there (on the line erstwhile death hangs around) to realize what it does to the psyche of a man. My dad, speaking about his experience in Okinawa, said it was amazing what 1 man would do to another. There's a quote from the movie Grand Torino that fits. Clint Eastwood's character, Walt Kowalski, is simply a veteran of the Korean War. He says to Janowicz's father, "What persecutes a man is things he wasn't expected to do." I can confirm without hesitation that my dad suffered PTSD until the day he died. He saw death as the only way for man to live in peace. How sad.
Dan Butler (1955-2018) wrote
: A fewer years ago Dr Thomas Weber He examined the war journals and papers of the era to recreate the 1914 Christmas truce.
He found evidence that many soldiers attempted to initiate repeated truces in 1915 and 1916, but then division commanders on both sides had orders to usage snipers to shoot at all soldier seen coming out of unarmed trenches.
It was singing well-known Christmas songs that led soldiers to approach each another without weapons. During modern battles, soldiers were driven by adrenaline brutality, which went into repentance in trenches between battles. Interrupting from the pure inhumanity of what they do most likely saved many of them from losing humanity forever. The sad fact is that most of those who participated in the ceasefire in 1914 did not last the war.
Dr. Weber besides mentioned that French soldiers did not participate in the first truce; only the British and Germans.
Another who did not accept the truce along with divisional and French commanders was Corporal Hitler of the regiment's first line of staff. At least that's how 1 of Hitler's brigades, Heinrich Lugauer, noted in his war journal. Weber quoted him; "When everyone was talking about Christmas fraternity with the English in 1914, Hitler came out as his fierce opponent. He said, 'This should not even be discussed during the war. '
: A fewer years ago Dr Thomas Weber He examined the war journals and papers of the era to recreate the 1914 Christmas truce.
He found evidence that many soldiers attempted to initiate repeated truces in 1915 and 1916, but then division commanders on both sides had orders to usage snipers to shoot at all soldier seen coming out of unarmed trenches.
It was singing well-known Christmas songs that led soldiers to approach each another without weapons. During modern battles, soldiers were driven by adrenaline brutality, which went into repentance in trenches between battles. Interrupting from the pure inhumanity of what they do most likely saved many of them from losing humanity forever. The sad fact is that most of those who participated in the ceasefire in 1914 did not last the war.
Dr. Weber besides mentioned that French soldiers did not participate in the first truce; only the British and Germans.
Another who did not accept the truce along with divisional and French commanders was Corporal Hitler of the regiment's first line of staff. At least that's how 1 of Hitler's brigades, Heinrich Lugauer, noted in his war journal. Weber quoted him; "When everyone was talking about Christmas fraternity with the English in 1914, Hitler came out as his fierce opponent. He said, 'This should not even be discussed during the war. '
Translated by Google Translator
source:henrymakow.com








