Wednesday, October 30, 2019

Peter Moon Promotes Douglas Dietrich's Hitler Kimono Lie

Peter Moon: aka Vince Barbarick posts false and misleading comments in reply to questions by Oriana Spratt regarding Dietrich's claim to be the son of Adolf Hitler. Moon will be hosting Dietrichs' show so Dietrich can party for Halloween.



Moon refers to a photo that surfaced in 2015.  Dietrich claimed the photo as his own in December 2018 when he began to claim he is the son of Adolf Hiter, Dietrich claims the photo was taken by his mother in 1936 (when she was 13) and that his mother obtained the semen of Hitler which she preserved and later used to inseminate herself with 30 years later in 1966.

https://www.inquisitr.com/2190166/see-weird-photo-of-adolf-hitler-in-japanese-kimono/

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3133517/Is-photo-Hitler-wanted-hide-world-Bizarre-image-appears-Nazi-leader-dressed-swastika-emblazoned-Japanese-kimono.html

Adolf Hitler in Japanese Kimono

According to the Express, the image is possibly among several produced after Hitler was sworn in as chancellor in 1933. Some of the photos were emblazoned on a vast array of collectibles produced in large quantities by the regime.
The Nazis gave detailed attention to producing imposing symbols and imagery to project the power and presence of the regime in the minds of subjects, and Hitler reportedly personally supervised the management of projection of the image of the party and the Third Reich through its familiar symbols, such as the swastika.
The obsessed preoccupation of the Nazis with producing imposing imagery of the regime has helped to create and sustain a lasting market for Nazi memorabilia.
You can still get authentic Nazi memorabilia today.
But it is very unlikely that Hitler would be thrilled to know that someone has unearthed an image of him dressed in what looks like a Japanese kimono. And this is not the only embarrassing self-portrait that Hitler would have loved to keep hidden from the world. The Daily Mail recently published photos of Hitler posing in lederhosen and knee-high socks. The photos reportedly come from a Hitler “fan magazine” from the 1930s found by a British soldier in a German house after the war.
Hitler reportedly banned the photos showing him in lederhosen and knee-high socks, describing them “beneath one’s dignity.”
[Image via Express]

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