Nazisymp

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Ro Khanna Nazi.PNG Ro Khanna aid to Nazis.PNG

(left) Ro Khanna condemns support for Nazism; (right) Ro Khanna votes for $14 billion in U.S. taxpayer aid for Nazis.[1]

A Nazisymp is a Nazi sympathizer. Most Nazisymps hold antisemitic or ethnically motivated Russophobic viewpoints.

Nazism at Arab Palestinians

See also: Nazism at Arab Palestinians

Alexandra Chalupa and the DNC

See also: Ukrainian collusion and Trump-Russia collusion hoax

The Chalupa sisters - Andrea, Irene and Alexandra Chalupa - are the grandchildren of Banderists.[2] Alexandra Chalupa was cited by Yahoo News as one of "16 people who shaped the 2016 election:."[3]

Alexandra Chalupa, a member of the Ukrainian Diaspora community and co-convener of the National Democratic Ethnic Coordinating Council (NDECC),[4] is a strident neo-Nazi Bandera and UPA apologist.[5] Alexandra Chalupa was paid $71,000 by the Democratic National Committee to collude with the government of Ukraine and Ukrainian Intelligence to dig up dirt on Paul Manafort and the Trump campaign during the 2016 presidential election. Alexandra Chalupa hired the hacking terrorist group named "Fancy Bear" by Dimitry Alperovich and Crowdstrike at the latest in 2015. While the Ukrainian hackers worked for the DNC, Fancy Bear had to send in progress reports, turn in research, and communicate on the state of the projects they were working on.

Canada

Volodymyr Zelensky, Justin Trudeau, and Chrystia Freeland applaud Yaroslav Hunka of the Waffen SS Galicia Division during a session of the Canadian Parliament, September 24, 2023.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and House of Commons Speaker Anthony Rota welcomed a former officer of the 14th Waffen SS Galicia Division named Yaroslav Hunka to attend an address by Ukrainian dictator Volodymyr Zelensky. Speaker Rota praised Hunka as a “Canadian hero” for fighting against the Soviet Union. Hunka was not an ally of Canada during World War II. The Allies of World War II, including Canada, fought with the Soviet Union against the armed forces of the Third Reich. More than 45,000 Canadians were killed fighting the Nazis. As an ally of Nazi Germany, Hunka and the 14th SS Galicia Division took part in numerous massacres of Ukrainian, Jewish, Polish and Slovak civilians.

Former members of the 14th Galicia Division were still wanted in Ukraine, Poland, Belarus, Lithuania, and the Russian Federation in 2023 for war crimes during the Second World War Nazi occupation. There is no statute of limitations for murder. Many Ukrainian Nazi war criminals fled Europe after World War II and were resettled and granted citizenship in the UK, Canada, and the United States. After the German surrender to the Soviet Union in Berlin on Victory Day, May 9, 1945, many of Ukrainian Nazis who did not flee Europe fought on against the Soviet Union until 1954, receiving covert aid from the CIA soon after the CIA's founding in 1947.

Memorial to the 'freedom fighters' of the SS 14th Waffen Division in Edmonton, Canada, who carried out massacres of women and children.[6]

International affairs analyst Dr. Andrew Korybko observed that in one fell swoop, Trudeau discredited himself as a so-called “champion of human rights”, while Zelensky proved beyond any doubt that an ethnic Jew can indeed glorify the Nazis’ genocidal allies despite having family who were murdered in the Holocaust.[7] After being vetted to attend Zelensky's speech by the Canadian government and Trudeau's office, Hunta was introduced by the Speaker as a “Ukrainian-Canadian veteran from the Second World War who fought for Ukrainian independence against the Russians” and received two extended standing ovations while Zelensky raised a clenched fist in solidarity. Hunta's family had tweeted out days in advance that a separate private meeting had been arranged for Hunta to meet and speak privately with Trudeau and Zelensky.[8] To its credit, even Politico reported on the number of Jewish organizations that condemned the fascist ceremony.[9]

C.B. Forde, writing in The Postil Magazine, described modern Russophobia in the 21st century during the NATO war in Ukraine: "What we are really witnessing is the barking of violent rhetoric, all justified by blurting out “Ukraine.” In other words, all manner of hatred can now be concealed by the “morality” of supporting Ukraine. This violence has become a habit of mind among all the Canadian and Western ruling elite—enthusiastically repeated by Trudeau, as this speech bears witness. This is why the members of the Canadian Parliament all stood, cheered and applauded the Nazi visiting them in House of Commons."[10]

References