T. A. Gardner
Serial Thread Killer
Why, because I make you uncomfortable with your horrid, wretched, Leftist ideas?T. A. is as bad or worse than any 'commie' here, but I have met only one, and she was horrible. So is T. A..
Why, because I make you uncomfortable with your horrid, wretched, Leftist ideas?T. A. is as bad or worse than any 'commie' here, but I have met only one, and she was horrible. So is T. A..
Show me where I ever did that.So you just call what you don't like Commie instead.
As what, a good idea coming from the Left? There haven't been any.No such thing, T. A.
And the RNC is gonna have an off year convention....Citations for the above post.
- Ian Kershaw, Hitler: 1889–1936 Hubris
- Detailed discussion of the Bamberg Conference and its role in consolidating Hitler’s authority.
- See especially pp. 265–272.
- Joachim Fest, Hitler
- Covers the ideological disputes between northern and southern factions and how Bamberg resolved them.
- Peter Longerich, Hitler: A Biography
- Provides a close reading of Hitler’s speeches and the internal party dynamics leading up to Bamberg.
2. Nuremberg Party Rally of 1926 — 1–4 August 1926
Primary and Secondary Sources
- Klaus P. Fischer, Nazi Germany: A New History
- Identifies the 1926 rally as the first major post‑Putsch mass rally and explains its symbolic importance.
- Richard J. Evans, The Coming of the Third Reich
- Discusses the revival of Nazi propaganda and the reestablishment of Nuremberg as the rally site.
- The Nuremberg Municipal Archives (Stadtarchiv Nürnberg)
- Hold original photographs, programs, and police reports from the 1926 rally.
- Cornelia Schmitz‑Berning, Vokabular des Nationalsozialismus
- Provides context for the “Rally of the Flag” (Reichsparteitag der Wiedergeburt).
3. Munich Putsch Anniversary Events — 8–9 November 1926
Primary and Secondary Sources
- David Jablonsky, The Nazi Party in Dissolution: Hitler and the Verbotzeit, 1923–1925
- Explains how the Putsch anniversary became a ritualized event after the party’s re‑legalization.
- Ulrich Herbert (ed.), National Socialist Extermination Policies
- Contains essays on the development of Nazi political ritual and myth‑making.
- Michael Burleigh, The Third Reich: A New History
- Describes the cult of the “martyrs” and the annual commemorations in Munich.
4. Regional SA and Propaganda Rallies (Saxony, Thuringia, Ruhr, Berlin)
Primary and Secondary Sources
- Bruce Campbell, The SA Generals and the Rise of Nazism
- Documents SA activity in Saxony, Thuringia, and the Ruhr during 1925–1927.
- Conan Fischer, The Rise of the Nazis
- Provides a regional breakdown of Nazi propaganda efforts in industrial and urban centers.
- Joseph Goebbels, The Goebbels Diaries: 1925–1926(edited editions)
- First‑hand accounts of early propaganda events in Berlin after Goebbels became Gauleiter in late 1926.
- Detlef Mühlberger, Hitler’s Followers: Studies in the Sociology of the Nazi Movement
- Analyzes regional variations in Nazi support and rally activity.
These works are widely used by historians of the Weimar Republic and the Third Reich because they:
- Rely on archival material
- Provide detailed chronologies
- Distinguish between national rallies, regional propaganda events, and internal party meetings
- Offer context for how 1926 fits into the broader reconstruction of the Nazi Party after the Putsch ban

Abd likely hundreds of ICE agents.There are going to be Nuremberg type trials in America in 2029. Hauled before the people will be Miller, Bovino, Noem, that Tricia whatshername, DHS's "Tokyo Rose" and of course Bondi.
Man, those are going to be just as bad - I think the N. trials lasted about a year and 199 defendants were tried. Think of how long it will take to try thousands - I mean, I guess only the ones who murdered and beat people.Abd likely hundreds of ICE agents.