860 résultats pour "outer"
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Paul
ÉLUARD
T qu'un
out jeune, j'ai ouvert mes bras à la pureté. Ce ne fut
battement d'ailes au ciel...
Paul ÉLUARD T qu'un out jeune, j'ai ouvert mes bras à la pureté. Ce ne fut battement d'ailes au ciel de mon éternité, qu'un Les Dessous d'une vie, « La Dame de carreau». battement de cœur amoureux qui bat dans les poitrines conquises. Je ne pouvais plus tomber. s Aimant l'amour. En vérité, la lumière m'éblouit. J'en garde assez en moi pour regarder la nuit, toute la nuit, toutes les nuits. Toutes les vierges sont différentes. Je rêve toujours d'urte vierge. 10 À l'école, elle est au banc deva...
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Texte
Paul
12
ÉLUARD
Les Dessous d'une vie, « La Dame de carreau».
T qu'un
out jeune, j'ai ouvert mes...
Texte Paul 12 ÉLUARD Les Dessous d'une vie, « La Dame de carreau». T qu'un out jeune, j'ai ouvert mes bras à la pureté. Ce ne fut battement d'ailes au ciel de mon éternité, qu'un battement de cœur amoureux qui bat dans les poitrines conquises. Je ne pouvais plus tomber. s Aimant l'amour. En vérité, la lumière m'éblouit. J'en garde assez en moi pour regarder la nuit, toute la nuit, toutes les nuits. Toutes les vierges sont différentes. Je rêve toujours d'urte vierge. 10 À l'école, elle est a...
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., Ev8' OÙTE 11(11,VELII cillEllOS OÜTE WAELII È~
Où le vent ne per111et ni de rester immobile ni d'avancer
Ce...
., Ev8' OÙTE 11(11,VELII cillEllOS OÜTE WAELII È~ Où le vent ne per111et ni de rester immobile ni d'avancer Ce fragment d'Eschyle (250 R.), attesté à la fois par Plutarque (De tranquillitate animi, 476a), par les parémiographes (Diogen. 4, 88 ; Greg. Cypr. L., 2, 13: Apost. 7, 22: Soudae 1368) et cité par Aristénète (Ep .. l, 27), désigne une situation critique ou difficile. Citons un parallèle en...
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Extrait d'un arrêt rendu par la Cour de cassation, chambre sociale, le 31 octobre 1989, n° 8S-41.229 : commentaire
la total to du personnel : elle nest jamais fixee dans le temps et les salaries doivent pouvoir, a tout moment, passer du camp des grevistes a celui des non-grevistes. Circonstances legi- timant le lock-out : La survenance dune contrainte insurmontable va autoriser le lock-out. II peut s'agir : -de ('occupation des locaux rendant le travail impossible aux non-grevistes ; - de debrayages repetes aboutissant a la paralysie dune chaine ; - les risques encourus par le personnel ou les clients. Exemp...
- Dwight Gooden Throws No-Hitter.
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t ement q uel p arti il p rendrait.
communiquer, et avec lequel il la vérifie. C'est pour cette raison que je m'entretiens volontiers avec toi plutôt qu'avec tout autre, persuadé comme je suis que tu as parfaitement étudié toutes les matières qu'il convient (348e) au savant d'approfondir, et en particulier celle de la vertu. Et quel autre consulte rais-je préférablement à toi? Toi qui te piques d'être homme de bien, non pas à la manière de quelques uns, qui...
- Cricket (game).
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ils s 'imaginent a u c ontraire q ue s
qu'on se laisse vaincre par le plaisir, par la douleur, ou par quelqu'une des autres passions dont je parlais tout à l'heure. - Vraiment, Socrate, il y a bien d'autres choses sur lesquelles les hommes n'ont pas des idées justes. -Essaie donc avec moi, Protagoras, de les détromper, et de leur apprendre en quoi consiste ce phénomène qui se passe en eux, et qu'ils appellent être vaincu par le plaisir (353a), et par conséquen...
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D ieu s eul u n p areil a vantage.
autour des mollets, on s'exerce sans cesse dans les gymnases, on porte des vêtements fort courts, comme si c'était par là que les Lacédémoniens sur passent les autres Grecs. Mais les Lacédémoniens, lorsqu'ils veulent converser tout à leur aise avec leurs sophistes, et qu'ils s'ennuient de ne les voir qu'en cachette, chassent de chez eux tous ces étrangers qui se trouvent dans leur ville; après quoi ils s' entretien nent avec...
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tice, a u c ourage, à l a t empérance, à l a s ainteté.
-Assurément. - À toutes ces questions, s'il ajoutait celle-ci : que disiez-vous donc tout à l'heure? ne vous auraisje pas bien entendus? Il m'a paru que vous disiez l'un et l'autre que les parties de la vertu sont disposées entre elles de manière que l'une n'est point semblable à l'autre.Je dirais pour ma part: pour tout le reste, tu as bien entendu, mais si tu crois que ce discours est aussi de moi, tu t'es trompé. (33l...
- Grapes of wrath
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m ains e t d e l 'esprit, f açonné s ans n ul r eproche, q ui
e st difficile v éritablement.
peut renverser et mettre par terre celui qui est debout; de même, un malheur sans ressource peut abattre l'homme (344d) qui a des ressources en lui même, mais non celui qui n'en a aucune. Une grande tempête qui survient peut laisser le pilote sans ressource; une saison fâcheuse laissera aussi sans ressource le laboureur; il en est de même du médecin : parce que le bon peut devenir mauvais, comme le témoigne un autre po...
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Bioethics
death ; Reproduction and ethics ). Since medical ethics has been perhaps the major growth area of applied ethics, this broader usage of the term 'bioethics' has become dominant in the Anglo-American world (see Medical ethics ). More broadly still, and in keeping with V.R. Potter 's introduction of the term ( 1971 ), 'bioethics' refers to the moral, social and political problems that arise from biology and the life sciences generally and that involve, directly or indirectly, human wellbein...
- Geoffroi Gaimar, Chroniques anglo-normandes (extrait)
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J e c rois ê tre d e ce n ombre, e t j e m e flatte d 'avoir
é té p lus loin q u'aucun a utre d ans l a d écouverte d e
c e q ui r end v ertueux; e t c ela v aut b ien l e p rix q ue
j 'exige p our l 'enseigner, e t m ême davantage, a u j ugement d e m es p ropres élèves.
continuais à le regarder, croyant qu'il dirait encore quelque chose, plein du désir de l'entendre. Cepen dant, m'étant aperçu qu'il avait réellement cessé de parler, je rassemblai avec peine mes esprits et, me tour nant vers Hippocrate, je lui dis : Fils d'Apollodore, que je te suis reconnaissant de m'avoir engagé à venir ici! (328e) Je n'aurais manqué sous aucun pré texte ce que je viens d'entendre de Protagoras. Jus qu'à...
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COMMENTAIRE INCIPIT THERESE RAQUIN
asked him: - Oh green hill, why do you become greener? - That's because Hayna went through here. Arrived at an orange hill, he asked him: - Oh orange hill, why do you become even more orange? - That's because Hayna went through here. Arrived in front of a yellow hill, he asked him: - Oh yellow hill, why do you become even more yellow? - That's because Haina went through here. When he arrived at the white hill, he asked: - Oh white hill, why do you become even whiter? - That's because Hain...
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c et i ntervalle, C allias e t A lcibiade s ont r evenus,
( 317e) a menant P rodicos q u'ils a vaient fait lever, e t
t ous c eux q ui é taient avec lui.
cette ville, à Zeuxippe d'Héraclée 35, qu'il s'adresse à lui comme il s'adresse à présent à toi, que ce peintre lui fait les mêmes promesses que tu lui fais (318c), que chaque jour il se rendra plus habile et fera de nouveaux progrès. Si Hippocrate lui demande : «En quoi ferai je de si grands progrès?», n'est-il pas vrai que Zeuxippe lui répondra qu'il les fera dans la pein ture? Ou bien qu'il lui vienne à l'esprit de s'a...
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m on cher, q uelque n om q u'il t e plaise d'employer, soit
agréable, soit joyeux, soit délectable, r éponds à c e q ue
j e t e d emande.
d'accord de chacun de ces points. Qu'appelez-vous donc du nom de terreur et de crainte? Entendez-vous par là la même chose que moi? Pour moi, je dis que c'est l'attente d'un mal, soit que (ceci s'adresse à toi, Prodicos) vous l'appeliez crainte ou terreur. Protago ras et Hippias jugèrent que la crainte et la terreur n'étaient autre chose que cela. Prodicos l'accorda de la crainte (358e), et le nia de la terreur. - Peu m'i...
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Windsor (Ontario) - geography.
IV ECONOMY Casino WindsorCasino Windsor, in Windsor, Ontario, opened in 1998. The hotel and casino provide an important boost to the economy of the city bycreating many new jobs and by attracting tourist traffic to the region.Richard Sheinwald/AP/Wide World Photos Windsor has been a base of American automobile companies from the beginning of the 20th century and it remains a major center of auto industry employment andmanufacturing. The Ford Motor Company built an auto manufacturing plant in Wi...
- Mark Twain: The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn (Sprache & Litteratur).
- poe
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Encyclopedia of Philosophy: Bentham and James Mill
terms of pain, a real entity. Thus a fiction is made clear by its translation into its relation to the real. Ideas are thus clarified by reference to their context—the sentence; whether or not the sentence can be paraphrased into one which contains real terms is the deciding factor with regard to its sense or nonsense. In a sense the substitute sentence provides the possibility of verifying the original by reference to the world of real entities. Thus if the word ‘duty' were used without re...
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Beauty on Earth Ramuz
extends beyond the text, literally and figuratively. Translator Bailat-Jones discusses the complications of preserving Ramuz's intent when bringing his French into English; besides moving between past, present, and conditional tenses at dizzying speeds, he uses the pronouns on, vous, and nous?one, you, and we, which are often in English interchangeable ways of talking about a general subject?to mean different, specific things. He speaks not only of ?one? as an abstract third-person, but ?one? as...
- Midnighters
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- On the road
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ÉTRANGER-GROUPE 1, SESSION DE JUIN 1995 LANGUE VIVANTE I
coming out of the station more than a week later, the man did not even look at him, and Thomas had known that be should not ask what had happened to the money. James Alan McP!IERsoN, A Matter ofVocabulary. 1. Compréhension de l'écrit A. Compréhension globale 1. Tick the box corresponding to the right answer and jus- tify by quoting from the text (only one answer). 1. Thomas Iived in a bouse which was: a) next to a police station. D b) on...
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Butterflies.
When the change is complete, the adult butterfly splits the chrysalis. The insect unfolds its wings andpumps blood and air into them. It spreads out the wings until they dry and harden. The beautifulbutterfly then flies off to slurp nectar from flowers. Most butterflies live only one or two weeks. BUTTERFLY RELATIVES Butterflies are closely related to moths, another type of insect. One difference between butterflies andmoths is how their antennae look. Butterflies have knobs called clubs on the...
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confess, I've never thought too much about giving lessons.
unpopularity atschool, Grandma's coupons,storagefacilities, peoplewhodon't know whattheInternet is,bad handwriting, beautifulsongs,howthere won't behumans infifty years—" "Whosaidthere won't behumans infifty years?" Iasked her,"Are youanoptimist orapessimist?" Shelooked ather watch andsaid, "I'm optimistic. " "Then Ihave some badnews foryou, because humansaregoing todestroy eachother assoon asitbecomes easyenough to,which will bevery soon." "Whydobeautiful songsmakeyousad?" "Because theyaren't t...
- Lifehack
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Cultural Revolution
I
INTRODUCTION
Cultural Revolution (1966-1976), political campaign in China, launched in 1966 by Chinese Communist Party chairman Mao Zedong to eliminate his political rivals and
revolutionize Chinese society.
1990s attempted to wipe out the legacy of the Cultural Revolution. Even Mao, once glorified as “The Great Helmsman” and the “Red Sun,” was officially criticized for his “leftist mistakes” in the Cultural Revolution, but was still praised forhis leadership in both the war against Japan ( see Sino-Japanese Wars) and the civil war against the Kuomintang. Today, while privately vilified by many Chinese, Mao is at the same time still genuinely admired as a powerful national leader. Contributed By:Rut...
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Cultural Revolution - History.
1990s attempted to wipe out the legacy of the Cultural Revolution. Even Mao, once glorified as “The Great Helmsman” and the “Red Sun,” was officially criticized for his “leftist mistakes” in the Cultural Revolution, but was still praised forhis leadership in both the war against Japan ( see Sino-Japanese Wars) and the civil war against the Kuomintang. Today, while privately vilified by many Chinese, Mao is at the same time still genuinely admired as a powerful national leader. Contributed By:Rut...
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- Il semble b ien, à ce q ue t u dis, q ue t u aies raison,
Socrate, r épondit H ippocrate.
chez Protagoras et chez tous les autres sophistes; mais, si tu ne t'y connais pas, prends bien garde, (314a) mon cher Hippocrate, de hasarder ce que tu as de plus cher au monde; car le risque est plus grand dans l'emplette des enseignements que dans celle des aliments: après que l'on a acheté des aliments, d'un marchand domestique ou d'un forain, on peut les emporter chez soi dans d'autres vaisseaux; et avant d'en prendre,...
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l 'étude.
la vertu comme pouvant être enseignée et acquise. Voilà qui est, ce me semble, suffisamment démontré. (324d) Il reste encore une difficulté à éclaircir, et qui a pour objet les hommes vertueux. Tu me demandes pourquoi ils font apprendre à leurs enfants tout ce qui dépend des maîtres, et les rendent habiles en toutes ces choses, tandis qu'ils ne sauraient les rendre meilleurs que le dernier des citoyens dans la vertu où...
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Jupiter (planet) - astronomy.
Beneath the supercritical fluid zone, the pressure reaches 3 million Earth atmospheres. At this depth, the atoms collide so frequently and violently that the hydrogenatoms are ionized—that is, the negatively charged electrons are stripped away from the positively charged protons of the hydrogen nuclei. This ionization results in asea of electrically charged particles that resembles a liquid metal and gives rise to Jupiter’s magnetic field. This liquid metallic hydrogen zone is 30,000 to 40,000 k...
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menon ou la vertu
A N G L A I S 2/6 04 1 CGS 08 01 CLASSES DE PREMIÈRE A. READING COMPREHENSION (08 points) I. Refer to the text to reorder the following ideas ch ronologically : (02 points) 1. Not a simple product 1. 2. Drive for profit 2. 3. Need for dialogue 3. 4. A promising market 4. II. Say whether the following statements are TR...
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Coutumes et traditions des pays anglophones
Etat civil : S'adresser à
Whe n the phone r ings, you pick up the re ceiver and give your number: 6-3–1- 0-9W e say each figur e separately. Whe n you call someone, you identify yourself : - He llo, David speakin g / Hello, this is David / He llo, David here Th en you ask for who you want : - Can I speak to .... ? / I ’d like to speak to . ..I f the pe rson who answers is not the person you want, you’ll p robably hear somethin g like : - Hang o n a minute / Hold on please - I ’m afraid he isn’ t i...
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Excerpt from Barnaby Rudge - anthology.
Mr. Dennis rolled lazily over upon his breast, and resting his chin upon his hand in imitation of the attitude in which Hugh lay, said, as he too looked towards thedoor: “ Ay, ay, you knew him, brother, you knew him. But who'd suppose to look at that chap now, that he could be the man he is! Isn't it a thousand cruel pities, brother,that instead of taking his nat'ral rest and qualifying himself for further exertions in this here honourable cause, he should be playing at soldiers like a boy?...
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Celtics Win in 1957.
The game stayed close throughout the first overtime and a last-second basket pulled the Hawks back into another tie, forcing a second extra period. Late in thesecond overtime Boston's Jim Loscutoff hit two free throws for a 125-123 Celtics lead in the final seconds. Because several St. Louis players had fouled out inovertime, Alex Hannum, the player-coach for the Hawks, inserted himself into the game for the first time in the series. Hannum threw an inbounds pass off thebackboard that Pettit gat...
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Alligators and Crocodiles.
During cold winters, alligators bury themselves in mud. There they can hibernate until spring. WHERE CROCODILES LIVE Four species of crocodiles live in the Americas. These crocodiles are found in southern Florida, Cuba andother Caribbean islands, southern Mexico, Central America, and northern South America. The Indo-Pacific crocodile lives along the seacoasts of India, southern China, Malaysia, and Australia.The swamp crocodile is found in the lakes and rivers of India. The Nile crocodile lives...
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Excerpt from A Christmas Carol - anthology.
External heat and cold had little influence on Scrooge. No warmth could warm, no wintry weather chill him. No wind that blew was bitterer than he, no falling snowwas more intent upon its purpose, no pelting rain less open to entreaty. Foul weather didn’t know where to have him. The heaviest rain, and snow, and hail, and sleet,could boast of the advantage over him in only one respect. They often “came down” handsomely and Scrooge never did. Nobody ever stopped him in the street to say, with g...
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Lamia
reason would tell him that it is not safe enough to depend only on a career as a poet. He saw in himself the ability and didn't let count anything else what could speak against the life of poet. This alike attitude is seen in Lycius when he listens to Lamia not to invite Appolonius to the marriage, even though he had learned everything by Appolonius, had always listen to his advices and obeyed his words. It is as if Keats saw himself turning away from his reason, shutting it out from his dream-l...
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Stonehenge - History.
In 2006 excavations at Durrington Walls, about 3 km (less than 2 mi) from Stonehenge, uncovered a large settlement dating to 2600 or 2500 BC. The settlement consisted of wooden structures laid out in the same pattern as Stonehenge and, according to the archaeologists who conducted the excavations, probably housed theworkers who built Stonehenge. However, the remains of large amounts of pottery and animal bones found at the site suggest that it was a place of feasting, which maymean that it hous...
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Stonehenge.
A Recent Excavations In 2006 excavations at Durrington Walls, about 3 km (less than 2 mi) from Stonehenge, uncovered a large settlement dating to 2600 or 2500 BC. The settlement consisted of wooden structures laid out in the same pattern as Stonehenge and, according to the archaeologists who conducted the excavations, probably housed theworkers who built Stonehenge. However, the remains of large amounts of pottery and animal bones found at the site suggest that it was a place of feasting, whic...
- drama, religious
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Perseus Greek Son of the god Zeus and Danae;
husband of Andromeda; father of Perses; slayer of
the Gorgon Medusa.
Perseus slew Medusa and cut off her head, which he carefully stowed in his leather bag. From the blood of Medusa sprang Chrysaor and the winged horse, Pegasus, children of Medusa and the sea god, Poseidon. Perseus and Andromeda - Mythology. With Medusa’s head in his leather bag, Perseus set off on his winged sandals to take the head to King Polydectes of Seriphos. As he flew along the coast, he saw a beautiful woman chained to a rock, weeping. She was Andromeda, daughter of King Cepheus of Eth...
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Meteor Shower - astronomy.
Meteor observations with radar work much the same way that observations with radio forward scattering observations do. With radar, the receiver and transmitter areat the same place. Both methods provide numbers of meteors per hour, without the visual observer’s dependence on a clear, dark sky. Astronomers can determine the orbit of the particle stream that creates a meteor shower by finding out the radiant of the shower and the speed of the meteors.Observers must record meteors with cameras or v...
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Prometheus (Forethought) Greek One of the
Titans, descended from the Earth Mother (Gaia)
and the Sky Father (Uranus); son of Iapetus and
one of the daughters of Oceanus, possibly Clymene;
brother of Atlas and Epimetheus; father of Deucalion.
knew he was being tricked, Zeus decided to keep the knowledge of fire-making from humankind. Prometheus, undaunted, stole fire from heaven, or from the forge of the smith-god, Hephaestus, and took it to Earth hidden in the hollow stalk of the fennel plant. He then began to teach people all the uses of fire—how to make tools and fashion metal, how to build, and how to cook. He also taught people how to sow and reap, and how to use herbs for healing. Prometheus, Bound and Unbound - Mythology. Pro...
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The Scarlett letter
The Scarlet Letter is an american romantic novel of fiction, written by Nathaniel Hawthorne, published in the mid-nineteenth century. It is considered to be his best work. Nathaniel Hawthorne was an American novelist and short story writer from the nineteen century. He is a dark romantic (anti-transcendentalist) which means that he explores the psychological effects of guilt and sin, madness, derangement in the human psyche. The Scarlett letter is marked by this exploration. The st...
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Excerpt from Macbeth - anthology.
As they had seen me with these hangman’s hands.Listening their fear I could not say “Amen”When they did say “God bless us.” LADY. Consider it not so deeply. MACBETH. But wherefore could not I pronounce “Amen”?I had most need of blessing, and “Amen”Stuck in my throat. LADY. These deeds must not be thoughtAfter these ways; so, it will make us mad. MACBETH. Methought I heard a voice cry, “Sleep no more!Macbeth does murder sleep—the innocent sleep,Sleep that knits up the ravelled sleave of care,The...
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Holocaust
I
INTRODUCTION
Holocaust, the almost complete destruction of Jews in Europe by Nazi Germany and its collaborators during World War II (1939-1945).
relation to the Jews. He claimed that the Jews had achieved economic dominance and the ability to control and manipulate the mass media to their own advantage. Hewrote of the need to eradicate their powerful economic position, if necessary by means of their physical removal. IV UNIQUENESS OF NAZI ANTI-SEMITISM The linking of anti-Semitic accusations to race struggle is what made Nazism so genocidal. The Nazis believed the Jews were responsible for what they regarded as thedegeneracy of modern...