Poll finds that 54 per cent think neo-Nazi groups could be successful in Austrian elections if there wasn’t a law banning them.

Forty two percent of Austrians think “not everything was bad under Hitler,” while 57 per cent think “there was nothing positive about the Hitler era,” according to a poll conducted by newspaper Der Standard that was published on Friday.
The poll was conducted among 502 eligible voters in Austria and published ahead of the 75th anniversary of the country’s annexation by Nazi Germany.
61 per cent thought the country adequately dealt with its Nazi past, while 39 per cent thought more should be done.
Nazi Germany annexed Austria in 1938, and a debate still smoulders on whether Austrians were Hitler’s first victims or willing accomplices. Austria’s Jewish population was nearly wiped out in the ensuing Holocaust.
Source: The Jerusalem Post

My comment:
Once a Nazi, always a Nazi.
With 42 per cent of today’s Austrians favorable to the Nazis, we are back in the days from 1933 to 1936.
Adolf Hitler got 36 per cent of the votes in 1932.
He might have done much better, if he had run for elections in Vienna today.
As late as in 1960, 89 per cent of the people of Austria were Roman Catholics.
Before the Austrians welcomed to be included in the Third Reich, the Austrians were a part of the Holy Roman Empire of Germany, the second Roman empire.
The inspiration of building a Roman Empire, is also behind the European Union (EU). The Austrians will hail the political leader, who will soon align and unite all the empires. Just like the dream of their Roman Catholic brother, Adolf Hitler.
Written by Ivar





