In Plain Sight with Jeremy from Kentucky, April 7, 2026

RBN
By RBN April 7, 2026 21:01

The Patrick and Jeremy Show Part Two: Featuring Don Advo from Stormfront Radio.

RBN
By RBN April 7, 2026 21:01
Write a comment

3 Comments

  1. Jack Brody April 8, 03:56

    The link to the .mp3 file is missing.

    Reply to this comment
  2. Jack Brody April 9, 03:40

    “[I]n March 1942 … the Bomber Command was placed under the direction of Sir Arthur ‘Bomber’ Harris, who inaugurated civilian bombing in the Middle East and India in the 1920s.” (Sheldon Richman; “Killing Noncombatants”; The Journal of Historical Review; Vol. 18, No. 1)

    “Mr. Spaight is not content merely to admit that upon Britain rests the responsibility for starting the practice of bombing civilian populations, but insists that to Britain must be awarded the entire credit for conceiving and carrying into effect this practice…. Finally, he agrees that Hitler only undertook the bombing of the British civilian population reluctantly three months after the R.A.F. had commenced bombing the German civilian population….” (F.J.P. Veale; Advance to Barbarism (1968); Chapter 6)

    “Aachen is the biggest German town in our hands. It is the most exhilarating sight I have seen for years. The town of some 170,000 inhabitants has not now a single habitable house left in it…. Ten thousand inhabitants are living like rats in cellars among the debris. One air raid alone caused 3,000 civilian deaths…. And it is good to think that what happened in Aachen happened, and goes on happening, in almost every German town.” (Report of British war correspondent, printed in London newspaper, Christmas Eve, 1944. (F.J.P. Veale; Advance to Barbarism))

    “Winston Churchill … knocked on the glass partition and told the driver to stop, turn around, go back…. As he gets out at No. 10 Downing Street, he turns … and says: ‘We have had a message, the beams are on London tonight and it would not be right for me to leave my capital and the citizens of this metropolis to suffer the raid alone.’ In fact, the message that he had received told him that the raid was on Coventry and so it was safe to come back to London…. His private secretary John Colville writes that that evening he went up on to the roof of the Air Ministry to wait for the oncoming bombers: he wanted to see the raid begin. What a hypocrite.” (David Irving; “On Contemporary History and Historiography”)

    “The Italian Volunteer Legion of Camillo Ricchiardi [in the Second Boer War] carried out the capture of an armoured train near Chieveley, Natal. Among the passengers who were taken prisoner was the young journalist Winston Churchill, whose life Ricchiardi spared by pretending not to see him dumping his pistol and dum-dum ammunition which had been declared unlawful on pain of death.” (historyreviewed.com/?p=9236)

    I wish to God that Ricchiardi had executed the satanic creature named Churchill. (I prefer to call him Swinson Dunghill.)

    Reply to this comment
View comments

Write a comment

<

Show Hosts