Originally posted by no1marauderI understand that you profess to be a lawyer?
Yes you are.
If so that explains your penchant for obtusely misrepresenting an opponent's argument, and a facility for confusing any issue by introducing 'red herrings'.
As Gibbon put it vis a vis your ilk in the days of the decline of the Roman Empire "....... detecting the chicanery of the lawyers who laboured to disguise the truth of the plainest facts, and to pervert the sense of the laws".
The only difference is that you are not very successful at the attempted swindle.
Originally posted by catfoodtimYou seem to me to be just a mixed-up kid, so just carry on flying your kites.
I've only ever seen you quote 'facts' from The Bell Curve and then hide behind it by claiming only someone with a good knowledge of statistical theory could understand. Do you really want me to say 'Pot/Kettle'?
Even someone who lived in Wolverhampton could understand my nationality:
English - Moved to Ireland.
As I've repeated on more t ...[text shortened]... I live.
Easy.
Edit: What has my nationality to do with this? Why the obsession?
I do not have much time for those who run to the 'moderator' for protection.
Originally posted by catfoodtimWell it, like you, is a bit of a joke but one is not allowed to say so .
At least that's some progress. Eventually you'll be able to call it 'the Irish flag'.
Run to the moderators? When exactly? And why did I again?
And why do you not have time for people who alert your posts?
Back to the original discussion: I don't believe Hitler was anyone's stooge. He hated Jews, Jews created Bolshevism, both had to be destroyed. Plus, there was all of that living space out there in the Russian hinterland, not to mention all of that farmland in the Ukraine. So why did he abandon the invasion of England when he had their backs to the wall? The opportunity and temptation to attack the U.S.S.R. was too great, and he even believed that if Germany lost the battle with Bolshevism, the Western powers would come to his aid. Hitler was not a rational fellow and followed his own intuition more often than the advice of his generals.