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    ヒトラー

    映画 関連語 ワルキューレ 第二次世界大戦 ユダヤ人
    • Is ESPN right to sack Hank Williams Jr for comparing President Obama to Adolf Hitler? | Poll
      After country singer Hank Williams Jr compared President Obama to Adolf Hitler on Fox News, sports channel ESPN cancelled his Monday Night Football gig. Good call? 国の後に歌手ハンクウィリアムスJrは彼のマンデーナイトフットボールのギグをキャンセルフォックスニュース、スポーツチャンネルESPNでアドルフヒトラーにオバマ大統領を比較した

    • Lars von Trier's Nazi speech at Cannes - video
      An extended version of the director's rambling comments about Nazis, Hitler and Jews at the press conference for his film Melancholia 彼の映画の記者会見で、ナチス、ヒトラーとユダヤ人の監督のとりとめのないコメントの拡張版メランコリア

    • Does Hitler have a plan for Auckland rail?
      A Hitler Youtube video, featuring John (Key), Len (Brown) and Martin (Snedden) has gone viral on the internet, depicting the Auckland public transport debacle on the opening night of the Rugby W ジョン(キー)、レン(ブラウン)とマーティン(Snedden)を搭載したヒトラーYoutubeビデオは、ラグビーWのオープニングの夜にオークランドの公共交通機関の崩壊を描いた、インターネット上でウイルスの行っている

    • Early Hitler letter on Jews unveiled in New York
      A Jewish human right organization has acquired a letter by Adolf Hitler believed to contain his first written comments detailing his belief that Jews were a threat and should be removed.Rabbi Marvin Hier of the Simon Wiesenthal... ユダヤ人の人権団体は、アドルフヒトラーの手紙は、ユダヤ人とは脅威であることサイモンウィーゼンタールのremoved.Rabbiマービンハイアーにする必要があります彼の信念を詳細に彼の最初の書かれたコメントが含まれていると考えられて取得しています...

    • Cannes reacts to Lars von Trier's ban - video
      Filmgoers at the Cannes film festival discuss the banning of the director Lars von Trier after his comments about 'understanding Hitler' in the press conference for MelancholiaHenry BarnesLaurence Topham カンヌ映画祭でFilmgoersはMelancholiaHenry BarnesLaurenceトッパムの記者会見で。。u0026#39;ヒトラー理解。。u0026#39;に関する彼のコメントの後に監督ラースフォントリアーの禁止を検討

    • Hindus outraged at Hitler v Ganesh play
      HINDU leader condemns play that shows the sacred god Ganesh going one-to-one with Hitler over a swastica. ヒンズー教のリーダーはswastica以上ヒトラーと一対一になる神聖な神ガネーシャを示すプレーを非難する

    • The blitz: day one timeline of where the bombs fell
      Hitler intended the relentless bombing of British cities to crush the morale of his enemy. Using London Fire Brigade records from the time, this interactive guide charts the impact, hour by hour, of the first day of this terrible nine-month campaignPaddy AllenJenny Ridley ヒトラーは敵の士気を鎮圧するイギリスの都市の執拗な爆撃を意図

    • What Does Bringing The Brooklyn Dodgers Back Have To Do With Social Media? (Part 1)
      I've read a lot of marketing books. More than any human should ever be exposed to. Well ... except for Hitler. If I had a time machine, preferably a DeLorean, I'd go back in time, kidnap Hitler, and read marketing books to him. I know he ultimately blew his brains out, but I think it would have happened much sooner had I done that. 私はマーケティングの本をたくさん読みました

    • The paintings Hitler couldn't steal
      In the summer of 1939, as Europe lurched ever closer towards war, the seemingly unstoppable rise of Adolf Hitler led to an exodus of French Jewry as thousands of families frantically packed up their belongings to flee the inevitable... 家族の何千もの必死避けられないから逃げるために荷物を詰め込んだので、1939年の夏に、ヨーロッパはこれに近い戦争に向かって見舞わとして、アドルフヒトラーの一見止め上昇がフランスのユダヤ人の流出につながった...

    • Diaries suggest illness affected Stalin's actions
      It's one of the great questions of history, and indeed philosophy: what does it take to create a Hitler or a Stalin? What circumstances does it take to produce such evil?Newly released diaries from one of Joseph Stalin's personal... それは歴史の大きな疑問の一つであり、実際に哲学だ:それは、ヒトラーやスターリンを作成するにはかかりますか?どのような状況は、そのような悪を生成するために時間がかかりますか?新たにリリースされた日記をスターリンの個人のいずれかから...

    • Danish Filmmaker Expelled for Hitler Remark
      Lars von Trier says that he understood, sympathized with Adolf Hitler; he later says he had been joking, apologized ラースフォントリアーは、彼がアドルフヒトラーに共感、理解しているという、彼は後に謝罪し、彼は冗談を言っていた言葉

    • Wiesenthal Center Says Hitler Letter Carries Warning for Today
      Letter shows Hitler was targeting Jews for removal from Germany long before he came to power 手紙は、彼が権力を握った長い前に、ヒトラーはドイツからの除去のためのユダヤ人を対象としていた示しています

    • Bankers Boycotting Mario Batali Over Hitler 'Metaphor'
      Members of the finance industry are lashing out against Mario Batali after the celebrity chef likened their impact on the world to that of history's worst villains, Josef Stalin and Adolf Hitler. On Twitter, angry bankers are using a hashtag, #bataligate, to encourage each other to boycott Batali restaurants like Babbo and Del Posto, whose ultra-high prices make them popular expense account destinations. 有名シェフが史上最悪の悪人、スターリンとヒトラーのように世界に与える影響になぞらえた後に金融業界のメンバーは、マリオBataliに反対して固縛されています

    • Baby clothes outrage
      SYDNEY - An Australian company has sparked international outrage by selling baby clothes with pictures of Hitler, Osama bin Laden and serial killers Ivan Milat, Ted Bundy and Charles Manson.The range of garments is in sizes from... シドニー - オーストラリアの会社からのサイズでヒトラー、オサマビンラディンと連続殺人犯イヴァンMilat、テッドバンディ、衣料のチャールズManson.The範囲であるの写真と赤ちゃんの服を販売して国際的な怒りを巻き起こした...

    • Top Nazi's secretary speaks at 100
      The 100-year-old former personal secretary to Hitler's propaganda minister, Joseph Goebbels, has spoken out about her time with one of the most infamous Nazi war criminals after remaining silent on the subject for more than 60 years.Brunhilde... ヒトラーの宣伝大臣、ヨーゼフゲッベルス、100歳の元個人秘書は、60以上のyears.Brunhildeの件名にサイレント残りの後の最も悪名高いナチの戦争犯罪者のいずれかで彼女の時間知った話されている...

    • Bones of Hitler's deputy secretly exhumed, burned
      The bones of Adolf Hitler's deputy Rudolf Hess were exhumed under cover of darkness, burned and secretly scattered at sea after his grave became a shrine for thousands of neo-Nazis, a cemetery official said.Workers removed Hess'... 彼の墓がネオナチの何千もの神社になった後に、アドルフヒトラーの代理ルドルフヘスの骨は、暗闇のカバーの下に発掘さ焼かれ、密かに海に散在していた、墓地の公式said.Workersはヘス。。u0026quot;を削除...

    • Hitler exhibition opens in Germany
      The first German exhibition since the Second World War to deal exclusively with the taboo subject of Adolf Hitler opens in Berlin tomorrow despite organisers' concerns it may be used as a shrine by neo-Nazis or invoke angry criticism... 第二次世界大戦は、アドルフヒトラーのタブーと排他的に対処するため、ドイツで最初の展覧会は主催者の懸念はネオナチの神社として使用することができるか怒って批判を起動するにもかかわらず、明日のベルリンで開か...

    • Swedish queen's father's Nazi past
      The queen of Sweden's father helped at least one Jew escape Hitler's Germany, according to a report commissioned by Queen Silvia in response to media allegations about his Nazi past.The report - published Tuesday - said although... スウェーデンの父親の女王は、彼のナチpast.Theのレポートについてのメディアの主張への応答としてシルビア王妃が委託した報告書によると、少なくとも一つのユダヤ人脱出ヒトラーのドイツを助けた - 火曜日発表された - が言った...

    • Window reveals fine act of resistance
      The quiff of the sword-wielding Herod is unmistakably Hitler's.For almost 70 years, worshippers in a church in a small town south of Paris have been saying their prayers under a portrait of Adolf Hitler.The Fuhrer's likeness... パリの小さな町の南の教会で崇拝者はアドルフHitler.The総統の肖像画の下で祈りを言っている剣を振り回すヘロデ王の淫乱な女は、紛れもなくヒトラーの

    • Who's Doing It Right? Storify Empowers Journalists to Write a Different Kind of Story
      Way back in 1983,  just days before Newsweek published the Hitler Diaries (does anyone remember that journalistic triumph-turned-disaster?), I accepted a job at the magazine. I had only one request that I insisted be met before walking into my new office: I wanted a CRT (cathode ray tube) to do my work. I mean, how could anyone possibly write or edit a story without one? The coveted IBM Selectric, a disruptive journalistic tool in its day, had finally met its match. null, responseDetails: Suspected Terms of Service Abuse. Please see responseStatus: 40

    • Letter early sign of Hitler's anti-Jewish vision, says centre
      With the white gloves of a very cautious curator, an official of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre yesterday laid before journalists in New York the flimsy pages of a letter allegedly typed and signed by Adolf Hitler in 1919 revealing his... ニューヨークでジャーナリストの前にある非常に慎重保佐人、サイモンウィーゼンタールセンターの公式昨日の白い手袋をして手紙の薄っぺらなページが伝えられるところでは入力とアドルフヒトラーによって署名された1919年に明らかに彼の...

    • The Resistible Rise of Arturo Ui – review
      Liverpool PlayhouseThe gangster Alberto Ui is a connoisseur of violence; just like his real-life counterpart, Adolf Hitler. Bertolt Brecht's play charts the rise to power of both. Fictional scenes are punctuated by historical facts that march in digital surtitles above the stage. Below them, the counterpoint story of Ui's growing grocery protection racket staccatos along to an intermittent jazz accompaniment (Nikola Kodjabashia score) on Ti Green's brutally expressionist set (towering podiums, receding riveted steel walls; slabs of grey, splashes of red), with its documentary film backdrops. Stephen Sharkey's new translation is stiletto-sharp. Walter Meierjohann's fast-as-the wind production is as intricately and incisively layered as a millefeuille spliced with razor blades. The cuff-shooting, shoulder-twitching cast are a Guys and Dolls chorus morphed into a Steven Berkoff-style gang. Each is as excellent as the next; all share one fault: they deliver their lines in a Capone-style singsong that makes meaning hard to follow. Ian Bartholemew's Ui is a performance of staggering, slumping, strutting genius – Charlie Chaplin meets Edward G Robinson, with flickers of the 。ührer in the interstices. Written in 1941 with the help of Margarete Steffin, Brecht's vegetable-trade tale shows that, by failing to resist corruption, we allow evil to mushroom.Bertolt BrechtTheatreAdolf HitlerClare Brennanguardian.co.uk © 2011 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds リバプールPlayhouseTheギャングアルベルトUIは、暴力の目利きであり、単に彼の現実の対応、アドルフヒトラーのような

    • Why Israel keeps moving to the right | Carlo Strenger
      Israel's growing distrust of the external world reflects a sense of existential threat and deep anxiety about its viabilityIsrael has been sliding into ever greater isolation in the few last years and this process has accelerated since Binyamin Netanyahu came to power in 2009. The international community is put off by his tactics: whenever the question of Israel's settlement policy comes up, he diverts attention to the Iranian nuclear threat. He argues that the world is facing a situation similar to 1938, and that its reaction is that of Neville Chamberlain, trying to appease Adolf Hitler. The world doesn't buy Netanyahu's rhetoric; his policy of stalling the peace process is perceived as a cynical ploy hiding Israel's true intent of holding on to the territories.This explanation fails to take into account that Netanyahu's rhetoric reflects a paradoxical state of mind of the Israeli electorate. Polls show that a consistent 70% majority of Israelis favouring the two-state solution. So why has Israel's electorate been moving consistently to the right in the last decade? Why is Netanyahu's popularity in Israel so high? And why is Israel's public less willing than ever to listen to criticism of Israeli policies?This development can be elucidated by a universal tendency of the human psyche uncovered by existential psychology in the last two decades. When under threat, particularly mortal threat, humans tend to defend psychologically by entrenching in their world views. These world views, which include identity narratives of righteousness, become ever more rigid under these circumstances, leading to growing distrust, hatred and negative prejudice against out-groups. Criticism of the in-group and its world view is rejected categorically.This theory predicts that Israel's move 外部世界のイスラエルの高まる不信はかつてないほどの分離にいくつかの最後の年で、このプロセスからネタニエフは2009年に権力を握った加速している摺動されている存在の脅威とそのviabilityIsraelについて深い不安感を反映されます

    • Spain is different no more | Almudena Grandes
      Only now is Spain finally free from the haunting memories of fascism. We can, at last, stop seeing ourselves as differentSpain is different. At school we learned that Napoleon had made this proclamation after losing at Bailén on 19 July 1808: his first battlefield defeat. In the early 1960s, Manuel Fraga Iribarne, the then minister for information and tourism, translated it into English, as a slogan designed to lure tourists to a country which promised nothing but sun and oranges, flamenco shows and glorious beaches.Now, two centuries after the military campaign and half a century after the marketing campaign, Spain is still different: a country alone, one which throughout the 20th century consistently went the other way, marching to a different beat to that which defined the development of other western nations (with the sole exception, relatively speaking, of Portugal).On the same date – 19 July – in another year, 1936, the failure of a military coup unleashed a long, cruel and devastating civil war which lasted until April 1939, just as the second world war was dawning. Those involved in the coup only succeeded in destroying the Republic, a legally constituted democracy, helped on their way by the axis and – even more significantly – by the singular failure of democratic powers to intervene. The latter made the mistake of thinking that by sacrificing Spain they would dissuade Hitler from extending his talons still further across Europe. The consequences are so well-known they require no further comment.And so began the great historical anomaly of 20th-century Spain, the only country where fascism won a war and remained in power for almost four decades. And not only was the mighty modernising drive of the Second Republic stopped abruptly in its tracks; Franco took Spa 今だけスペインは最終的にファシズムの忘れられない思い出から無料です

    • Tony Kushner's degree snub puts playwrights in their place
      Academia should be a bastion of intellectual freedom, but this retraction shows writers are expected to keep the status quoPlaywrights who speak out often suffer a backlash. It happened to Harold Pinter in Britain, and the latest example is Tony Kushner in the US. He was supposed to receive an honorary degree from John Jay College, part of the City University of New York (CUNY), but it's now been vetoed because of a protest from a single trustee who claims that Kushner is anti-Israel. Kushner himself has robustly denied the charge that he ever advocated a boycott of Israel, however critical he may be of Israeli defence policies. It makes you wonder whether any self-respecting intellectual will in future want to accept an honorary degree from a college that seems so ready to stifle open debate.The irony is that Kushner is, among many other things, a profoundly Jewish playwright. He first came to attention with A Bright Room Called Day, which showed a group of friends in Weimar Germany in 1932-33 disintegrating under the pressure of Hitler's rise to power. And Kushner's most famous work, Angels in America, pits a conservative Mormon against a liberal Jew, depicts closeted gay McCarthy henchman Roy Cohn as both a political Machiavelli and an incarnation of life force, and rejects stasis in favour of reconciliation, hope and the possibility of change.What is absurd is that Kushner should be penalised at all for speaking out on the subject of modern Israel. But society likes its playwright to know their place. Pinter was constantly mocked in the media for attacking the lies and falsehoods of American foreign policy and its British supporters – until, that is, the invasion of Iraq on dubious legal and moral grounds woke people up to the truth of what he was saying. Like Kushn アカデミアは、知的自由の砦する必要がありますこの後退は、作家は、しばしば反発を受ける声ステータスquoPlaywrightsを保つと予想されますを示しています

    • 1 January 1934: A report on Dachau
      The Guardian investigates the concentration campDachau opened in March 1933, the first concentration camp for political prisoners to be set up under Hitler, and it served as a model and training ground for later camps. Over 200,000 people were imprisoned there until its liberation on 29 April 1945. Over 30,000 people died, although the exact number is unknown. NewspapersNational newspapersGermanyAdolf HitlerGuardian Research Departmentguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds Guardianは濃度campDachauは1933年3月、ヒトラーの下に設定されて政治犯の最初の強制収容所で開かれたので、それは後でキャンプのためのモデル訓練場として提供し検討する

    • Parents who named son 'Adolf Hitler' lose custody
      A New Jersey couple who gave their children Nazi-inspired names have lost custody of themA New Jersey couple who gave their children Nazi-inspired names have lost custody of them. A US state appeals court made the ruling, citing the parents' own disabilities and the risk of serious injury to their children. The state removed Heath and Deborah Campbell's three small children from their home in January 2009. A month earlier, the family drew attention to the names when a supermarket refused to decorate a birthday cake for their son, Adolf Hitler Campbell. He and siblings JoyceLynn Aryan Nation Campbell and Honszlynn Hinler Jeannie Campbell have been in foster care.United Statesguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds 子供たちにナチス風の名前を与えたニュージャージーカップルは、それらの親権を失っている子供たちにナチス風の名前を与えたテマニュージャージーカップルの親権を失っている

    • Letters: WikiLeaks, secrecy and extradition
      There seems to be an assumption that any US attempt to extradite Julian Assange will have to take place after Sweden's European arrest warrant has been disposed of (The US embassy cables, 18 December). I'm not so sure. Hidden away in part 5 of the UK's Extradition Act is section 179. This appears to deal with the situation where an EAW is in process and an extradition request is received from a category 2 country, such as the US. When this happens, it is the home secretary who decides which goes first. That decision is based, in part, on four criteria, one of which is the relative seriousness of the offences concerned. Doesn't this imply that the home secretary, after weighing a request to an interview by the Swedish police against a US grand jury indictment for espionage, could order a halt to the EAW and let the US extradition request go ahead first?Mike PowellVictoria, British Columbia, Canada• Some people assert that diplomatic negotiating is impossible without the secrecy that is breached by WikiLeaks. Yet the opposite is the truth. Negotiations are made difficult by mismatches of knowledge between parties, which force them to gamble and bluff in the face of uncertainties. A key factor in the causation of wars is discrepancies of information. For instance, Stalin's ignorance of Hitler's intentions in 1941 and Hitler's ignorance of the defensive capabilities of the USSR led to war on the eastern front. If we'd had WikiLeaks-type unsecrecy back then, that biggest conflict in history might not have happened.Robin ClarkeBirmingham• Comparison has been made between WikiLeaks and the Pentagon papers during the Vietnam war. But one can go much further back. In 1645, after King Charles I's defeat at the battle of Naseby in the English civil war, his letters were captured (12月18日、米国大使館のケーブル)、スウェーデンの欧。逮捕状が破棄された後にして、Julian Assangeを引き渡すことは米国の試みが行わを取らなければならないという前提があるようです

    • German stereotypes: don't mention the war
      Schoolchildren in Germany are taught the lessons from Hitler's days in power and most adults are quite ready to talk about itOf course you can. Germans do, all the time. Flick through any newspaper, any day of the week, and there is very likely to be at least one story related to the second world war.Recent examples include a feature on a museum about Topf und 。öhne, the oven manufacturers who supplied Auschwitz; reviews of a newly released film called Mein Kampf, about the life of a young Viennese painter called Adolf Hitler; and a discussion of children's literature in the time of National Socialism.While your average Germans are not quite as self-flagellating as 。ürgen, the cagoule-wearing caricature from the Harry Enfield programme, they are likely to mention the war before you do. From a very young age, German schoolchildren have it drummed into them that their forefathers voted Hitler into power and played a role in the systematic murder of millions of innocent people. As a result, they carry a certain sense of history with them throughout their lives.There is even a special German word – Vergangenheitsbewältigung – that means dealing with the past.That's why, when neo-Nazis try to rewrite history – by holding a provocative day of remembrance each year on 13 February to commemorate the German victims of the Dresden bombing, for example – they are drowned out by the rest of the population.GermanyEuropeHelen Piddguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2011 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds ドイツの小学生は、電源のヒトラーの日からの教訓を教えられているほとんどの大人は非常にすることができますitOfコースについて話をする準備が整いました

    • Jens-Anton Poulsson obituary
      Joint leader of the daring wartime raid at TelemarkThe military career of the Norwegian Jens-Anton Poulsson, who has died aged 91, lasted 42 years, but may fairly be said to have peaked near the beginning, when he led the home-based support for the most spectacular sabotage operation of the second world war – the destruction of the heavy-water plant in the Telemark region west of Oslo.Poulsson, born at Tinn in Telemark, had just joined the army at the time and fled to Britain after the debacle that followed the German invasion in 1940. This culminated in a chaotic allied withdrawal and the ensuing Nazi occupation. In the UK, Poulsson joined the first Norwegian Independent Company as a second lieutenant. He was soon recruited by the Special Operations Executive (SOE), created in summer 1940 by Winston Churchill for sabotage operations in occupied territory.The Norwegian resistance reported in autumn 1941 that the hydroelectric power-plant at Vermork had stepped up production of heavy water, raising fears that the Germans were accelerating their efforts to develop an atomic bomb. The fluid is used as a moderator to slow down the chain reaction in unenriched uranium 235. The plant, opened before the war as one of the largest of its kind in the world, had been set up to power a fertiliser factory, for which large quantities of hydrogen were needed. A by-product of hydrogen production was deuterium, the hydrogen isotope found in heavy water, which is produced slowly and expensively by electrolysis.The US and Britain, already committed to a programme to create an atomic bomb, concluded that if the Nazis needed large quantities of heavy water, they had to be working on a bomb, just as the exiled Albert Einstein had twice warned. In fact, Albert Speer, Hitler's armaments suprem ノルウェーのイェンスのTelemarkThe軍事キャリアアントンPoulsson氏は91歳で死去したの大胆な戦時中の空襲の共同代表、42年も続いた、かなりされるの先頭付近のとき、彼のサポートのためのホームベースの主導のピークがあると可能性があります第二次世界戦争の中で最も壮大なサボタージュ操作 - Oslo.Poulssonのテレマーク地域の西には、重水プラント、Tinnでテレマーク生まれの破壊は、単に時に、軍に入隊していたし、英国への大敗後、逃走は、1940年にドイツの侵略に続く

    • Hitler exhibition opens in Berlin
      An exhibition titled Hitler and the Germans at the German Historical Museum focuses on the personality cult that sprang up around the Nazi dictator ドイツ歴史博物館でヒトラーとドイツという展覧会は、ナチス独裁の周り跳び個人崇拝に焦点を当てて

    • Video: Hitler and the German people exhibition opens at Berlin museum
      Curators at capital's Historical Museum hope display will show role of German society and illustrate that Hitler was only one aspect of Nazi system 首都の歴史博物館希望の表示でキュレーターは、ドイツ社会の役割が表示され、ヒトラーがナチスシステムの一側面であったことを示しています

    • Letters: A Monopoly of chance encounters
      Your article on the 75th anniversary of Monopoly (G2, 28 December) took me right back to 1938, when as a girl of 13, I played it morning, noon and night with my brother and his friend. This was in Vienna, in March, just after the Anschluss when Hitler invaded, and, being of Jewish family background, we could not go to school. I had just been given this new game by my grandfather on his recent return from one of his business trips to England. It was a godsend as we could not go anywhere else and there was nothing else to do. To this day, I remember all the streets and still have the original set – and it is complete, and well used. Soon afterwards I came to this country with Kindertransport, and now, as an octogenarian, a British subject, and with four years' service in the WAAF during the war, I have been playing this very game with my grandchildren and telling them the history of it all.Alice AnsonWatford • Michael Hann may like to know we are keeping his article. We currently have 32 Monopoly sets, the oldest of which is pre-second world war and belonged to my husband as a child. Wherever we go on holiday, we try to acquire a local Monopoly as a souvenir and, if necessary, buy a dictionary for translating the Chance and Community Chest cards (eg the Czech, Polish and Icelandic versions). We have local versions from Thunder Bay, on the Canadian shore of Lake Superior; a Cypriot version called Totopoly; a rug version from the Netherlands; and a Birmingham edition. There are travel sets, a card game version and an Arabic version, bought for us by my son when he was working in Kuwait, which we are still trying to screw up the courage to attempt. Playing Monopoly in different languages does wonders for one's language skills, not least learning to count and to interpret sig モノポリー75周年記念(G2は12月28日)にあなたの記事は、13の女の子として、私はそれを朝、昼と夜の弟と彼の友人と遊んだ1938年にすぐに戻って連れて行ってくれました

    • Pick of the clicks: what did you read on the film site in 2010?
      What did your mouse edge towards on this site this year? Here are the top 10 most viewed articles, galleries, videos, audio streams and interactives. On your own head be it …Articles1) Porpoises rescue Dick Van DykeOur most-viewed piece of content of any type, by some distance, was this brief news story about the efforts of water mammals in saving the life of an 84-year-old man. It was shared on Facebook no less than 77,000 times.2) Hitler? A scapegoat. Stalin? I can empathise. Oliver Stone stirs up historyA report from the US previewing the director's dubious-sounding TV documentary series.3) The greatest film scenes ever shotPhilip French and assorted directors and producers pick their favourites.4) The death of Sex and the CityHadley Freeman dances entertainingly on the grave.5) Oscars 2010 liveblog: the 82nd Academy Awards as it happensFive-and-a-half-hours of glamour, gongs and grinding fatigue.6) Michael Douglas reveals his cancer has spreadA news story following the star's frank appearance on David Letterman.7) Film director Kevin Smith thrown off Southwest Airlines plane for being 'too big' Mostly notable on account of the fuss he made afterwards.8) The Uma Thurman film so bad it made £88 on opening weekendMotherhood wasn't great, it's true; but some films actually make far less.9) Brief encounters of the animal kind: Isabella Rossellini's Green PornoA classy little blog from April 2009. Its longevity in the top 10, however, suggests this piece may have been an inadvertent search engine optimisation smash hit.10) Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1 - review Xan Brooks's damning first take.Galleries1) The 20 best films for summer 2009Nostalgia? Hopefulness? Whatever the reason, Peter Bradshaw's picks for at least six months before came out on top.2) Osca このサイトは今年に向かって、マウスのエッジのですか?ここでは、最も人気の記事では、ギャラリー、ビデオ、オーディオストリームとインタラクティブトップ10です

    • Letters: It's the little things you remember
      After all these years of thinking we got through the war with no fuss or trauma, your G2 edition (The blitz: 70 years on, the survivors remember, 7 September) has produced a strange shakiness. It's the little things. In 1940, there were no toys in the shops so parents set up a swap system for Christmas presents. My china doll Betty, with blue eyes that opened and shut, went to four-year-old Paddy, whose parents lived in a flat over the chemist's shop. Soon afterwards, Paddy was killed when people were caught in a stick of bombs as they ran to the public shelter. Her mother asked if the doll could be buried in Paddy's grave, as she had treasured it. I said yes, of course – to refuse would be unthinkable. There were worse things later – the oil bomb, the incendiary that came through the roof, Mr Thrower getting his head blown off by a doodlebug. The V2 rocket that had just fallen when I came home from school. But it's the thought of the perfect china face deep under the earth beside Paddy that somehow makes my heart constrict. Like I say, the little things.Alison PrinceWhiting Bay, Isle of Arran• Thank you for publishing the cheerfully heroic reminiscences of the blitz. The second world war generation seems to have come to quietly accept being either completely disregarded, or being sneered at and treated with condescending disrespect, by every form of media, the advertising industry and politicians of all parties. It's a very good thing for us they did not keep quiet when Hitler demanded they grovel, and then went on to help win the war and elect Attlee's great government.Chris HardyLondon• I grew up with the stories of the blitz – the death, destruction, bravery, fear and failure. What happened to my family adversely affected my whole childhood and later life. Yet 私たちは大騒ぎや外傷、あなたのG2の版(電撃:上70年の戦争で得た思考のすべてのこれらの年後、生存者は)奇妙な揺れを生産している9月7日を覚えている

    • Germany set to pay off last WW1 reparations
      Germany marks the end of an era this Sunday when, 92 years after the end of hostilities, it will make the last of its First World War reparations payments that once provoked a wave of resentment strong enough to sweep Adolf Hitler... ドイツは交戦の末92年後、一度恨みに十分な掃引アドルフヒトラーに強いの波を引き起こした、その第一次世界大戦の賠償金の支払いの最後になる、時代の今週の日曜日の終わりを示します...

    • Poll | Is Jon Gaunt right that calling someone a 'Nazi' is acceptable slang?
      In his legal battle with Ofcom, former TalkSport presenter Jon Gaunt is arguing that calling someone a 'Nazi' is merely slang for people who impose their views and does not mean they are Hitlerite genocidal fascists. Do you agree? Ofcomの元TalkSport発表ジョンゴーントと彼の法廷闘争では、呼び出し元の誰かは。。u0026#39;ナチスだけで、自分の意見を課す彼らはヒトラーの虐殺ファシストているわけではない人々のため俗語です主張している

    • Anger over billboard linking Obama, Hitler
      IOWA - A billboard created by a conservative Iowa political group comparing President Barack Obama to Adolf Hitler and Vladimir Lenin is being condemned by other activists.The North Iowa Tea Party began displaying the sign in... アイオワ州は - 看板保守アイオワ州の政治団体アドルフヒトラーとレーニンにバラクオバマ大統領を比較することによって作成された他のactivists.Theノースアイオワコーヒー党を非難されている記号関連する情報...表示開始

    • Angela Merkel: Another day, another crisis | Editorial
      Last night's three rounds of voting did much to restore the drama the German constitution has tried to expungeChoosing a German president is boring by design, largely because the last head of state to make the job exciting was Adolf Hitler. The post is ceremonial and decided by secret ballot in a special assembly of MPs, state representatives and even celebrities. There is no move to make it a direct election – even though that would now be popular in a country confident of its democratic institutions – and the reason for that is also buried in the past: to prevent a wave of populism emerging.Even so, last night's three rounds of voting in the Reichstag did much to restore the drama the German constitution has so conscientiously tried to expunge. The nail-biting finish (hundreds were gathered outside the Reichstag to watch the event on giant television screens) had less to do with the two main candidates than it had with the plummeting fortunes of Chancellor Angela Merkel herself.Nine months into a coalition with the liberal Free Democrats (FDP), the dream partnership has turned into something of a nightmare. Unlike the grand coalition with the SDP before it, neither side has been able to blame their wobbles on the need to keep the other party's backwoodsmen quiet. The result is that the two rightwing parties have been bickering constantly. Guido Westerwelle, the FDP leader, has been sidelined as foreign minister. And relations were not helped when Merkel ditched her plans for tax cuts, the main item on the FDP's manifesto, after a heavy defeat in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany's most populous state.Merkel's political touch also seems to have left her. Relying on a coterie of political friends, she was surprised by some heavyweight resignations, such as president Horst 状態の最後の頭は仕事を刺激する主な理由投票の最後の夜の3回のラウンドは、ドイツ憲法はしようとしたドラマを復元するデザインで退屈はドイツ大統領expungeChoosingには、多くのでしたアドルフヒトラーだった

    • Ryszard Kaczorowski obituary
      The last Polish president-in-exile in London, he passed the post's insignia on to the democratically elected Lech WalesaRyszard Kaczorowski, who has died aged 90, was Poland's last president-in-exile, serving from 1989 to 1990. His death in the recent air crash concludes a story of enduring belief in an apparently hopeless cause. Of the governments-in-exile which found refuge in London during the second world war, Poland's was unique in continuing for several decades – an existence that was at best eccentric and seemingly increasingly senseless.The son of a railwayman, he was born in Białystok, eastern Poland. He went to a commercial school, joined the Scouts and worked for a wine merchant. When Poland was divided and overrun in 1939 as a result of Hitler and Stalin's non-aggression pact, he was made second in command of a civil defence group organised by the Scouts.Białystok was occupied by the Soviets, but Kaczorowski continued clandestine activities with the Scouts and was in contact with emerging resistance groups. His anti-Soviet activities were uncovered by the NKVD, the forerunner of the KGB, and on 10 May 1941 he was sentenced to death, later commuted to 10 years' hard labour, starting at the Kolyma gulag in Siberia.Kaczorowski was released after the German invasion of the Soviet Union in June 1941 and enlisted in the pro-Soviet Polish forces under the command of General 。ładysław Anders. Allowed out of Russia, these troops came under overall British command and formed the greater part of Anders's Second Polish Corps, which would distinguish itself in the Italian campaign.The discovery by the Germans of thousands of executed Polish officers in Katyn in 1943 and the Polish government-in-exile's request that the Red Cross investigate led to Stalin breaking r ロンドンの最後のポーランド大統領の亡命、彼はにポストの記章を通。民主レッヒWalesaRyszard Kaczorowski、90歳で死亡した、選出されたポーランドの最後の大統領の亡命、1989年から1990年まで務めた

    • In praise of… Freya von Moltke
      In Berlin's Mitte district, an understated memorial centre honours the men and women who resisted Nazi rule. Its modesty is fitting, because relatively few Germans were prepared to risk their lives to take on Hitler, even if the restraint makes for a contrast with occasional French claims about their resistance, which, though it later grew, was initially also thin on the ground. The rebels' rarity provides additional reason to revere them as individuals – especially now time's tide has pushed them to the brink of extinction. Yesterday brought news of the death – at 98 years – of one of the most remarkable of the species, Freya von Moltke. Wealthy and well educated, Von Moltke and her husband, Helmuth, did not use their privileges to protect themselves, but instead to do what they could for victims of the Nazis. Ultimately, they tried in vain to bring the poisonous regime to an end. Helmuth's Kreisau Circle, the dissident set which drew its name from his country estate, dreamed up plans for democracy from the early 1940s, and backed the attempt to assassinate Hitler in 1944. After it failed, Freya was left a widow when Helmuth was executed. She dedicated much of the six and a half decades of post-war life she would enjoy to chronicling the German resistance, in lectures and books, and in her later years she supported the conversion of Kreisau into a centre for European reconciliation. A woman who lived and sacrificed through her country's darkest years, was keen to bequeath the promise of a brighter future.Second world warAdolf HitlerGermanyguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds ベルリンミッテ地区では、控えめな追悼の中心部の男性とはナチスの支配に抵抗し、女性を称えるもの

    • Letters: Cabinet was supine over the Iraq war
      Richard Gott is right to compare Tony Blair with Neville Chamberlain (Letters, 14 January), but their respective cabinets provide an illuminating contrast. Although prime ministers usually have an advantage in determining policies during emergencies, the cabinet should come into its own when the decision-making process is drawn out, allowing plenty of notice over possible options. This is what happened in the spring of 1939, when a cabinet of anti-communist ministers nonetheless forced Chamberlain to open negotiations with the Soviet Union for a possible alliance against Hitler. That it was by then too late to achieve that end does not change the fact that a strong prime minister reluctantly followed the collective will of his colleagues on a major foreign policy issue. In similar circumstances, in the slow build-up to a possible war, the Blair cabinet showed itself to be wholly supine. The account given to the Chilcot inquiry by the ex-cabinet secretary Andrew Turnbull suggests that senior ministers (notably Gordon Brown, whose opposition to the war would have been decisive) were guilty of a dereliction of their constitutional duty.Christopher Hill Professor of international relations, University of CambridgeIraq war inquiryAdolf HitlerGordon BrownTony Blairguardian.co.uk © Guardian News & Media Limited 2010 | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds リチャードゴットネヴィルチェンバレンと1月14日)が、それぞれのキャビネット照明コントラストを提供する(手紙、トニーブレア首相と比較することが望ましい


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