06-02-2010, 01:29 PM
Prince Bernhard was such a charming SS man. He spied for the Nazis during the war when he was living in London. At least, I believe that is the case. The British military didn't trust him at all and the King pleaded with them to give him a job of importance to placate him.
It is my position that he was the man who provided the Nazis with details of the top secret Operation Market Garden - the capture of the Dutch bridges culminating in the Bridge at Arnhem - ensuring that the operation failed, thus ensuring Nazi Germany's survival for another 8 months. Just enough time for Bormann to get all the Nazi loot and military technology/blueprints to safe havens -- and to make the necessary arrangements for Bormann, Himmler, Hitler and Eva Braun to escape justice after the war and emigrate to Latin America (as now seems the case)
And, of course, his German buddy, Prince Philip' had two two sisters who were married to fairly senior SS officers, one of whom was on Himmler's personal staff.
All very cozy...
It is my position that he was the man who provided the Nazis with details of the top secret Operation Market Garden - the capture of the Dutch bridges culminating in the Bridge at Arnhem - ensuring that the operation failed, thus ensuring Nazi Germany's survival for another 8 months. Just enough time for Bormann to get all the Nazi loot and military technology/blueprints to safe havens -- and to make the necessary arrangements for Bormann, Himmler, Hitler and Eva Braun to escape justice after the war and emigrate to Latin America (as now seems the case)
And, of course, his German buddy, Prince Philip' had two two sisters who were married to fairly senior SS officers, one of whom was on Himmler's personal staff.
All very cozy...
The shadow is a moral problem that challenges the whole ego-personality, for no one can become conscious of the shadow without considerable moral effort. To become conscious of it involves recognizing the dark aspects of the personality as present and real. This act is the essential condition for any kind of self-knowledge.
Carl Jung - Aion (1951). CW 9, Part II: P.14