https://youtu.be/3CmJyn61j1k A little music for today. I have some errands to run, but there will be more work and updates on Ursula when I'm finished.
YouTube
"Ami, Go Home!" - East German Anti-American Song
My channel is dedicated to anthems, hymns and patriotic songs, here is the link to our discord server: https://discord.gg/WtVJJ56Er6
We are going to shift from Germany to Dixie today, as we track the bloody legacy of House Albrecht to the slave trade and the American Civil War. As it turns out, the Albrechts got rich not just from one genocide, but two.
First, we need to cover the Celle Hole scandal. When I get back home we will begin on this bizarre false flag attack, and how it links two aristocratic families on two continents.
On the 25th of July, 1978, a bomb was detonated on the wall the prison, in Celle, Germany. The bomb did not have the desired effect, only creating a small hole, and a group of 12 men who were supposed to enter the prison were forced to flee. The perpetrators escaped, but a Mercedes was found loaded with a rubber raft, escape tools, a Walther handgun, and forged passports, one of which had a picture of jailed left-wing militant Sigurd Debus inside. Later, tools were planted in Debus’ cell to seal the deal, making the whole affair seem like a failed escape plan from the Red Army Faction.
Albrecht hailed the attacks as a successful operation, which he claims stopped a robbery and murder (he provided no evidence for this), and the incident was used to justify the worsening of conditions for Debus and other jailed RAF members. The RAF responded with a hunger strike, which eventually led to the death of Debus in 1981.
However, the story never quite added up. The RAF maintained their innocence, and mounting pressure from lawyers and the public eventually led to a parliamentary inquiry in 1986, which found that there was no escape attempt, no robbery or murder and that entire affair was a false flag attack called Operation Fire Magic, planned by the German Federal and Lower Saxony police with the approval of Ernst Albrecht. A Lower Saxony policeman even detonated the bomb. Despite this, nothing happened to Albrecht or his government. The embarrassing affair was quickly hushed up, and Debus’ death was reduced to little more than one name on long list of those who have starved to death for the benefit of the Albrechts.
However, the story never quite added up. The RAF maintained their innocence, and mounting pressure from lawyers and the public eventually led to a parliamentary inquiry in 1986, which found that there was no escape attempt, no robbery or murder and that entire affair was a false flag attack called Operation Fire Magic, planned by the German Federal and Lower Saxony police with the approval of Ernst Albrecht. A Lower Saxony policeman even detonated the bomb. Despite this, nothing happened to Albrecht or his government. The embarrassing affair was quickly hushed up, and Debus’ death was reduced to little more than one name on long list of those who have starved to death for the benefit of the Albrechts.
https://web.archive.org/web/20090430095753/https://www.zeit.de/1987/25/Feuerzauber-mit-dunklen-Figuren German articles about "fire magic"
https://www.landtag-niedersachsen.de/drucksachen/drucksachen_11_5000/4001-4500/11-4380.pdf And the parliamentary inquiry.
So, as it turns out, Ernst Albrecht is not just a Nazi, but also a terrorist.
But WHY did Ernst do this? Even a Nazi thug such as him would want a reason to go to all this trouble to frame and kill the RAF.
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Perhaps the reason is due to the persistent rumors that the RAF was targeting his beloved daughter, Ursula.
No evidence was ever provided for this, of course, but you should expect no less from Nazis.
Now properly afraid, little Rosie Albrecht enrolled in the London School of Economics under an assumed name to protect her from the RAF's notice.
She didn't pick that name because she liked the way it sounds. No, Ladson was as much her family as Albrecht. The two houses had been linked in blood since 1902.
The Ladsons were a family of slave traders, plantation owners and cotton merchants who had moved to South Carolina from Barbados.
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At one time, the Ladsons were the most prolific slave traders in the United States, and they used all the money they earned to buy themselves a considerable amount of power. James Henry Ladson was the Lt. Governor and Senator for South Carolina from 1794-1804. His son, also named James Henry Ladson (Anglo freaks tend to be pretty inbred, so I doubt they could come with anything better) was a Confederate officer.
This is because James the second was a fanatical proponent of secession. He viewed it as his holy duty to convert all his slaves to Christianity to ensure order on his massive plantation.
The religious and moral instruction of the negroes has, for several years, been a subject of great interest to me, and I am satisfied that our exertions in their behalf (although much, very much, yet remains to be done) are not only misunderstood abroad, but unappreciated. To improve the negro is a far more arduous task than many, who have no experience in teaching them, are aware. They are naturally dull, and of a weak intellect, but generally possessing good memories; and those who have been engaged in this work of charity, have to lament, after much labour, that the instruction they have endeavoured to give, although remembered, has been perverted and misdirected.- James H. Ladson, "The Religious Instruction of the Negroes"