Edward Bellamy’s Nazism & Hitlerism Exposed: it came from USA Pledge of Allegiance & Francis Bellamy

Edward Bellamy’s Nazism & Hitlerism Exposed. Adolf Hitler Nazism came from USA Pledge of Allegiance, Francis Bellamy and Edward Bellamy. Edward Bellamy’s Nazism haunts the USA today.

The Pledge of Allegiance was the origin of the stiff-armed salute adopted later by German national socialists. One way that Hitler was inspired to use the American gesture was via sports events including Harvard football via Ernst Hanfstaengl, a Harvard grad. Francis Bellamy (author of the Pledge in 1892) and Edward Bellamy were American national socialists who influenced Nazis, their rituals (robotic chanting in unison on command in government schools as in the pledge), their dogma and their symbols (e.g. the swastika used as crossed S-letters for socialism). The Bellamys inspired the Nazi salute and Nazi behavior. See the discoveries of the noted historian Dr. Rex Curry. Look for the eye-popping photographs and videos of Americans doing nazi salutes. http://rexcurry.net/pledge.html

Francis Bellamy would not have wanted his gesture to have changed either, so he would not have wanted the hand-over-the-heart. Technically, Bellamy did not specify the early stiff-armed salute. He specified an initial military salute that was then extended outward to gesture at the flag with the palm up, as if to say “there is the flag that we are chanting about.” In practice, small brainwashed children would merely extend the military salute out to point at the flag, resulting in the Nazi salute. If Bellamy had made an effort to maintain his original gesture he would have had to constantly demand that young children be drilled and punished for flubbing the nuanced gesture that Bellamy originally penned. It would probably have been impossible because anyone can see how easy it is to casually extend Bellamy’s initial military salute out at the flag. Imagine trying to teach six-year-olds how to do the second part of the gesture any other way. Teachers were probably relieved to have them achieve the military salute and then the teachers would probably yell “ok, now point at the flag!”
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BssWWZ3XEe4

Some people thought that having children do the military salute was both disrespectful (the children were not in the military) and/or creepy, so the first part was dropped entirely, leaving only the nazi salute.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mvDwL553pVM&feature=mfu_in_order&list=UL

Bellamy, a self-described “Christian socialist” did not have a problem with religion, nor with references to God, and Bellamy showed it in his life and in the larger pledge program which contains various religious references including the actual phrase “under God.” http://rexcurry.net/pledgespeech.html

On the web sites that archive his work, the documentarian Dr. Rex Curry leads viewers on a journey into the mind and spirit of America. The legendary teacher explores the power of myths, sacred myths, in “the land of the free and the home of the brave.”

One Comment

  1. Posted December 5, 2011 at 4:07 pm | Permalink

    Francis Bellamy’s daughter disagreed with the decision to add the words “Under God” to the Pledge of Allegiance in 1954. She is often cited by people who claim that Francis Bellamy was anti-religion. Bellamy probably would have disagreed with the addition of “under God” in his pledge, however he would have disagreed because he did not ever want anyone altering his pledge in any way. It had nothing to do with the religious nature of the alteration. Bellamy never wanted anyone to alter his pledge period. One reason is that the original earlier pledge had a “beat” or “rhythm” and “under God” definitely throws it off, some would say even in a non-sensical and crude manner.

    Where do some Congressmen acquire the chutzpah to re-write another man’s verse, and change his gesture?

    It is not clear that Bellamy’s daughter would disagree with the above.

    Of course, as any daughter would, she would want to be kind regarding her father. That is why there is no doubt she would do all she could to distance her father’s dogma and influence from that of Stalin, Mao and Hitler.

    That being said, Francis Bellamy also would not have wanted his gesture to have changed either, so he would not have wanted the hand-over-the-heart. Technically, Bellamy did not specify the early stiff-armed salute. He specified an initial military salute that was then extended outward to gesture at the flag with the palm up, as if to say “there is the flag that we are chanting about.” In practice, small brainwashed children would merely extend the military salute out to point at the flag, resulting in the Nazi salute. If Bellamy had made an effort to maintain his original gesture he would have had to constantly demand that young children be drilled and punished for flubbing the nuanced gesture that Bellamy originally penned. It would probably have been impossible because anyone can see how easy it is to casually extend Bellamy’s initial military salute out at the flag. Imagine trying to teach six-year-olds how to do the second part of the gesture any other way. Teachers were probably relieved to have them achieve the military salute and then the teachers would probably yell “ok, now point at the flag!”

    Some people thought that having children do the military salute was both disrespectful (the children were not in the military) and/or creepy, so the first part was dropped entirely, leaving only the nazi salute.

    Bellamy, a self-described “Christian socialist” did not have a problem with religion, nor with references to God, and Bellamy showed it in his life and in the larger pledge program which contains various religious references including the actual phrase “under God.” http://rexcurry.net/pledgespeech.html


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