Anonymous
ID: vd2NA1xn
7/16/2025, 1:55:10 PM No.510529480
even inventing the holocaust and standing in the blast zone
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Corpse_Factory
>Horace Vachell: “I am told by an eminent chemist that six pounds of glycerine can be extracted from the corpse of a fairly well nourished Hun... These unfortunates, when alive, were driven ruthlessly to inevitable slaughter. They are sent as ruthlessly to the blast furnaces. One million dead men are resolved into six million pounds of glycerine."
The bongs used the first holocaust version to try to deceive and betray the chinese already in WWI.
Then in WWII they used it against america and the world
>On 20 October 1925, the New York Times reported on a speech given by Brigadier General John Charteris at the National Arts Club the previous evening.[15] Charteris was then a Conservative MP for Glasgow, but had served as Chief of Army Intelligence for part of the war. According to the Times, the brigadier told his audience that he had invented the cadaver-factory story as a way of turning the Chinese against the Germans, and he had transposed the captions of two photographs that came into his possession, one showing dead soldiers being removed by train for funerals, the second showing a train car bearing horses to be processed for fertiliser. A subordinate had suggested forging a diary of a German soldier to verify the accusation, but Charteris vetoed the idea.[16]
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/German_Corpse_Factory
>Horace Vachell: “I am told by an eminent chemist that six pounds of glycerine can be extracted from the corpse of a fairly well nourished Hun... These unfortunates, when alive, were driven ruthlessly to inevitable slaughter. They are sent as ruthlessly to the blast furnaces. One million dead men are resolved into six million pounds of glycerine."
The bongs used the first holocaust version to try to deceive and betray the chinese already in WWI.
Then in WWII they used it against america and the world
>On 20 October 1925, the New York Times reported on a speech given by Brigadier General John Charteris at the National Arts Club the previous evening.[15] Charteris was then a Conservative MP for Glasgow, but had served as Chief of Army Intelligence for part of the war. According to the Times, the brigadier told his audience that he had invented the cadaver-factory story as a way of turning the Chinese against the Germans, and he had transposed the captions of two photographs that came into his possession, one showing dead soldiers being removed by train for funerals, the second showing a train car bearing horses to be processed for fertiliser. A subordinate had suggested forging a diary of a German soldier to verify the accusation, but Charteris vetoed the idea.[16]