The real basis of these laws
were 'Sexual Harassment', stemming from the 1920 depression
It Is 1920 - And Berlin's New Elite
Emerges
Bertolt Brecht, Albert
Einstein, Hans Eisler, Kurt Weill, and Billy Wilder
Jewish Theater Hits A New Level
Of Arrogance
Die Dreigroschenoper is about slick playboy
Jewish banker bilking ordinary Germans
Berlin's Jewish
Night Club Scene
German girls were taken
advantage of because of the 1920's depression
The Theaters Pushed The Lesbian Life Style
Berlin's Cabarets
Poland's Émigrés Were
Berlin's New Elite
A German wife was a status symbol
Mia Farrow With Some Of Her
Children
The Versailles Treaty Brought The Weimar Age And
Depression
German Jews, reinforced by Polish and Russian Jews, became
the dominant force in Weimar Germany. Their Communist's elected officials were gaining
seats, and they
dominated the professional class, especially in Berlin.
Next came their sexual revolution, and Berlin was the
center. It is considered the most decadent era in modern times.
Finally the German people had their fill, and Chancellor Hitler, and the socialist party,
passed the Nuremberg laws.
Allen was forbidden visitation
rights to three of them
Berlin In 1922
Berlin had a population of 3.2 million, and about 210,000 were Jewish.
The professions were over 50% Jewish controlled. Berlin was
referred to as
the 'Jew' of Germany.
1919-1933 Berlin
The Weimar Republic, 1919-1933, was the period referred to that
reflects the collapse of the German empire, due to the
Versailles treaty. It was during this period the Communists tried to gain control
of the Reichland.
Jews, who emerged from the Jewish quarter, and emigrated from Poland,
flocked into the theater, banking, professions, government, and education
segments of Germany.
Frankfurt School
This was the headquarters for the Communist scheming in Germany. Max Horkheimer,
T.W. Adorno, Herbert Marcuse, Leo Lowenthal, and Erich Fromm were all
there
Magnus Hirshfeld
Formed the Institute for Social Research. He was considered the
Einstein of sex. Hirschfeld co-wrote and acted in the
1919 film "Different From the Others", he played the first homosexual character ever written
for cinema.
Anita Berber
Typified the Jewish mindset. Her stage acts revolved around
masturbation, cocaine, and lesbian love.
The Cabarets
These were the epitome of depravity. Young German waitress, dressed
in vulgar outfits, circulated through private rooms while anxious
middle age Jewish businessmen casually molested them.