Germany: Brainwashed German Teenagers Win Prize After Convincing Town to Strip Adolf Hitler of Honorary Citizenship

Info Stormer
February 10, 2015

hitler

Jews claim that Adolf Hitler gassed 60 trillion of them. So it must be true. Jews never lie lol.

A group of brainwashed German teenagers have been awarded a prize for “Civil Courage” after discovering their hometown never stripped Adolf Hitler of his honorary citizenship. As a result of their research, the town officially stripped Hitler of this title.

The teens actually spent a year researching this and since they’ve been led to falsely believe that Hitler gassed trillions of Jews and started World War II etc.. I guess this was an important topic for them.

Hitler was the greatest leader of the 20th century. The Germans should be cursing the Jews, not Hitler who tried to save them from the insanity we see today.

Unfortunately, if you ask the average German, they’d probably take Angela Merkel over Hitler.  This is despite the fact that Merkel is literally attempting to genocide them through her insane pro-invasion policies. Compare that to the Jewish fantasies and lies of shower room gas chambers etc.. associated with Hitler.

DW:

German teenagers have won a prize for digging into the Nazi past of their hometown of Uetersen to prove that Hitler had never been stripped of his honorary citizenship. They say the town authorities tried to dodge them.

Eight teenagers have won a German national civil courage award for a school project that showed that Adolf Hitler had never been stripped of the honorary citizenship of their hometown of Uetersen.

The eight teenagers spent over a year on their research project, questioning the town’s mayor, who in turn questioned the Bundestag’s research service. Both initially referred the children to a Wikipedia article claiming that honorary citizenship expired with Adolf Hitler’s death in 1945.

But there was no proof of this, and the town eventually corrected the error at a ceremony in December. The students’ tenacity was rewarded with the Bertini prize for Civil Courage in Hamburg in late January. “I’d be lying if I said it wasn’t exciting,” said Arvid Maiwald, one of the students.

The students made an eight-minute film for a sociology and media class in which they interviewed historians and local officials, none of whom could come up with a good reason why the Nazi dictator was still an honorary citizen of the small northern German town of around 18,000 inhabitants.