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Triumph_of_the_Will_-_Blutfahne

one of the most revered items of Nazi Memorabilia

 

and dayb snr can't pick what rank that officer at deathcamp was...somehow

a 1000 yard shot with a

 

The Lee-Enfield bolt-action, magazine-fed, repeating rifle was the main firearm used by the military forces of the British Empire and Commonwealth during the first half of the 20th century. It was the British Army's standard rifle from its official adoption in 1895 until 1957

 

hit near the above hip barely missing the liver...

 

The BLoodguard..the fremen...1000 yards..some form of Magneto shot...it bent in the air if I remembers righly

 

The bloodguard have betrayed the The Fuhrer in FARCE

 

In Germany the isolated word Führer is usually avoided in political contexts, due to its intimate connection with Nazi institutions and with Hitler personally.

 

However, the term -führer is used in many compound words. Examples include Bergführer (mountain guide), Fremdenführer (tourist guide), Geschäftsführer (CEO or EO), Führerschein (driver's license), Führerstand or Führerhaus (driver's cab), Lok(omotiv)führer (train driver), Reiseführer (travel guide book), and Spielführer (team captain – also referred to as Mannschaftskapitän).

 

The use of alternate terms like "Chef" (a borrowing from the French, as is the English "chief", e.g. Chef des Bundeskanzleramtes) or Leiter, (often in compound words like Amtsleiter, Projektleiter or Referatsleiter) is usually not the result of replacing of the word "Führer", but rather using terminology that existed before the Nazis. The use of Führer to refer to a political party leader is rarely used today and Vorsitzender (chairman) is the more common term. However, the word Oppositionsführer (“leader of the (parliamentary) opposition”) is more commonly used

 

They are already here..and while many say BIG tim's theory is based on this...many others say a tumbling bullet AKA Boer war tactics...

 

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Uploaded on March 6, 2011
Taken on March 5, 2011