James Bond , Hitler y Ian Fleming.
tiniininoo tieeenieieieeeniioii chironnn chironnn ... chirrorinnnnnnnnnnnnnnn
QUe shishi es el mega ese?
Pero es que si esta saliendo en MEGA que deduzco que debe ser un canal de pago? es decir Mainstream...
ACOJANTE , pero LA COSA quiere decir que igual....la cosa va en serio.. y nos hacen un tirado de manda rellenito, rellenito, rellenito..pero de los rellenitos..
Y nos vienen con alguna historia, como que
merkel es hija de Hitler, o alguna cosas de esas...
LO he pillado a boleo, pero el tema hace ya bastane tiempo, que ultimamente un RUN RUN, que vaya RUN RUN
James Bond author Ian Fleming urged appeasing Adolf Hitler - Telegraph
James Bond author Ian Fleming urged appeasing Adolf Hitler
James Bond author Ian Fleming recommended appeasing Hitler's Nazis a year before the start of the Second World War.
By Andy Bloxham 1:35AM BST 14 Jun 2008
Fleming, then a stockbroker, criticised those who thought a more aggressive approach was needed, whose opinions he described as "the dangerous counsels of the slaughterhouse brigade".
He believed a deal could be done with the future tyrant which would allow Germany to return to its pre-war strength in exchange for a strict disarmament pact.
Fleming's comments, which many in Britain shared, were set out in a letter, which is thought to have been stored unseen for decades.
The letter was published on September 28, 1938, as the nation waited to hear the outcome of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain's meeting with Hitler in Munich.
Fleming argued that if Hitler's territorial ambitions were limited to the aims he outlined in February 1920, then Britain should step back from war.
Three of those aims were: uniting a greater Germany of German peoples; repealing the Versailles treaty; and obtaining further territory to allow Germany's "surplus" population to emigrate.
The author wrote: "There will be no peace, no return of prosperity, and no happiness in Europe until England and France agree to the fulfilment of Herr Hitler's stated programme in exchange for a binding disarmament pact."
The day after the letter appeared in The Times, Chamberlain signed the Munich agreement, effectively allowing Hitler to take over Czechoslovakia's defensive frontier, and then flew back to Britain to declare: "Peace in our time".
The creator of 007, the world's most famous spy, changed his mind during the war, when he became a Naval Intelligence officer.
His animosity towards the Nazis revealed itself in the links of the Bond villain's to Hitler's regime: Hugo Drax in Moonraker is the former nancy officer Graf Hugo von der Drache; his aide is Willy Krebs (Hans Krebs was Hitler's army chief of staff); and Ernst Stavro Blofeld 'spied for the Nazis'.