Black Ribbon Day
Today (August 23rd) is Black Ribbon Day. It is the day the European Union, Georgia, the United Kingdom, Canada and the United States remembers the Men, Women and Children murdered by both the Nazis and the Communists. The date was chosen because it was when the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact between the German Nazis and the Soviet Communists was signed in 1939.
The Nazis murdered 24,826,424
Men, Women and Children (Non-Military Civilians) from 1933-1945.
That number also includes those
in Targeted Groups that the Nazis specifically went after:
Jews:
6 Million Men, Women and Children;
Non-Jewish Polish Civilians:
3 Million Men, Women and Children
People with Disabilities:
270,000 Men, Women and Children (doesn’t include the 375,000 Disabled who were
Forcibly Sterilized)
Roma and Sinti (Gypsies):
500,000- 1.5 Million Men, Women and Children
Jehovah's Witnesses: 5,000 Men, Women and Children
Homosexuals: 9,000 Men and Women in Concentration Camps
(Doesn’t include the 50,000 Men and Women held in Regular Prisons)
The Communists murdered
149,469,610 Men, Women and Children (Non-Military Civilians) Worldwide since 1917 and the Communists in
China, Cuba, Vietnam, Laos and North Korea continue murdering Innocent People.
We should also remember the
Ukrainian Men, Women and Children being murdered by the Russian Nazi Zs since
2022.
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