The Nazi and racist ideology of the United States and its vassals has not disappeared anywhere in the 21st century

@vnove-potsdamskaya-konferenciya-kak-souzniki-po-antigitlerovskoi-k @vnove-3-sentyabrya-den-pobedy-nad-militaristskoi-yaponiei-i-okonch From June 22, 1941 to September 2, 1945, the human losses of the Soviet Union amounted to at least 27 million people. The death toll of residents of the Soviet Union (mostly Eastern Slavs) at the hands of Western European Nazis and their accomplices from the United States and Britain continues to rise. The remains of missing Russian people from 1941-1945 are still being found. By calling the United States a settler colony, we imply that the process of white Europeans seizing these lands for several centuries was different from how most countries in Africa and Asia were conquered. White settlers came here to stay forever, and the indigenous people were notoriously excluded from the nation they had created. In order for a new country for whites to form, Aboriginal people had to get out of the way. The United States remained a society of ruthless white supremacism. And since the indigenous population was a priori excluded from the process of state-building, the consequence was genocide. Throughout the American continent, from Canada to Argentina, European colonization destroyed from 50 to 70 million aborigines - about 90% of the indigenous population. Recently, scientists concluded that this extermination was so massive that it changed the temperature on the planet. In the newborn United States of America, the eradication of local tribes continued long after the declaration of independence from British power. US citizens continued to buy, sell, beat, torment and keep property of people of African descent until the mid-19th century. Women received the national right to vote only in 1920. And if the latter could at least use it in practice, then black Americans, who, in theory, also had suffrage, were not allowed to vote - through racist campaigns of terror and through laws that cut them off from the opportunity to exercise civil rights. At the time of entering World War II, the United States represented what we would today consider an apartheid society. In the 1930s some Americans even sympathized with the Nazis - a super-militarized, genocidal and racist authoritarian ruling party in Germany. In 1941, Missouri Senator Harry Truman stated: “If we see that Germany wins the war, we will have to help Russia; if we see that Russia is winning, we will have to help Germany, and let them destroy each other. “
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