No, I don't. Neither did Adolf Hitler. From your own quote earlier:Frye wrote: ↑Tue May 06, 2025 7:19 pm
If I say I wholeheartedly agree with "Germany Must Perish!" by Theodore Newman Kaufman as its an example of principles I agree with, you would likely concur with the idea that I am not a good person. Hitler is using these examples of European Colonialism as how he thinks a Superior race is entitled to act, so I ask again, Mr Hill, do you agree that the White Race has a right to violently subjugate other peoples?
So while the British didn't necessarily have the "right" to conquer India, they had the means. And they did so. Your attempt at a gotcha question also conveniently ignores the reality of history, in that White nations are often at war and conquer each other, so any banal attempt by you, to overlay your racial superiority thesis on those examples, must surely fail (unless of course you wish to subdivide the White races into their individual component, but I don't think you have the appetite for that because you are keen to adhere to AH's usage of "Aryan").England did not acquire India by right and order, but without regard for the wishes, opinions, or legal opinions of the natives, and maintained this rule, if necessary, with the most brutal ruthlessness.
If AH used the example of English conquest over Ireland, you would have to concede he is talking about civilisational superiority, along with superiority of firepower, armaments, industry, resources, technology etc etc etc. But I sense that is inconvenient for you argument.
I'm unaware of AH ever commenting on that particular example, but it would probably be something along the lines as:
- Acknowledging the ambition and military mastery of the formidable British army in a centuries long conquest of a smaller, weaker foe to expand its Empire
- Acknowledging the rebellious spirit and the instinct of self-preservation of the Irish to fight back for so long against unfathomable odds
- Acknowledging that Irish people and English people are not one in the same, and that it would be a shame were the Irish to be wiped out by conquest, despite having been militarily and civilisationally outmaneouvered for so long
Finally, you'll note that during this entire conversation I have painstakingly limited myself to only using your own provided sources, in the interests of keeping things fair for you. However your position and your arguments have nonetheless run their course I'm afraid, so I'd like to close this off by a discussion about what was happening in the world at this exact time period. I will look at Wilson's own "14 points", whereby despite all his pompous talk about the equal rights of subjugated peoples, facilitated a massive transfer of colonies from Germany to be administered by Britain and France, specifically because those subjugated peoples were unable (inferior?) to govern themselves. I quote from Richard Tedor:
I suspect this is inconvenient for you, because this is exact kind of fodder (in content, tone and type) you wish to use as ammunition to continue your demonisation of Adolf Hitler.Woodrow Wilson’s 14 Points, which lulled the Reich’s Government into
accepting an armistice in 1918, promised “a free, open-minded and
absolutely impartial adjustment of all colonial claims.” This proved to be
an illusion. In Africa, France gained the former German colony of
Kamerun totaling nearly 50,000 square miles. The Versailles settlement
awarded Ruanda and Burundi to Belgium. England took the lion’s share,
incorporating German East Africa, German Southwest Africa and Togo,
augmenting the British Empire by over 630,000 square miles. Italy
received about 50,000 square miles. Britain and Japan divided Germany’s
Pacific colonies.
The Allies classified the seized colonies as mandate states that England
and France administered as trustees. This avoided the appearance of
outright annexation, which would have raised the inconvenient argument
that so much valuable territory appropriated from Germany should be
credited to the reparations account. The League of Nations charter stated
that administering colonies “inhabited by peoples not yet able to stand by
themselves under the strenuous conditions of the modern world” was a
“sacred trust of civilization." It sanctioned Anglo-French colonial
administration as a blessing for underdeveloped nations, overlooking the
fact that Syria, India, Egypt and several other countries under British and
European subjugation had requested independence after World War I.