Well this has nothing to do with Catholicism. But I'm going to mention it anyway.
You can put a Nazi uniform, officer cap and eye patch on Tom Cruise and he is still a pretty boy.
Das ist alles.
Well this has nothing to do with Catholicism. But I'm going to mention it anyway.
You can put a Nazi uniform, officer cap and eye patch on Tom Cruise and he is still a pretty boy.
Das ist alles.
How is that not different from this?
Bare on the beach is OK with God, Catholic says
"Certainly the Garden of Eden story, which most people know from Genesis, does not suggest that the crime or the sin of Adam and Eve was being unclothed," said Rapoport. "It was disobeying a higher power."Of course that's true. But that doesn't mean it's ok to romp around nude playing volleyball. Goodness - that's just awful.
Hitler's Music Collection Turns Up in Dead Russian Soldier's Attic
The most astonishing fact about the records — essentially Hitler’s “Best of . . .” collections — is the presence of Jewish performers. Among the recordings is a Tchaikovsky concerto performed by the virtuoso Polish Jewish violinist Bronislaw Huberman. Hitler would have been aware, while listening to Huberman’s playing, that he had founded the Palestine Orchestra in 1936 (which went on to be the foundation of today’s Israel Philharmonic Orchestra) and that he was living in enforced exile.The Austrian Jewish pianist Artur Schnabel, whose mother was killed by the Nazis, also had his work included in Hitler’s personal collection. It is not known which records in the collection were listened to most frequently, nor have they been formally catalogued.
“I’m not terribly surprised by Hitler’s record choices,” said James Kennaway, of Stanford University. “Nazi music policy was pretty incoherent. Stravinsky was played in the Third Reich because he was known to have right-wing views, Bartok because Hungary was a German ally.” Dr Kennaway, a leading musicologist who specialises in the Nazi period, added: “The only real point of consistency in Nazi policy was antiSemitism, so the Schnabel and Huberman recordings do stand out.”