Only on CC do you have people spinning a positive story to keep up a division.
Neither Trudeau, Senior or Junior are Nazi's either, but as history recalls Young Pierre Trudeau was a supporter of the movement until he found Liberalism.
I believe he even went riding on a motorcycle waving a Nazi flag while a student at McGill.
I believe he even went riding on a motorcycle waving a Nazi flag while a student at McGill.
It was the Canadian democratic system of govt that prevented excesses of your beloved neo-nazi Harpo and his gang of thieves.I love the Nazi picture of Harper Bill Barilko. He was such a Nazi, that he was able to kick down your door and take away your right to speak out against his policies. I wonder how you would feel if someone presented a meme of your family member in such a disgusting way?
It was the Canadian democratic system of govt that prevented excesses of your beloved neo-nazi Harpo and his gang of thieves.
Unnaturally fixated
He did.
Yeah. I guess that he believed that we started it, just like the Prussian son of an SS officer that I shared an engineering office with years ago thought too.Did prime minister Pierre Trudeau protest World War II by riding around Montreal on his motorcycle while wearing a Nazi helmet?
It’s unclear.
According to biographers Max Nemni and Monique Nemni, authors of Young Trudeau: 1919-1944: Son of Quebec, Father of Canada, the motorcycle/helmet story “has as many variants as there are storytellers, each embroidering freely on the known facts.” Credible sources do seem to agree, however, that young Pierre and his friend Roger Rolland (1921-2011) played a prank in 1942 that involved dressing up in European military uniforms and riding around on their motorbikes.
The Nemnis quote Rolland’s memory of the prank, in which he recounts that it was he, not Trudeau who wore the German army helmet (from the First World War, incidentally). Rolland similarly claims, in the Nemnis’ words, that the point of the prank was simply to surprise some friends with “outlandish disguises,” — “not to convey some political message.” The Nemnis themselves seem skeptical, and question “how two educated young men in their early twenties, in the midst of a world war, could find such a prank appropriate.”
Source: Canadian Urban Legends » J.J.'s Complete Guide to Canada
I believe he even went riding on a motorcycle waving a Nazi flag while a student at McGill.
He did.