"In the summer of 782, ‘4500 Saxon prisoners were beheaded on a single day at Verden on the River Aller in northern Saxony, on the orders of Charlemagne, King of the Franks.’ So, bluntly, reported the author of the Royal Frankish Annals, the main Frankish narrative for the period, which were written up in 790 or so. By the time those annals had been put into print at Cologne in 1521, Charlemagne had come to be venerated as a saint, and also, with more historical justification, celebrated as the founder of both France and Germany. The annals made the beheadings at Verden known to a wide audience just as Germany’s identity was becoming contentious; Charlemagne’s reputation survived because the Saxon victims were thought to have been pagans, their fate necessary to his Christianisation of Saxony. By the 18th century, however, that no longer washed. French as well as German writers were appalled by the barbarian warlord whom Voltaire called ‘a thousandfold murderer’, and in the 19th century the events at Verden made Charlemagne a problematic hero for German nationalists. The issue was revisited by historians in the 1930s. To those, mainly northerners, who denounced the brutality, others, often southerners, replied that the exemplary punishment was justified by its outcome. Non-historians took sides as well. While Himmler put up a monument to the Saxon dead, Hitler forbade his chief ideologue, Rosenberg, from calling ‘a hero’ like Charles the Great ‘the butcher of the Saxons’, adding that ‘without violence, no one either in Charles’s times or in ours could have brought together the German peoples with their thick heads and their particularities.’
Charlemagne is still widely regarded by Western Europeans as a foundational figure. In 768 he inherited a Frankish kingdom covering modern France plus Belgium and Luxemburg, and extended it to include the Netherlands, much of Italy and most of modern Germany: by the time of his death in 814, he ruled an area almost exactly co-extensive with the original European Community. Scholars in all those countries have contributed to the huge modern historiography on Charlemagne. Aachen, where he made his capital from the 790s onwards, and where the Charlemagne Prize is awarded every year to the politician who has contributed most to European co-operation, is a site of memory for 21st-century Europeans. That his name is less well known in the UK is symptomatic of British isolation within Old Europe.
Yet Verden 782 stubbornly resists euphemism. Alessandro Barbero, in Carlo Magno: Un padre dell’ Europa (2000), notes that even before 782 the Franks were represented as new Israelites, and interprets the massacre as inspired by Old Testament precedents such as the slaughter of the Amalekites and Moabites. In Charlemagne (1999), a large book, Jean Favier mentions the event in a single line, without comment. Dieter Hägermann, in the still larger Karl der Grosse (2000), devotes four pages to exculpation. But German historians still differ sharply: what one recently characterised as ‘an orgy of violence’, another minimised by suggesting that the word decollare in the annals, meaning ‘behead’, was a medieval typo for delocare, ‘relocate’." - J. L. Wilson, 'Go away and learn,' London Review of Books, April 2004.
Barbarian. Infidel. Goyim.
Regardless of the term a conquering civilization uses to classify the outsider, the enemy, and the stranger, the effect is the same: mass slaughter.
In every imperial civilization, petty tribe, and religious cult, slander comes before the slaughter.
Even Christians, known for their religious piety and turn-the-other-cheek approach to violence, murdered pagans who did not yield to the Christian God wherever they found them. During their heyday they killed with the best of them. They built churches on the worship sites of their enemies. The transfer of sacred geological power to Christian hands was always a bloody event.
The state killers today don't need religion to wash their crimes away but they do need something very close to it.
The terms in fashion today by the pedophile ruling elites to denigrate their victims before the coming global slaughter are "useless eaters" and "terrorists."
The killing off of a majority of humanity is being dressed up with scientific reasoning and the lingo of state security.
Modern climate science and climate security have always been linked with mass killing policies. The engineering of the weather serves a multitude of purposes, but at its core it is about global depopulation.
The gay and trans agendas are also mainly about the worldwide campaign to achieve a massive reduction in the global population.
We saw during the manufactured Covid event that governments the world over are willing to kill their own populations by the hundreds of thousands at a time, especially the best and brightest in society.
And that drawn-up event was only the start of the global genocide. They learned a lot during that crisis which they will apply to the next one with greater precision and will.
What they learned is that modern societies adapt quickly and comply to new social rules and standards almost instantly.
In a matter of weeks businesses, shops, workplaces, and government offices were basically following the same script.
At the end of the day man is a social animal, and where the herd is directed to go, even off the cliff, is a simple matter. It takes a few words from positions of authority to change the direction of society. And if that fails, violence against a rebellious few can bring the herd back into line.
And we see this now most of all in a war-torn society ike Ukraine, where the people in power are running away with loot to faraway islands while the large underclass of Ukrainians are being led to pointless deaths in eastern Ukraine.
In this case, the nearby enemy provided by the Russian threat was enough to secure early compliance from wayward Ukrainians, but the longer the war has gone on without success the greater the need for the captured Ukrainian state to sweep aside all pretenses and wage war against its own people.
In Iran, the turn towards tyranny happened quickly after the staged Revolution in 1979 and the subsequent war with Iraq. Wars allow for the consolidation of state power unlike anything else, which is why the state of Israel has been at war for its entire existence. Without constant war Israel wouldn't exist. It wouldn't know how to function in peacetime, without the eternal threat of enemies.
What would Israel be without Palestinians or Jews without Goyim? What would a Muslim be without the Infidel to cast aspersions upon?
Psychologically these cults and states wouldn't know how to operate. Slandering and slaughtering is all they have ever done.