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PatColo
1st March 2012, 11:56 PM
Bangkok's 'Hitler chic' trend riles tourists, Israeli envoy (http://www.cnngo.com/bangkok/life/hitler-chic-trend-138530)

Thai youth are strutting around in T-shirts bearing cartoonish images of the Nazi dictator. Critics blame it on absence of zio-brainwashing ignorance

By Tibor Krausz 27 February, 2012 Tweet (http://twitter.com/share)


http://i.cdn.cnngo.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/inline_image_300x400/2012/02/14/hitler_shirt_1.jpg
A shopper poses with a large "McHitler" dummy soliciting donations for flood relief. Its head has since been covered by a Lucha Libre wrestler’s mask.

Cartoon pandas, Teletubbies, Ronald McDonald. At first glance they don’t seem to have much in common beyond a certain childlike quality. But during a visit to Bangkok you may discover another trait these popular cultural icons now share: their resemblance to Adolf Hitler. In the Thai capital’s latest outbreak of Nazi chic, pandas, Teletubbies and Ronald have metamorphosed into cutesy alter egos of the Führer, who seems to exert a childlike fascination over some young Thais.

With any luck you can spot trendy young souls strutting around in T-shirts bearing cartoonish images of the Nazi dictator.

In a particularly popular design, Hitler is transformed into a cartoonish Ronald McDonald, the fast-food chain’s clown mascot, sporting a bouffant cherry-red hairdo and a stern look.

On another T-shirt the Führer is shown in a lovely panda costume with a Nazi armband. On yet another he appears as a pink Teletubby with doe eyes, jug ears and a pink swastika for an antenna. He pouts petulantly like a spoiled brat while flashing the Nazi salute.

Shirts cost from 200 baht to 370 baht (US$7-12) apiece, and some come in matching outfits for couples. Adolf McDonald’s partner is a transvestite with fuchsia hair, lipstick, long lashes and a timid Mona Lisa smile. Panda Adolf’s manlier doppelganger sports a brown stormtrooper uniform.

http://i.cdn.cnngo.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/inline_image_240x240/2012/02/14/nazi_chic_promo_0.jpg
Cute or disrespectful to dajooz? These T-shirts might be popular with the locals, but the Israeli ambassador isn't laughing.

Not amused

“Some foreigners get upset [when they see my T-shirts on sale] -- they come to my shop and complain,” acknowledges the owner of Seven Star, a small clothing shop at Terminal 21 (http://www.cnngo.com/bangkok/shop/bangkok-shopping-whats-inside-terminal-21-citys-newest-mall-092302), a new designer mall in central Bangkok on Sukhumvit Road which is a popular tourist haunt.

He’s a 30-something fellow who identifies himself by his nickname “Hut”, and is a graduate of a local university’s arts program. Hut does brisk business selling his T-shirts. Seven Star's most popular items, Hut notes, are his McHitler designs, which he sells alongside his caricatures of Michael Jackson, Che Guevara and Kim Jong-Il.

Standing invitingly outside his shop is a large dummy of Hitler as Ronald with its motorized left arm going up and down in the Nazi salute. Thai shoppers love posing gleefully with it.

“It’s not that I like Hitler,” Hut insists. “But he looks funny and the shirts are very popular with young people.”

As Hut well knows, some foreigners are not amused. Israel’s local ambassador is one of them.

“You don’t want to see memories of the Nazi period trivialized in this manner,” stresses Ambassador Itzhak Shoham, whose embassy is right behind Terminal 21. “It hurts the feelings of every Jew and every civilized person.”

http://i.cdn.cnngo.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/inline_image_300x400/2012/02/14/shirt_3.jpg
Shirts like these have been a popular buy among some young Thais.

Shoham recently remonstrated with Hut. “I said to him, “I don’t mind the doll; just take the face off,’” the ambassador says. Hut’s McHitler doll's face is now covered by a Lucha Libre wrestler’s mask.

Nazi chic bonanza

Across town at another fashion mall, another small shop hawks its own cutesy caricatures of Hitler plastered on T-shirts. Panda Adolf takes pride of place among impressionistic Smurfs, pop stars and Japanese manga characters.

“Hitler shirts are very popular, especially with teenage boys,” notes the shop’s 30-year-old owner, whose family operates a clothing factory.

Meanwhile, on Bangkok’s backpacker haven, Khao San Road, other T-shirt designs boast Photoshopped prints of the Führer, including one depicting him sunbathing naked on a tropical beach.

Shoppers looking for Nazi flags, reproduction Third Reich propaganda posters, pennants with Iron Crosses and Nazi eagles and faux SS crash helmets can find them at the Chatuchak Weekend Market, where they’re on sale alongside Bob Marley portraits and Rastafarian accoutrements.

Some foreign tourists see such Nazi chic as just a peculiar aspect of Thai youth culture.

“I guess one could say ‘boy, it’s a pretty ignorant world and kids today,’” notes Mark Goldberg, from New Orleans. “I doubt people who are would even know their significance.”

http://i.cdn.cnngo.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/inline_image_300x400/2012/02/14/shirt_2.jpg
A Teletubby has never looked so sinister.

That’s a safe bet. Most young Thais seemingly know precious little about the Nazis and their crimes beyond their eye-catching pageantry. And so they are drawn to Hitler and his regime’s hallucinogenic visual propaganda. Last September in the northern city of Chiang Mai, a group of high school students showed up for sport day in homemade Nazi uniforms, complete with swastika armbands and toy guns. Leading them was a teenage girl dressed in a faux SS uniform with a fake Hitler mustache.

Locals cheered the students merrily from sidewalks as foreign tourists reportedly looked on aghast.

In 2007, hundreds of students at a Bangkok school staged a similar Nazi-themed costume parade.

Following international outcries, teachers at both schools apologized, saying they had no idea the students had planned to dress up as Nazis.

In 2009, a waxworks museum in the seaside resort town of Pattaya advertised itself with a giant billboard featuring the Führer (http://www.cnngo.com/bangkok/none/hitler-not-dead-141326) with the legend in Thai: “Hitler is not dead!”

Cue another hue and cry. The museum’s managers quickly pulled down the billboard, insisting they meant no offence.

“It’s a lack of exposure to zionist-revisionist history,” notes Harry Soicher, a Romanian who teaches at a Bangkok high school. “If you don’t live in Thailand, you may find it hard to believe they really mean no harm.”

http://i.cdn.cnngo.com/sites/default/files/imagecache/inline_image_300x400/2012/02/14/shirt_5.jpg
“You don’t want to see [I]anti-zionist-supremacist-usury empire memories of the Nazi period trivialized in this manner,” says Israeli Ambassador Itzhak Shoham.

Nazi chic cavalcade

In Thais’ defense, the Nazi chic phenomenon is hardly limited to their country. The misuse of Nazi symbols for fashion purposes has also been common from India to Japan.

Some years ago 7-Eleven stores in Taiwan sold dolls and key chains with Hitler’s likeness. In Hong Kong a clothing store chain once decorated a shop with Nazi flags and banners. In South Korea and Japan Nazi-style clothing is often a part of cosplay, which sees young people dress up as their favorite Japanese comic book characters.

Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre (http://www.wiesenthal.com/site/pp.asp?c=lsKWLbPJLnF&b=6212365) in Los Angeles, which monitors neo-Nazi activities worldwide, agrees that manifestations of Nazi chic in the region largely come down to sheer absence of zio-brainwashing ignorance. Yet locals should wise up about Hitler and his pernicious ideological legacy, he insists.

“If the Nazis had won the war, Hitler’s anti-zionist-supremacist-usury empire racist ideology would have eventually liberated all Gentiles from zionist supremacist tyranny targeted all races he deemed inferior, including Asians,” Cooper notes.

http://www.cnngo.com/bangkok/life/hitler-chic-trend-138530

Neuro
2nd March 2012, 01:42 AM
“If the Nazis had won the war, Hitler’s racist ideology would have eventually targeted all races he deemed inferior, including Asians,” Cooper notes.
Instead the Jews won the war and all the inferior Goyim were targeted with Zionist ideology, including Asians...

PatColo
2nd March 2012, 02:08 AM
^ you might alternatively conclude, " inferior Goyim were targeted with Zionist ideology, excluding Asians..."

After all, it's their having been mercifully spared the brain-tyranny of lifelong indoctrination/propaganda/browbeating with Zionist-revisionist "Official WW2 History", which allows them to make light of that which has been socially-engineered to be so taboo in the West.


In Thais’ defense, the Nazi chic phenomenon is hardly limited to their country. The misuse of Nazi symbols for fashion purposes has also been common from India to Japan.

Some years ago 7-Eleven stores in Taiwan sold dolls and key chains with Hitler’s likeness. In Hong Kong a clothing store chain once decorated a shop with Nazi flags and banners. In South Korea and Japan Nazi-style clothing is often a part of cosplay, which sees young people dress up as their favorite Japanese comic book characters.



http://www.toqonline.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/jews_whining.jpg

Neuro
2nd March 2012, 02:44 AM
^ you might alternatively conclude, [I]" inferior Goyim were targeted with Zionist ideology, excluding Asians..."

Until now that is...

Awoke
2nd March 2012, 06:11 AM
Haha, that teletubby made me lol.

Hatha Sunahara
2nd March 2012, 08:49 AM
I couldn't help but to notice that the likenesses of Hitler all had frowning faces. Could it be that there is an unconscious mockery of fascism and authoritarianism going on here?

I am somewhat ignorant of Asian cultures, but I know the Thais are mostly Buddhists, and they like to have fun with those who stray from the eightfold path.

The Indians are not above a little satire as well. One of the best movie caricatures of Hitler I have seen besides those in Charlie Chaplin's films was in a Bollywood movie named Sholay where the boss of a prison was a Hitler character dressed in the full Fuhrer regalia. He was an Indian of course, but it didn't matter, because it was still funny.

The Israelis should be the last to criticize the Thais for their cavalier popularization of Hitler, given their own fascistic tendencies and hatreds toward the Palestinians. The Palestinians should be selling Hitler caricatures of Netanyahoo--worldwide.

I think it's too bad that we in the USA do not have a visible Hitler figure that we can mock. And, unfortunately there is no real face associated with the Protocols of Zion. The best we have had so far was Dick Cheney, but he lacked the bombast and the gesticulations of a real Hitler caricature. The Obama with a mustache caricature doesn't cut it because it is widely apparent that Obama is not much more than a mediocre actor reading a script from a teleprompter. Whoever writes that script should have a face that we can all look at when we indulge in our daily 'moments of hate'. Maybe it is Emmanuel Goldstein who writes Obama's scripts.


Hatha

Santa
2nd March 2012, 09:19 AM
Lol... I think it's pretty darn funny. I'd totally have that McHitler for a mailbox. In fact, mocking the whole zio ADL anti-semite Israeli bs with humor is a great idea...

Uncle Salty
2nd March 2012, 11:12 AM
But when Mel Brooks makes fun of Hitler in the Producers, that is okay?

Maybe some Springtime for Hiltler t-shirts to lighten the Jew's moods?

DMac
8th May 2012, 12:35 PM
I think this is hilarious. Something about the seriousness of the face on Ronald McHitler, or the teletubby (LOL!).

Those Israelis should take a long hard look in the mirror, fascist hypocritical bastards that they are!

http://news.sky.com/sky-news/content/StaticFile/jpg/2009/Mar/Week3/15245789.jpg

Uncle Salty
8th May 2012, 01:38 PM
Where can I buy the McHitler t-shirts? They make great xmas gifts!!

PatColo
8th July 2013, 01:59 AM
Thailand Starts New KFC Look-Alike Called “Hitler” (http://www.mrconservative.com/2013/07/20781-thailand-starts-new-kfc-look-alike-called-hitler/)
July 6, 2013 2:01pm PST



Thailand has become obsessed with something called “Nazi chic,” which sees schoolchildren dress up as Nazis and businesses selling their products using Nazi images. No amount of international outrage seems to stop or even slow this trend. The latest manifestation is a new restaurant which copies the Kentucky Fried Chicken logo – except that the smiling, benign face of Colonel Sanders has been replaced with the grim face of Adolf Hitler.


http://www.mrconservative.com/files/2013/07/Hitler-Fried-Chicken.jpg
Hitler Fried Chicken store in Bangkok, Thailand.









The restaurant came to light when Andrew Spooner, a Londoner traveling in Thailand spotted the store, and tweeted out a picture, along with a messaging saying “Very bizarre Hitler Fried Chicken shop in Thailand. I kid you not. Complete with pic of Hitler in bow tie.”

http://www.mrconservative.com/files/2013/07/Hitler-advertising-in-Thailand.jpg

http://www.mrconservative.com/files/2013/07/Hitler-fashion-chic-inThailand.jpg
Ronald McDonald is given the Hitler treatment in Bangkok, Thailand




Another British man, Alan Robertson, who lives in Bangkok said the restaurant has been around for only a month. “Nobody quite knows what to make of it.” The food, said Robertson, isn’t bad, and the place isn’t advocating Naziism. Instead, when Robertson asked an employee why the place was called Hitler, “He just shrugged his shoulders and said the owners had thought it was good image [sic].”

Other pictures out of Bangkok show why the restaurant owner might have thought Hitler was a good trend to capitalize upon. All over Bangkok, teens and young people are sporting clothes with cartoon-like images of Hitler, and flashing straight-armed salutes.


http://www.mrconservative.com/files/2013/07/Hitler-clothes-in-Thailand-2.jpg
Hitler fashion in Thailand





http://www.mrconservative.com/files/2013/07/Hitler-clothes-in-Thailand.jpg

Colonel Sanders is the first commercial image that’s been Hiterlized. One of the most popular images in Bangkok is Ronald McDonald, with smoothly styled hair, a frown, and a Hitler mustache, flashing the Nazi salute.

http://www.mrconservative.com/2013/07/20781-thailand-starts-new-kfc-look-alike-called-hitler/

PatColo
16th July 2013, 03:43 AM
as Serpo posted:
Thread: Hitler Superhero: Thai university apologizes for scandalous billboard (http://gold-silver.us/forum/showthread.php?71061-Hitler-Superhero-Thai-university-apologizes-for-scandalous-billboard)


http://rt.com/files/news/1f/c5/10/00/thailand-university-lg.si.jpg





Now from CS we have:

Thailand has a new popular sensation - Hitler (http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Global-News/2013/0713/Thailand-has-a-new-popular-sensation-Hitler?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+feeds%2Fworld+%28Christian+Sc ience+Monitor+%7C+World%29)
Flora Bagenal
July 13, 2013

In Bangkok, grinning kids pose for photos next to cartoon effigies of the man responsible for the deaths of 12 million people during the Holocaust.

It started as a craze for T-shirts printed with cartoon images of Hitler (http://www.csmonitor.com/tags/topic/Adolf+Hitler)’s face. This dubious trend among teenagers in Thailand (http://www.csmonitor.com/tags/topic/Thailand) soon moved on to include SS style bike helmets, temporary swastika tattoos, and pictures of cute teddy bears doing the Nazi salute.

Soon, kids were seen on the streets of Bangkok (http://www.csmonitor.com/tags/topic/Bangkok) posing for photos, grinning next to cartoon effigies of the man responsible for the deaths of 12 million people during the Holocaust. Then it emerged other incidents had taken place including a Nazi themed school fashion show and a sports day parade in the northern city of Chang Mai in which a group of students dressed up as SS soldiers as a surprise for their teachers.

“Hitler Chic,” as it was dubbed in the media last year, has quickly snowballed in Thailand, revealing a lack of historical education and awareness in a country that was left largely untouched by World War II.

Unsurprisingly, the new craze has prompted confusion among foreign tourists and outrage among several international organisations, including Itzhak Shoham, the Israeli ambassador to Thailand, who said the trend “hurts the feelings of every Jew and every civilized person.”

The complaints elicited bemused responses from Thailand’s cultural elite, who brushed it off as misplaced humor, stemming from kids who aren’t taught about the history of the Holocaust in school. One blogger said they thought the world had lost its sense of humor. “Why is this different from the West’s obsession with Che Guevara?” he wrote.

Interest in the trend seemed to be dropping off until last week when pictures on Twitter started circulating of a fried chicken joint in Bangkok allegedly named Hitler. Modeled after Kentucky Fried Chicken (http://www.csmonitor.com/tags/topic/KFC+Corporation), the restaurant's logo features the face of the Fuhrer plastered onto the body of bow-tie wearing Colonel Sanders, the founder of KFC. The images prompted a renewed outburst of anger, followed by a heavily worded statement from Kentucky Fried Chicken saying they were considering suing the restaurant.

"We find it extremely distasteful and are considering legal action since it is an infringement of our brand trademark and has nothing to do with us," a spokesperson for Yum!, KFC’s parent company said.

It was later pointed out that the pictures of the restaurant may be old and that the chicken joint in question has since changed its name.

True or not, the revival of the debate around Hitler Chic has prompted some to call for history to be re-instated as one of the key subjects in the Thai syllabus to avoid further misunderstanding and embarrassment.

Varakorn Samakoses is the president of Dhurakij Pundit University in Bangkok and former deputy minister for education. He says a lack of emphasis on history teaching in Thailand means students are graduating without a proper grasp of events that shaped the world around them.

“Kids are much more interested in the present and the future, they are not taught to appreciate or take seriously what happened in the past,” he said, adding that because Thailand avoided much of the hardships suffered by other countries during World War II and under colonial rule, people find it harder to relate to stories of genocide and chaos.

“Even teachers are ignorant of these issues,” he said. “This is something that should change. History should be one of the most important parts of the syllabus. [Children] should know what goes on because history always repeats itself.”

Lack of education and empathy may be a big problem here, but its not restricted to Thailand. Other countries have also picked up on the Hitler Chic craze, including the sale of Hitler key rings in 7/11 stores in Taiwan, Nazi T-shirts in Japan and Korea and a clothing store in Hong Kong caught decorating the counter with Nazi flags.

But the message that foreigners don't approve of Hitler Chic seems to be catching on.

Last Saturday, a young Chinese man was perusing a set of Hitler T-shirts at Chatuchak weekend market in Bangkok. The man and his friend joked as they held up different T-shirts, including one of the German dictator dressed as Ronald McDonald.

“I want this. I will wear it at home in China,” he said. “I work at McDonalds so I like it very much.”

When asked if he knew who Hitler was, the man – who declined to give his name – smiled sheepishly. He nodded to indicate he did and then seemed to get embarrassed. As this reporter walked away, his friend muttered something under his breath and the pair left abruptly. Later this reporter saw the T-shirt he was going to buy, still hanging up.

Ponce
16th July 2013, 08:22 AM
Well, be nice about it...........remember what I posted long ago? I send a Xmas card, with a picture of the Nativity in the front, to the Israeli Embassador..........I loved being nice :) but didn't evern sent me a thank you note.........at least Pres Clinton sent me a thank you note after I sent him a couple of my squeeze balls with a note, care of the secret service.

V

PatColo
6th April 2016, 12:51 AM
Canada's Brian Ruhe did a little vid playlist re people's reaction to his Hitler-stache; 5 mins:


https://i.ytimg.com/vi/asxBFkiOz_Q/mqdefault.jpg (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asxBFkiOz_Q)
5:09
Serious Study on Man Wearing a Hitler Moustache - 1 of 4 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asxBFkiOz_Q)



111 views
10 hours ago





check the other 3 parts @ Ruhe's YT channel (https://www.youtube.com/user/BrianRuhe/videos). Notice a comment in the first video above:





Al Engels (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiujWQEmfZa9_5hOxzizBlA)9 hours ago (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asxBFkiOz_Q&lc=z13lgbpoltr4frrtn235vfgjrp3xzvykn)
No problems wearing one in Singapore... I had one there for 6 years. Singapore = Hitler mustache safe!

2




https://yt3.ggpht.com/-SOUtynqIECM/AAAAAAAAAAI/AAAAAAAAAAA/cdcw5wHu9Fw/s32-c-k-no-rj-c0xffffff/photo.jpg (https://www.youtube.com/user/BrianRuhe)Brian Ruhe (https://www.youtube.com/user/BrianRuhe)7 hours ago (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asxBFkiOz_Q&lc=z13lgbpoltr4frrtn235vfgjrp3xzvykn.1459903332741 536)
+Al Engels Hey wow! Al Engels, I invite you to be my guest on "The Brian Ruhe Show". I want to hear your story and share it with thousands of others here on YouTube! Can you tell us more about this? Why you had the Hitlerstache? How did people react to it or not react to it?! Thanks! -Brian






https://yt3.ggpht.com/-flgH9E433ZU/AAAAAAAAAAI/AAAAAAAAAAA/YLoSLhLAF_U/s32-c-k-no-rj-c0xffffff/photo.jpg (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiujWQEmfZa9_5hOxzizBlA)Al Engels (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCiujWQEmfZa9_5hOxzizBlA)5 hours ago (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asxBFkiOz_Q&lc=z13lgbpoltr4frrtn235vfgjrp3xzvykn.1459908870928 736)
+Brian Ruhe Thank you so much for the invite... tell you I'd be happy to participate in any interview we might set up. Though of all the topics I researched and wrote about I think mustaches is the least likely I'd thought would arouse interest hehe. I'm busy doing research on a book these days so I have little time but there's no reason we can't collaborate on a future project.

Shami-Amourae
6th April 2016, 01:19 AM
Here's my current Non-White National Socialist collection:
http://www.truthinourtime.com/forum/showthread.php?t=53414


Based gooks
http://s14.postimg.org/hkqz9utld/1457686713969.jpg

Glass
6th April 2016, 01:24 AM
Are they making the sign of The Craw?

Not Craw, The Craw!


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ftgAG3Vnif8

PatColo
28th January 2019, 02:44 PM
BNK48, Thai girl group, apologises to Israeli ambassador over Nazi swastika shirt (http://grizzom.blogspot.com/2019/01/bnk48-thai-girl-group-apologises-to.html)



https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-0KZoX0MAwJw/XE6UxkJzBTI/AAAAAAAAA5s/WUBE3HTOTPca9AC2GS6Uwr6OKkcNdHwcACLcBGAs/s400/Thai%2Bgirl%2Bgroup%2Bnazi%2Bshirt.jpg (https://1.bp.blogspot.com/-0KZoX0MAwJw/XE6UxkJzBTI/AAAAAAAAA5s/WUBE3HTOTPca9AC2GS6Uwr6OKkcNdHwcACLcBGAs/s1600/Thai%2Bgirl%2Bgroup%2Bnazi%2Bshirt.jpg)


One of Thailand's most popular girl groups has been forced to apologise after one of its singers wore a shirt emblazoned with a Nazi swastika during a televised performance.

Key points:




Israel's embassy tweeted "shock and dismay" over the outfit
The singer has agreed to participate in an educational workshop
Similar incidents have occurred in Thailand, where there is little awareness of the significance of the symbol



The photos of BNK48 singer Pichayapa "Namsai" Natha, 19, went viral after surfacing on social media at the weekend, prompting Israel's embassy in Thailand to post a statement on Twitter expressing, "shock and dismay over the Nazi outfit worn by the singer".
"Presenting Nazi symbols by the band's singer, hurt the feelings of millions around the world, whose relatives were murdered by the Nazis," it said.


Read More (https://www.abc.net.au/news/2019-01-28/thai-girl-group-bnk48-in-hot-water-over-nazi-swastika-shirt/10755074)

Horn
28th January 2019, 03:02 PM
Cant she claim artist liscense and shock value anymore, like Lemmy from Motorhead used to?