The New York Times reported in 1939 that Nazi Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels terminated the careers of five prominent German comedians. Their crime? Making political jokes about the Nazi regime.
Joseph Goebbels ended the careers of five actors in 1939 for making fun of Nazis, in an alarming foreshadowing of Jimmy ...
Recently, I posted a commentary titled “Charlie Kirk and the Propaganda of Ultra-Right Martyrdom” on the Times of Israel. It ...
U.S. President Donald Trump and members of his administration, including White House Deputy Chief of Staff Stephen Miller, spoke at a memorial service for the late conservative activist Charlie Kirk.
Online users reposted the newspaper article from Feb. 4, 1939, following ABC's initial September 2025 announcement of suspending "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" ...
Texas congressman Keith Self apparently hasn’t learned the lesson that if you have to quote an infamous Nazi propagandist to make your point, then maybe it’s a point not worth making. During a House ...
On October 4, 1933, Germany’s Propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels introduced the Nazi’s new Schriftleitergesetz (Editor’s Law) with the words: “I have the natural intention to be and to remain the ...
LONDON, Thursday -- MAY 3, 1945 --(AP) The Soviet official communique Thursday quoted a high Nazi official in conquered Berlin as stating that Adolf Hitler, Propaganda Minister Goebbels and the German ...