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ESTABLISHMENT SCORE MASSIVE OWN GOAL BY SENDING HEIMBACH TO PRISON


Back in 1923 the Bavarian authorities made a massive mistake. They sent Hitler to jail, where he finally had the leisure to write his best-selling book "Mein Kampf" that propelled him to supreme power only ten years later.

Now it looks like the authorities in Kentucky are making exactly the same mistake by sending "America's Fuhrer" Matthew Heimbach to prison:
A white nationalist on probation for harassing a protester at a Donald Trump campaign rally in Kentucky in 2016 is going to jail after a domestic abuse incident in Indiana. Matthew Heimbach, 27, was ordered to serve 38 days in jail for violating the terms of his two-year probation for the Trump rally incident. Heimbach appeared Tuesday in misdemeanor court in Louisville and was led away in handcuffs.

"I really hope that I do not see you back here in this court," Jefferson County District Judge Stephanie Burke said.

"Yes, your honor," Heimbach replied before being led to the county jail.
While Hitler was sent to jail after the attempted Munich "putsch," in which police fired on Hitler and his supporters, killing 16, Heimbach is being sent to jail for violating his parole by choking his close associate and Trad Worker Party spokesman Matt Parrott into unconsciousness after Parrott caught him shagging his wife. 

Twice!

Just as the Nazi Party was deeply black pilled by Hitler's conviction in the 1924 trial that followed the Putsch, so the Trad Workers Party is now deeply black pilled by Heimbach's legal troubles. But, in the earlier case Hitler, was able to use his eight month prison sentence to reunite the Nazi Party and pen his blueprint for World domination "Mein Kampf." 

Heimbach, by contrast, has only 38 days to use his prison time in this way and produce the defining book that will set him on the path to becoming "America's Fuhrer." 

This seems rather tight. In fact, it will be hard to get even the first chapter finished. Clearly it would have been better for all concerned if Heimbach had been awarded a longer sentence, say one of ten or fifteen years.

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