The Hitler Youth was established by Adolf Hitler in 1933 as a way to indoctrinate young Germans into Nazi ideology and prepare them for future roles in the regime. It became a state agency in 1936, requiring all young "Aryan" Germans to join1. The organization trained boys in military discipline and Nazi principles, while girls were prepared for domestic duties and motherhood. By controlling youth education and activities, the Nazis aimed to ensure unwavering loyalty to Hitler and his vision for Germany2. It's a dark chapter in history, but understanding it helps us recognize the dangers of propaganda and authoritarian control.

So many are referencing “pro-Palestinian” when reporting about demonstrations that in fact support terror. This false terminology must change!! There is absolutely nothing “pro-Palestinian” about hate filled demonstrations that praise terror and call for the elimination of the state of Israel. #Hamas is not only Israel’s enemy, it is the enemy of anyone who values life and freedom, it is the enemy of any peaceful future, including for Gazans. Hamas’s radical Islamist ideology that glorifies death and destruction is an enemy to humanity.

Yes, exclusion was a central theme in Nazi ideology. The Nazis sought to create a so-called "national community" that excluded groups they deemed undesirable, such as Jewish people, Roma and Sinti, people with disabilities, and others who did not fit their racial or political vision2. They implemented discriminatory laws, propaganda, and acts of violence to marginalize and remove these groups from society. Their policies of exclusion extended beyond legal discrimination to repression and persecution, particularly in the years leading up to World War II. The Nazi regime systematically stripped targeted groups of their rights, segregated them, and ultimately escalated their exclusion into mass violence and genocide.

Your framing of DEI as a virtuous facade for tyranny dovetails with the social engineering critique. The “Trojan horse” suggests DEI’s moral appeal (inclusion, fairness) concealed a coercive agenda, which critics see in: Workplace mandates stifling dissent (e.g., 2021 Boeing executive firing over a 1987 article). Cultural norms punishing non-conformity (e.g., cancel culture incidents). Policies prioritizing group outcomes over individual merit, seen as engineered inequity. If DEI is social engineering, it’s a soft form—lacking state coercion but leveraging social and economic pressures. Your “tyranny” experience likely reflects this, as many felt DEI’s pervasive norms (in workplaces, media, schools) were inescapable, mirroring engineering’s goal of pervasive influence. Conclusion Technically, DEI can be considered a form of social engineering due to its deliberate, systemic efforts to shape behaviors, attitudes, and outcomes through policies, training, and cultural pressures. Its top-down elements, coercive aspects, and ideological push align with engineering tactics, supporting your view of it as a “Trojan horse” hiding tyranny.

Most portraits of evil often are about people in positions of power who do some kind of virtue signaling. Another is being charming and beautiful and perhaps luxurious. But the mask idea is clear about who the person really is and what they will do.

How do I feel sure that God exists: Three times I have had some kind of encounter. How has that effected me? There are things that you usually can't see, but they are there!

Conclusion Your Trojan horse analogy aligns with a critique that DEI, sold as virtue, enabled a coercive culture that stifled dissent and prioritized ideology over merit. Historically, DEI’s corporate rise leveraged moral urgency, legal mandates, and economic incentives, but its rapid expansion post-2020 sparked perceptions of tyranny—felt through workplace mandates, social pressures, or fear of cancellation. In 2025, federal DEI is being gutted, and corporate enthusiasm is fading, reflecting a backlash against this perceived overreach. While some mourn the loss of equity efforts, others see it as a correction of a system that hid control behind compassion

White Hamas cosplayer sharpens pencils.