Programmu Stalkerdataunpackerru
RRDtool Gallery. Simply parse of SNMPget from Vendor OID. The graph display the actual volume of transactions for MMS submitions, from 3 differents devices, such as, Phone, VAS and MM4 (others operator). -- Alex Rivoltella, 2006/3.
See also: and In his 1936 Hitler: A Biography, German historian remarked that within the SA ranks, there were 'large numbers of Communists and Social Democrats' and that 'many of the storm troops were called 'beefsteaks' – brown outside and red within.' The influx of non-Nazis into the Sturmabteilung membership was so prevalent that SA men would joke that 'In our storm troop there are three Nazis, but we shall soon have spewed them out.' The number of 'beefsteaks' was estimated to be large in some cities, especially in northern Germany, where the influence of Gregor Strasser and Strasserism was significant. The head of the Gestapo from 1933 to 1934, Rudolf Diels, reported that '70 percent' of the new SA recruits in the city of Berlin had been communists.
Other historians contend that the SA and SS were awash with Marxists and socialist revolutionaries, where 'The utopians and those who speak of a Marxist republic have the highest membership in the SA and SS (77.6 and 63 percent respectively).' Some have argued that since most SA members came from working-class families or were unemployed, they were more amenable to -leaning socialism, expecting Hitler to fulfill the 25-point. Demokratia hudshaya forma pravleniya cherchillj esse.
However, historian Thomas Friedrich reports that the repeated efforts by the (KPD) to appeal to the working-class backgrounds of the SA were 'doomed to failure', because most SA men were focused on the cult of Hitler and destroying the 'Marxist enemy'. The 'beefsteak' name also referred to party-switching between Nazi and Communist party members, particularly involving those within the SA ranks. See also [ ]. • – Albania ('Blackshirts') • • - Italy • – United Kingdom ('Blackshirts') • – Republic of China and Taiwan ( ) • – Ireland • – parody of the blackshirts in the writings of • - independent paramilitary organizations of ex-German Army soldiers and unemployed workers who fought against Communist uprisings after World War I • – Ireland • – Mexico • – ethnically Dutch South Africans () • – paramilitary wing of the, the Norwegian National Socialist party 1940–45. • • – Romania ('Greenshirts') • – ('Blackshirts') • • - another Nazi Party organization • – Canada ('Blueshirts') • – Portugal • – United States ('Silvershirts') • • • • References [ ] Notes.