Allach Porcelain displays odd socialist symbolism or markings.....

Allach Porcelain uses a logo that exposes the swastika as crossed "S" letters symbolizing "Socialism" under the monstrous National Socialist German Workers' Party.

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provides additional confirmation of the amazing discoveries of thehistorian Dr. Rex Curry (author of "Swastika Secrets).
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joins Volkswagen in showing similar alphabetic symbolism.http://rexcurry.net/bookchapter4a1a2a.htmlGermany in the 1930's often used symbols for letters and words. Commonsymbols under the National Socialist German Workers' Party (NSGWP)often used the "S" shape, including the side-by-side use in the "SS"Division and the overlapping use in the swastika. The NSGWP's leader was aware of the practice, and perhaps the source of the practice, in that he incorporated the same symbolism into his own bizarre signature. It was a manner of declaring his socialism every time he signed his name with his signature's "S" shape.
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is part of growing evidence that supports the discovery by the notedsymbologist Dr. Curry that the swastika, although an ancient symbol,was used also to represent "S" shapes for "Socialism" and its victoryunder German National Socialists.http://rexcurry.net/book1a1contents-swastika.htmlAllach Porcelain was produced in the small German town of Allach justoutside of Munich between the years of 1936 and 1945. In 1936 the"Porzellan Manufaktur Allach" was acquired by the SS Division under theNational Socialist German Workers' Party. The leader of the SS, knownfor his obsession with socialism, saw the state acquisition of aporcelain factory as a way to establish an industrial base for theproduction of works of art that would be representative of the victoryof socialism in Germany. The Allach enterprise had a sinister purposeof promoting the his personal vision of German socialism. It is interesting to note that leader of the SS had two "H" letters in his own name and also had a very stylized signature.

Surprisingly, the majority of items produced at Allach as collectables included blatant imagery associated with German Socialist ideology. The Allach symbol is entwined "S" letters as a reference to the "SS" or more generally to "state socialism" as symbolized by the swastika as the symbol of the National Socialist German Workers' Party.

As output at the Allach factory increased, the German socialists moved production to a new facility near the Dachau concentration camp. The accusation arose that the socialized factory might have been taking advantage of slave labor, similar to what was done throughout the socialist Wholecaust (of which the Holocaust was a part): 65 million slaughtered under the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics; 49 million slaughtered under the Peoples' Republic of China; 21 million slaughtered under the National Socialist German Workers' Party. That accusation was denied by the factory managers at the Nuremberg Trials. Initially intended as a temporary facility, Dachau remained the main location for porcelain manufacture even after the original factory in Allach was modernized and reopened in 1940. The factory in Allach was instead retrofitted for the production of ceramic products such as household pottery.

The fall of German National Socialism brought an end to the Allach concern. The Allach factories were shut down in 1945 and never reopened.

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