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The reason the Brownshirts were running was they had a prisoner with them.
As a result, Hanussen is kidnapped and murdered by the Brownshirts.
"What Johnnie Cochran has done is allow the brownshirts in the courtroom while he's auguring about racism," he added.
He was always concerned with the struggles against both the communists and the brownshirts and ordered the confiscation of weapons found at their meetings.
It's the Brownshirts," Pegg hissed in an urgent whisper.
It had been some kind of political rally, so it appeared, the Brownshirts or the League of St George.
Savage makes it clear that he is not encouraging the Tea Party to respond with violence to the union threat, as the Brownshirts did in Germany.
Germany's FAUD struggled throughout the late 1920s and early 30s as the brownshirts took control of the streets.
In 1932 he also joined the Brownshirts, and by the time of his crimes, circa 1940, he had reached the rank of Scharführer.
Joaquin (Joe Quintero), who is a little too fond of Pepe for the other men's heterosexual comfort, shouts, "The Brownshirts are Fascists!"
The Brownshirts were a quasi-military force trucked over from Europe by the Fourth Reich for the sole purpose of creating terror and havoc among the conquered American population.
The countess and Peter, Jews who understand the evil outside but try to adapt to it, find that the Germany of Hitler and the Brownshirts has no place, no peace for them.
Most of the brownshirts were scrawny bantamweights, but they were packing firepower grande: sawed-offs, tommmys, .45 automatics, brass knucks dangling from their cartridge belts.
Despite such hostility between the brownshirts and the regular army, Blomberg and others in the military saw the SA as a source of raw recruits for an enlarged and revitalised army.
The Blood-clot boy fights the Brownshirts using his (unspecified) magical powers and kills all but one of them, who he ties up and leaves as an object for public ridicule before continuing on his journey.
Claus-Christian W. Szejnmann, Nazism in Central Germany: The Brownshirts in 'Red' Saxony, Berghahn Books, New York, 1999.
Although he was a leading member of the Danzig Party it would probably be fair to describe him as a misguided liberal who only realised his mistaken alliance when he saw the brownshirts pulling on their kicking boots.
I also remember the brownshirts marching through the streets with swastika flags, and the shock when the restaurant owner on our block was incarcerated as a German-American Bund leader after the United States entered World War II.