After
America
,
There
is
No
Place
to
Go"
This
Letter
was
sent
to
Evangelist
Dea
Warford
by
the
author
of
this
important
paper.
Dea
has
encouraged
this
nation
to
be
saturated
by
this
true
testimony.
Patriotic
Americans
and
Christians
love
this
nation
under
God.
The
author
of
this
article
lives
in
South
Dakota
and
is
very
active
in
attempting
to
maintain
our
freedom.
Google
"Kitty
Werthmann"
and
you
will
see
articles
and
videos.
Kitty
Werthmann
is
85
years
old.
Below
is
her
story:
"What
I am
about
to
tell
you
is
something
you've
probably
never
heard
or
will
ever
read
in
history
books.
I
believe
that
I am
an
eyewitness
to
history.
I
cannot
tell
you
that
Hitler
took
Austria
by
tanks
and
guns;
it
would
distort
history.
We
elected
him
by a
landslide
-
98%
of
the
vote.
I've
never
read
that
in
any
American
publications.
Everyone
thinks
that
Hitler
just
rolled
in
with
his
tanks
and
took
Austria
by
force.
In
1938,
Austria
was
in
deep
Depression.
Nearly
one-third
of
our
workforce
was
unemployed.
We
had
25%
inflation
and
25%
bank
loan
interest
rates.
Farmers
and
business
people
were
declaring
bankruptcy
daily.
Young
people
were
going
from
house
to
house
begging
for
food.
Not
that
they
didn't
want
to
work;
there
simply
weren't
any
jobs.
My
mother
was
a
Christian
woman
and
believed
in
helping
people
in
need.
Every
day
we
cooked
a
big
kettle
of
soup
and
baked
bread
to
feed
those
poor,
hungry
people
-
about
30
daily.
The
Communist
Party
and
the
National
Socialist
Party
were
fighting
each
other.
Blocks
and
blocks
of
cities
like
Vienna
,
Linz
,
and
Graz
were
destroyed.
The
people
became
desperate
and
petitioned
the
government
to
let
them
decide
what
kind
of
government
they
wanted.
We
looked
to
our
neighbor
on
the
north,
Germany
,
where
Hitler
had
been
in
power
since
1933.
We
had
been
told
that
they
didn't
have
unemployment
or
crime,
and
they
had
a
high
standard
of
living.
Nothing
was
ever
said
about
persecution
of
any
group
--
Jewish
or
otherwise.
We
were
led
to
believe
that
everyone
was
happy.
We
wanted
the
same
way
of
life
in
Austria
. We
were
promised
that
a
vote
for
Hitler
would
mean
the
end
of
unemployment
and
help
for
the
family.
Hitler
also
said
that
businesses
would
be
assisted,
and
farmers
would
get
their
farms
back.
Ninety-eight
percent
of
the
population
voted
to
annex
Austria
to
Germany
and
have
Hitler
for
our
ruler.
We
were
overjoyed,
and
for
three
days
we
danced
in
the
streets
and
had
candlelight
parades.
The
new
government
opened
up
big
field
kitchens
and
everyone
was
fed.
After
the
election,
German
officials
were
appointed,
and
like
a
miracle,
we
suddenly
had
law
and
order.
Three
or
four
weeks
later,
everyone
was
employed.
The
government
made
sure
that
a
lot
of
work
was
created
through
the
Public
Work
Service.
Hitler
decided
we
should
have
equal
rights
for
women.
Before
this,
it
was
a
custom
that
married
Austrian
women
did
not
work
outside
the
home.
An
able-bodied
husband
would
be
looked
down
on
if
he
couldn't
support
his
family.
Many
women
in
the
teaching
profession
were
elated
that
they
could
retain
the
jobs
they
previously
had
been
required
to
give
up
for
marriage.
Hitler
Targets
Education
-
Eliminates
Religious
Instruction
for
Children:
Our
education
was
nationalized.
I
attended
a
very
good
public
school.
The
population
was
predominantly
Catholic,
so
we
had
religion
in
our
schools.
The
day
we
elected
Hitler
(March
13,
1938),
I
walked
into
my
schoolroom
to
find
the
crucifix
replaced
by
Hitler's
picture
hanging
next
to a
Nazi
flag.
Our
teacher,
a
very
devout
woman,
stood
up
and
told
the
class
we
wouldn't
pray
or
have
religion
anymore.
Instead,
we
sang
"Deutschland,
Deutschland,
Uber
Alles,"
and
had
physical
education.
Sunday
became
National
Youth
Day
with
compulsory
attendance.
Parents
were
not
pleased
about
the
sudden
change
in
curriculum.
They
were
told
that
if
they
did
not
send
us,
they
would
receive
a
stiff
letter
of
warning
the
first
time.
The
second
time
they
would
be
fined
the
equivalent
of
$300,
and
the
third
time
they
would
be
subject
to
jail.
The
first
two
hours
consisted
of
political
indoctrination.
The
rest
of
the
day
we
had
sports.
As
time
went
along,
we
loved
it.
Oh,
we
had
so
much
fun
and
got
our
sports
equipment
free.
We
would
go
home
and
gleefully
tell
our
parents
about
the
wonderful
time
we
had.
My
mother
was
very
unhappy.
When
the
next
term
started,
she
took
me
out
of
public
school
and
put
me
in a
convent.
I
told
her
she
couldn't
do
that
and
she
told
me
that
someday
when
I
grew
up,
I
would
be
grateful.
There
was
a
very
good
curriculum,
but
hardly
any
fun
- no
sports,
and
no
political
indoctrination.
I
hated
it
at
first
but
felt
I
could
tolerate
it.
Every
once
in a
while,
on
holidays,
I
went
home.
I
would
go
back
to
my
old
friends
and
ask
what
was
going
on
and
what
they
were
doing.
Their
loose
lifestyle
was
very
alarming
to
me.
They
lived
without
religion.
By
that
time
unwed
mothers
were
glorified
for
having
a
baby
for
Hitler.
It
seemed
strange
to
me
that
our
society
changed
so
suddenly.
As
time
went
along,
I
realized
what
a
great
deed
my
mother
did
so
that
I
wasn't
exposed
to
that
kind
of
humanistic
philosophy.
Equal
Rights
Hits
Home:
In
1939,
the
war
started
and
a
food
bank
was
established.
All
food
was
rationed
and
could
only
be
purchased
using
food
stamps.
At
the
same
time,
a
full-employment
law
was
passed
which
meant
if
you
didn't
work,
you
didn't
get
a
ration
card,
and
if
you
didn't
have
a
card,
you
starved
to
death.
Women
who
stayed
home
to
raise
their
families
didn't
have
any
marketable
skills
and
often
had
to
take
jobs
more
suited
for
men.
Soon
after
this,
the
draft
was
implemented.
It
was
compulsory
for
young
people,
male
and
female,
to
give
one
year
to
the
labor
corps.
During
the
day,
the
girls
worked
on
the
farms,
and
at
night
they
returned
to
their
barracks
for
military
training
just
like
the
boys.
They
were
trained
to
be
anti-aircraft
gunners
and
participated
in
the
signal
corps.
After
the
labor
corps,
they
were
not
discharged
but
were
used
in
the
front
lines.
When
I go
back
to
Austria
to
visit
my
family
and
friends,
most
of
these
women
are
emotional
cripples
because
they
just
were
not
equipped
to
handle
the
horrors
of
combat.
Three
months
before
I
turned
18,
I
was
severely
injured
in
an
air
raid
attack.
I
nearly
had
a
leg
amputated,
so I
was
spared
having
to
go
into
the
labor
corps
and
into
military
service.
Hitler
Restructured
the
Family
Through
Daycare:
When
the
mothers
had
to
go
out
into
the
work
force,
the
government
immediately
established
child
care
centers.
You
could
take
your
children
ages
4
weeks
to
school
age
and
leave
them
there
around-the-clock,
7
days
a
week,
under
the
total
care
of
the
government.
The
state
raised
a
whole
generation
of
children.
There
were
no
motherly
women
to
take
care
of
the
children,
just
people
highly
trained
in
child
psychology.
By
this
time,
no
one
talked
about
equal
rights.
We
knew
we
had
been
had.
Health
Care
and
Small
Business
Suffer
Under
Government
Controls:
Before
Hitler,
we
had
very
good
medical
care.
Many
American
doctors
trained
at
the
University
of
Vienna
.
After
Hitler,
health
care
was
socialized,
free
for
everyone.
Doctors
were
salaried
by
the
government.
The
problem
was,
since
it
was
free,
the
people
were
going
to
the
doctors
for
everything.
When
the
good
doctor
arrived
at
his
office
at 8
a.m.,
40
people
were
already
waiting
and,
at
the
same
time,
the
hospitals
were
full.
If
you
needed
elective
surgery,
you
had
to
wait
a
year
or
two
for
your
turn.
There
was
no
money
for
research
as
it
was
poured
into
socialized
medicine.
Research
at
the
medical
schools
literally
stopped,
so
the
best
doctors
left
Austria
and
emigrated
to
other
countries.
As
for
healthcare,
our
tax
rates
went
up
to
80%
of
our
income.
Newlyweds
immediately
received
a
$1,000
loan
from
the
government
to
establish
a
household.
We
had
big
programs
for
families.
All
day
care
and
education
were
free.
High
schools
were
taken
over
by
the
government
and
college
tuition
was
subsidized.
Everyone
was
entitled
to
free
handouts,
such
as
food
stamps,
clothing,
and
housing.
We
had
another
agency
designed
to
monitor
business.
My
brother-in-law
owned
a
restaurant
that
had
square
tables.
Government
officials
told
him
he
had
to
replace
them
with
round
tables
because
people
might
bump
themselves
on
the
corners.
Then
they
said
he
had
to
have
additional
bathroom
facilities.
It
was
just
a
small
dairy
business
with
a
snack
bar.
He
couldn't
meet
all
the
demands.
Soon,
he
went
out
of
business.
If
the
government
owned
the
large
businesses
and
not
many
small
ones
existed,
it
could
be
in
control.
We
had
consumer
protection.
We
were
told
how
to
shop
and
what
to
buy.
Free
enterprise
was
essentially
abolished.
We
had
a
planning
agency
specially
designed
for
farmers.
The
agents
would
go
to
the
farms,
count
the
live-stock,
then
tell
the
farmers
what
to
produce,
and
how
to
produce
it.
"Mercy
Killing"
Redefined:
In
1944,
I
was
a
student
teacher
in a
small
village
in
the
Alps
.
The
villagers
were
surrounded
by
mountain
passes
which,
in
the
winter,
were
closed
off
with
snow,
causing
people
to
be
isolated.
So
people
intermarried
and
offspring
were
sometimes
retarded.
When
I
arrived,
I
was
told
there
were
15
mentally
retarded
adults,
but
they
were
all
useful
and
did
good
manual
work.
I
knew
one,
named
Vincent,
very
well.
He
was
a
janitor
of
the
school.
One
day
I
looked
out
the
window
and
saw
Vincent
and
others
getting
into
a
van.
I
asked
my
superior
where
they
were
going.
She
said
to
an
institution
where
the
State
Health
Department
would
teach
them
a
trade,
and
to
read
and
write.
The
families
were
required
to
sign
papers
with
a
little
clause
that
they
could
not
visit
for
6
months.
They
were
told
visits
would
interfere
with
the
program
and
might
cause
homesickness.
As
time
passed,
letters
started
to
dribble
back
saying
these
people
died
a
natural,
merciful
death.
The
villagers
were
not
fooled.
We
suspected
what
was
happening.
Those
people
left
in
excellent
physical
health
and
all
died
within
6
months.
We
called
this
euthanasia.
The
Final
Steps
-
Gun
Laws:
Next
came
gun
registration.
People
were
getting
injured
by
guns.
Hitler
said
that
the
real
way
to
catch
criminals
(we
still
had
a
few)
was
by
matching
serial
numbers
on
guns.
Most
citizens
were
law
abiding
and
dutifully
marched
to
the
police
station
to
register
their
firearms.
Not
long
after-wards,
the
police
said
that
it
was
best
for
everyone
to
turn
in
their
guns.
The
authorities
already
knew
who
had
them,
so
it
was
futile
not
to
comply
voluntarily.
No
more
freedom
of
speech.
Anyone
who
said
something
against
the
government
was
taken
away.
We
knew
many
people
who
were
arrested,
not
only
Jews,
but
also
priests
and
ministers
who
spoke
up.
Totalitarianism
didn't
come
quickly,
it
took
5
years
from
1938
until
1943,
to
realize
full
dictatorship
in
Austria
.
Had
it
happened
overnight,
my
countrymen
would
have
fought
to
the
last
breath.
Instead,
we
had
creeping
gradualism.
Now,
our
only
weapons
were
broom
handles.
The
whole
idea
sounds
almost
unbelievable
that
the
state,
little
by
little
eroded
our
freedom.
After
World
War
II,
Russian
troops
occupied
Austria.
Women
were
raped,
preteen
to
elderly.
The
press
never
wrote
about
this
either.
When
the
Soviets
left
in
1955,
they
took
everything
that
they
could,
dismantling
whole
factories
in
the
process.
They
sawed
down
whole
orchards
of
fruit,
and
what
they
couldn't
destroy,
they
burned.
We
called
it
The
Burned
Earth.
Most
of
the
population
barricaded
themselves
in
their
houses.
Women
hid
in
their
cellars
for
6
weeks
as
the
troops
mobilized.
Those
who
couldn't,
paid
the
price.
There
is a
monument
in
Vienna
today,
dedicated
to
those
women
who
were
massacred
by
the
Russians.
This
is
an
eye
witness
account.
"It's
true..those
of
us
who
sailed
past
the
Statue
of
Liberty
came
to a
country
of
unbelievable
freedom
and
opportunity.
America
Truly
is
the
Greatest
Country
in
the
World.
Don't
Let
Freedom
Slip
Away!
Submitted
by
Tom
Stephens
www.christsbondservants.org