Talk:National Socialist Movement in the Netherlands

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I want to insert the statement "Mussert objected to the word party and considered it a movement, but it was and is generally seen as a party." After all, even fascists have the right to self-define them. Andries 23:53, 11 February 2006 (UTC)

[edit] May 1943

I am confused by the following statement;

"After May 1943 the SS direction within the occupation became dominant and the NSB became a marginal party."

In what way do these two things relate one to the other? What form, in other words, did the SS 'direction' take and what bearing did this have on the NSB? How did these 'changes' relate to the administration of Seyss-Inquhart, and what impact did they have on Nazi policy in the Netherlands? The NSB had only at the most minimal level been involved in the occupation regime, so in what way did they become 'more marginal'? I see that two citation requests have been put on this point, but I would ask that this be cleared up as soon as possible. I personally find this sentence maddeningly ambigious. White Guard 01:22, 6 September 2006 (UTC)

I see the statement in question has now been removed-thanks. White Guard 07:36, 6 September 2006 (UTC)