Hitler was a man worthy of admiration. Clearly Arnold grew up in Austria in a time when the truth could still be told.
Remember, the Holohoax lie never even started to gather steam until the 1970's.
Arnold clearly grew up free of the anti Hitler propaganda that brainwashes modern day western people.
According to documents obtained in 2003 from the Austrian State Archives by the Los Angeles Times, which was after the expiration of a 30-year seal of his records under Austrian privacy law, Gustav Schwarzenegger voluntarily applied to join the Nazi Party on 1 March 1938, two weeks before the country was annexed.
Austria became part of the German Reichthrough the Anschluss on 12 March 1938.A separate record obtained by the Wiesenthal Center indicates he sought membership before the annexation but was only accepted in January, 1941. He also applied to become a member of the Sturmabteilung (SA), theNSDAP's paramilitary wing, on 1 May 1939, the year after the annexation of Austria, at a time when SA membership was declining.
The SA had 900,000 members in 1940, down from 4.2 million in 1934. This decline in SA membership was the result of The Night of the Long Knives which was a political purge carried out by Hitler against the SA which was seen as too radical and too powerful by senior military and industrial leaders within Nazi Germany.
Schwarzenegger had served in the Austrian Army from 1930 to 1937, achieving the rank of section commander and in 1937 he became a police officer. After enlisting in the Wehrmachtin November 1939, he was a Hauptfeldwebel (Master Sergeant) of the Feldgendarmerie, which were military police units.
He served in Poland, France, Belgium, Ukraine, Lithuania andRussia. His unit was Feldgendarmerie-Abteilung 521 (mot.), which was part of Panzer Group 4. Wounded in action in Russia on 22 August 1942, he had the Iron Cross First and Second Classes for bravery, the Eastern Front Medal or the Wound Badge.
Schwarzenegger appears to have received much medical attention. Initially, he was treated in the military hospital inŁódź, but according to the records he also suffered recurring bouts of malaria, which led to his discharge in February, 1944. Considered unfit for active duty, he returned to Graz, Austria, where he was assigned to work as a postal inspector.