Lies being taught;
Mein Kampf is unintelligible ravings of a
maniac.
Now the Truth; CHAPTER VII Revolution;
Enemy propaganda and while Germany was at war
Jews back home take over everything, industry, finance and Jobs;
Effect of enemy war propaganda;
In 1915 the enemy started his propaganda
among our soldiers. From 1916 onwards it steadily became more intensive, and at
the beginning of 1918 it had swollen into a storm flood. One could now judge
the effects of this proselytizing movement step by step. Gradually our soldiers
began to think just in the way the enemy wished them to think. On the German
side there was no counter-propaganda.
In the midsummer of 1918, after the
evacuation of the southern bank of the hearne, the German Press adopted a
policy which was so woefully inopportune, and even criminally stupid, that I
used to ask myself a question which made me more and more furious day after
day: Is it really true that we have nobody who will dare to put an end to this
process of spiritual sabotage which is being carried on among our heroic
troops?
What happened in France during those days of
1914, when our armies invaded that country and were marching in triumph from
one victory to another? What happened in Italy when their armies collapsed on
the Isonzo front? What happened in France again during the spring of 1918, when
German divisions took the main French positions by storm and heavy
long-distance artillery bombarded Paris?
In the summer of 1915 the first enemy
leaflets were dropped on our trenches. They all told more or less the same
story, with some variations in the form of it. The story was that distress was
steadily on the increase in Germany; that the War would last indefinitely; that
the prospect of victory for us was becoming fainter day after day; that the
people at home were yearning for peace, but that 'Militarism' and the 'Kaiser'
would not permit it; that the world--which knew this very well--was not waging
war against the German people but only against the man who was exclusively responsible,
the Kaiser; that until this enemy of world-peace was removed there could be no
end to the conflict; but that when the War was over the liberal and democratic
nations would receive the Germans as colleagues in the League for World Peace.
This would be done the moment 'Prussian Militarism' had been finally destroyed.
One feature of this propaganda was very
striking. It was that in sections where Bavarian troops were stationed every
effort was made by the enemy propagandists to stir up feeling against the
Prussians, assuring the soldiers that Prussia and Prussia alone was the guilty
party who was responsible for bringing on and continuing the War, and that
there was no hostility whatsoever towards the Bavarians; but that there could
be no possibility of coming to their assistance so long as they continued to
serve Prussian interests and helped to pull the Prussian chestnuts out of the
fire.
This persistent propaganda began to have a
real influence on our soldiers in 1915. The feeling against Prussia grew quite
noticeable among the Bavarian troops, but those in authority did nothing to
counteract it. This was something more than a mere crime of omission; for
sooner or later not only the Prussians were bound to have to atone severely for
it but the whole German nation and consequently the Bavarians themselves also.
In this direction the enemy propaganda began
to achieve undoubted success from 1916 onwards.
At the end of September 1916 my division was
sent into the Battle of the Somme. For us this was the first of a series of
heavy engagements, and the impression created was that of a veritable inferno,
rather than war. Through weeks of incessant artillery bombardment we stood
firm, at times ceding a little ground but then taking it back again, and never
giving way. On October 7th, 1916, I was wounded but had the luck of being able
to get back to our lines and was then ordered to be sent by ambulance train to
Germany.
Two years had passed since I had left home,
an almost endless period in such circumstances.
I could hardly imagine what Germans looked like without uniforms. What a
change! From the mud of the Somme battlefields to the spotless white beds in
this wonderful building. One hesitated at first before entering them.
The spirit of the army at the front appeared
to be out of place here. For the first time I encountered something which up to
then was unknown at the front: namely, boasting of one's own cowardice. For,
though we certainly heard complaining and grousing at the front, this was never
in the spirit of any agitation to insubordination and certainly not an attempt
to glorify one's fear. No; there at the front a coward was a coward and nothing
else, And the contempt which his weakness aroused in the others was quite
general, just as the real hero was admired all round. But here in hospital the
spirit was quite different in some respects. Loudmouthed agitators were busy
here in heaping ridicule on the good soldier and painting the weak-kneed
poltroon in glorious colours. A couple of miserable human specimens were the
ringleaders in this process of defamation. One of them boasted of having
intentionally injured his hand in barbed-wire entanglements in order to get
sent to hospital. Although his wound was only a slight one, it appeared that he
had been here for a very long time and would be here interminably. Some arrangement
for him seemed to be worked by some sort of swindle, just as he got sent here
in the ambulance train through a swindle. This pestilential specimen actually
had the audacity to parade his knavery as the manifestation of a courage which
was superior to that of the brave soldier who dies a hero's death. There were
many who heard this talk in silence; but there were others who expressed their
assent to what the fellow said.
Personally I was disgusted at the thought
that a seditious agitator of this kind should be allowed to remain in such an
institution. What could be done? The hospital authorities here must have known
who and what he was; and actually they did know. But still they did nothing
about it.
Back Home Jews had taken control of everything.
But in Munich conditions were far worse.
After my discharge from hospital, I was sent to a reserve battalion there. I
felt as in some strange town. Anger, discontent, complaints met one's ears
wherever one went. To a certain extent this was due to the infinitely maladroit
manner in which the soldiers who had returned from the front were treated by
the non-commissioned officers who had never seen a day's active service and who
on that account were partly incapable of adopting the proper attitude towards
the old soldiers. The general spirit was deplorable. The art of shirking was
looked upon as almost a proof of higher intelligence, and devotion to duty was
considered a sign of weakness or bigotry. Government offices were staffed by
Jews. Almost every clerk was a Jew and every Jew was a clerk. I was amazed at
this multitude of combatants who belonged to the chosen people and could not
help comparing it with their slender numbers in the fighting lines.
In the business world the situation was even
worse. Here the Jews had actually become 'indispensable'. Like leeches, they
were slowly sucking the blood from the pores of the national body. By means of
newly floated War Companies an instrument had been discovered whereby all
national trade was throttled so that no business could be carried on freely
Special emphasis was laid on the necessity for unhampered centralization. Hence
as early as 1916-17 practically all production was under the control of Jewish
finance.
But against whom was the anger of the people
directed? It was then that I already saw the fateful day approaching which must
finally bring the DEBACLE, unless timely preventive measures were taken.
While Jewry was busy despoiling the nation
and tightening the screws of its despotism, the work of inciting the people
against the Prussians increased. And just as nothing was done at the front to
put a stop to the venomous propaganda, so here at home no official steps were
taken against it. Nobody seemed capable of understanding that the collapse of
Prussia could never bring about the rise of Bavaria. On the contrary, the
collapse of the one must necessarily drag the other down with it.
This kind of behaviour affected me very
deeply. In it I could see only a clever Jewish trick for diverting public
attention from themselves to others. While Prussians and Bavarians were
squabbling, the Jews were taking away the sustenance of both from under their
very noses. While Prussians were being abused in Bavaria the Jews organized the
revolution and with one stroke smashed both Prussia and Bavaria.
I could not tolerate this execrable
squabbling among people of the same German stock and preferred to be at the
front once again. Therefore, just after my arrival in Munich I reported myself
for service again. At the beginning of March 1917 I rejoined my old regiment at
the front.”
Adolf Hitler;
Kaps
heil hitler
ReplyDeleteI have one question. What was the objective that the ammunition factories went on strike so that Germany to lose world war 1 ??
ReplyDeleteA strong and independent nation is not in the interst of Jewish International bankers. Germany is a strong nation is evident by the fact that since 1950s its balance of payments has always been the highest in the world i.e. its exports far exceeds its imports and remain highest in the world. most of the heavy and sophisticated machines are built in germany. jews wanted to capture and have control on this nation. see history index on how WW1 was started by jews to end monarchy in Austria, Russia, Germany and Hungary.
DeleteHi, why Jews want German to lose world war 1 by going on general strike of all ammunition factories??
ReplyDeleteShort answer; world domination. WW1 ended monarchy in Austria, hungary, germany and Russia and placed these countries in the hands of Jewish international bankers.
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