Lies being taught;
Mein Kampf is unintelligible ravings of a
maniac.
Now the Truth; Read and know. VOLUME II: THE NATIONAL
SOCIALIST MOVEMENT CHAPTER I; WELTANSCHAUUNG AND PARTY
“On February 24th, 1920, the first great mass
meeting under the auspices of the new movement took place. In the Banquet Hall
of the Hofbräuhaus in Munich the twenty-five theses which constituted the
programme of our new party were expounded to an audience of nearly two thousand
people and each thesis was enthusiastically received.
Thus we brought to the knowledge of the
public those first principles and lines of action along which the new struggle
was to be conducted for the abolition of a confused mass of obsolete ideas and
opinions which had obscure and often pernicious tendencies. A new force was to
make its appearance among the timid and feckless bourgeoisie. This force was destined
to impede the triumphant advance of the Marxists and bring the Chariot of Fate
to a standstill just as it seemed about to reach its goal.
It was evident that this new movement could
gain the public significance and support which are necessary pre-requisites in
such a gigantic struggle only if it succeeded from the very outset in awakening
a sacrosanct conviction in the hearts of its followers, that here it was not a
case of introducing a new electoral slogan into the political field but that an
entirely new WELTANSCHAUUNG, which was of a radical significance, had to be
promoted.
One must try to recall the miserable jumble
of opinions that used to be arrayed side by side to form the usual Party
Programme, as it was called, and one must remember how these opinions used to
be brushed up or dressed in a new form from time to time. If we would properly understand
these programmatic monstrosities we must carefully investigate the motives
which inspired the average bourgeois 'programme committee'.
Those people are always influenced by one and
the same preoccupation when they introduce something new into their programme
or modify something already contained in it. That preoccupation is directed towards
the results of the next election. The moment these artists in parliamentary
government have the first glimmering of a suspicion that their darling public
may be ready to kick up its heels and escape from the harness of the old party
wagon they begin to paint the shafts with new colours. On such occasions the
party astrologists and horoscope readers, the so-called 'experienced men' and
'experts', come forward. For the most part they are old parliamentary hands
whose political schooling has furnished them with ample experience. They can
remember former occasions when the masses showed signs of losing patience and they
now diagnose the menace of a similar situation arising. Resorting to their old
prescription, they form a 'committee'. They go around among the darling public
and listen to what is being said. They dip their noses into the newspapers and
gradually begin to scent what it is that their darlings, the broad masses, are
wishing for, what they reject and what they are hoping for. The groups that
belong to each trade or business, and even office employees, are carefully
studied and their innermost desires are investigated. The
'malicious slogans' of the opposition from which danger is threatened are now
suddenly looked upon as worthy of reconsideration, and it often happens that
these slogans, to the great astonishment of those who originally coined and
circulated them, now appear to be quite harmless and indeed are to be found
among the dogmas of the old parties.
So the committees meet to revise the old
programme and draw up a new one.
For these people change their convictions
just as the soldier changes his shirt in war--when the old one is bug-eaten. In
the new programme everyone gets everything he wants. The farmer is assured that
the interests of agriculture will be safeguarded. The industrialist is assured
of protection for his products. The consumer is assured that his interests will
be protected in the market prices. Teachers are given higher salaries and civil
servants will have better pensions. Widows and orphans will receive generous
assistance from the State. Trade will be promoted. The tariff will be lowered
and even the taxes, though they cannot be entirely abolished, will be almost
abolished. It sometimes happens that one section of the public is forgotten or that
one of the demands mooted among the public has not reached the ears of the
party. This is also hurriedly patched on to the whole, should there be any space
available for it: until finally it is felt that there are good grounds for
hoping that the whole normal host of philistines, including their wives, will
have their anxieties laid to rest and will beam with satisfaction once again.
And so, internally armed with faith in the goodness of God and the impenetrable
stupidity of the electorate, the struggle for what is called 'the
reconstruction of the REICH' can now begin.
When the election day is over and the
parliamentarians have held their last public meeting for the next five years,
when they can leave their job of getting the populace to toe the line and can
now devote themselves to higher and more pleasing tasks--then the programme committee
is dissolved and the struggle for the progressive reorganization of public
affairs becomes once again a business of earning one's daily bread, which for
the parliamentarians means merely the attendance that is required in order to
be able to draw their daily remunerations. Morning after morning the honourable
deputy wends his way to the House, and though he may not enter the Chamber
itself he gets at least as far as the front hall, where he will find the
register on which the names of the deputies in attendance have to be inscribed.
As a part of his onerous service to his constituents he enters his name, and in
return receives a small indemnity as a well-earned reward for his unceasing and
exhausting labours.
When four years have passed, or in the
meantime if there should be some critical weeks during which the parliamentary
corporations have to face the danger of being dissolved, these honourable
gentlemen become suddenly seized by an irresistible desire to act. Just as the
grub-worm cannot help growing into a cock-chafer, these parliamentarian worms leave
the great House of Puppets and flutter on new wings out among the beloved
public. They address the electors once again, give an account of the enormous labours
they have accomplished and emphasize the malicious obstinacy of their
opponents. They do not always meet with grateful applause; for occasionally the
unintelligent masses throw rude and unfriendly remarks in their faces. When
this spirit of public ingratitude reaches a certain pitch there is only one way
of saving the situation. The prestige of the party must be burnished up again.
The programme has to be amended. The committee is called into existence once again.
And the swindle begins anew. Once we understand the impenetrable stupidity of
our public we cannot be surprised that such tactics turn out successful. Led by
the Press and blinded once again by the alluring appearance of the new
programme, the bourgeois as well as the proletarian herds of voters faithfully
return to the common stall and re-elect their old deceivers. The 'people's man'
and labour candidate now change back again into the
parliamentarian grub and become fat and rotund as they batten on the leaves
that grow on the tree of public life--to be retransformed into the glittering
butterfly after another four years have passed.
Scarcely anything else can be so depressing
as to watch this process in sober reality and to be the eyewitness of this
repeatedly recurring fraud. On a spiritual training ground of that kind it is
not possible for the bourgeois forces to develop the strength which is
necessary to carry on the fight against the organized might of Marxism. Indeed
they have never seriously thought of doing so. Though these parliamentary quacks
who represent the white race are generally recognized as persons of quite
inferior mental capacity, they are shrewd enough to know that they could not
seriously entertain the hope of being able to use the weapon of Western
Democracy to fight a doctrine for the advance of which Western Democracy, with
all its accessories, is employed as a means to an end. Democracy is exploited
by the Marxists for the purpose of paralysing their opponents and gaining for
themselves a free hand to put their own methods into action. When certain
groups of Marxists use all their ingenuity for the time being to make it be
believed that they are inseparably attached to the principles of democracy, it
may be well to recall the fact that when critical occasions arose these same
gentlemen snapped their fingers at the principle of decision by majority vote,
as that principle is understood by Western Democracy. Such was the case in those
days when the bourgeois parliamentarians, in their monumental shortsightedness,
believed that the security of the REICH was guaranteed because it had an
overwhelming numerical majority in its favour, and the Marxists did not
hesitate suddenly to grasp supreme power in their own hands, backed by a mob of
loafers, deserters, political place-hunters and Jewish dilettanti. That was a blow in the
face for that democracy in which so many parliamentarians believed. Only those
credulous parliamentary wizards who represented bourgeois democracy could have believed
that the brutal determination of those whose interest it is to spread the
Marxist world-pest, of which they are the carriers, could for a moment, now or
in the future, be held in check by the magical formulas of Western
Parliamentarianism. Marxism will march shoulder to shoulder with democracy
until it succeeds indirectly in securing for its own criminal purposes even the
support of those whose minds are nationally orientated and whom Marxism strives
to exterminate. But if the Marxists should one day come to believe that there
was a danger that from this witch's cauldron of our parliamentary democracy a
majority vote might be concocted, which by reason of its numerical majority
would be empowered to enact legislation and might use that power seriously to
combat Marxism, then the whole parliamentarian hocus-pocus would be at an end. Instead
of appealing to the democratic conscience, the standard bearers of the Red
International would immediately send forth a furious rallying-cry among the
proletarian masses and the ensuing fight would not take place in the sedate
atmosphere of Parliament but in the factories and the streets. Then democracy
would be annihilated forthwith. And what the intellectual prowess of the
apostles who represented the people in Parliament had
failed to accomplish would now be successfully carried out by the crow-bar and
the sledge-hammer of the exasperated proletarian masses--just as in the autumn
of 1918. At a blow they would awaken the bourgeois world to see the madness of
thinking that the Jewish drive towards world-conquest can be effectually
opposed by means of Western Democracy.
As I have said, only a very credulous soul
could think of binding himself to observe the rules of the game when he has to
face a player for whom those rules are nothing but a mere bluff or a means of
serving his own interests, which means he will discard them when they prove no longer
useful for his purpose.
All the parties that profess so-called
bourgeois principles look upon political life as in reality a struggle for
seats in Parliament. The moment their principles and convictions are of no
further use in that struggle they are thrown overboard, as if they were sand
ballast. And the programmes are constructed in such a way that they can be dealt
with in like manner. But such practice has a correspondingly weakening effect on
the strength of those parties. They lack the great magnetic force which alone
attracts the broad masses; for these masses always respond to the compelling
force which emanates from absolute faith in the ideas put forward, combined
with an indomitable zest to fight for and defend them.
At a time in which the one side, armed with
all the fighting power that springs from a systematic conception of life--even
though it be criminal in a thousand ways--makes an attack against the
established order the other side will be able to resist when it draws its
strength from a new faith, which in our case is a political faith. This faith
must supersede the weak and cowardly command to defend. In its stead we must
raise the battle-cry of a courageous and ruthless attack. Our present movement
is accused, especially by the so-called national bourgeois cabinet ministers--the
Bavarian representatives of the Center, for example—of heading towards a
revolution. We have one answer to give to those political pigmies. We say to
them: We are trying to make up for that which you, in your criminal stupidity,
have failed to carry out. By your parliamentarian jobbing you have helped to
drag the nation into ruin. But we, by our aggressive policy, are setting up a
new WELTANSCHAUUNG which we shall defend with indomitable devotion. Thus we are
building the steps on which our nation once again may ascend to the temple of freedom.
And so during the first stages of founding
our movement we had to take special care that our militant group which fought
for the establishment of a new and exalted political faith should not
degenerate into a society for the promotion of parliamentarian interests.
The first preventive measure was to lay down
a programme which of itself would tend towards developing a certain moral
greatness that would scare away all the petty and weakling spirits who make up
the bulk of our present party politicians.
Those fatal defects which finally led to
Germany's downfall afford the clearest proof of how right we were in
considering it absolutely necessary to set up programmatic aims which were
sharply and distinctly defined.
Because we recognized the defects above
mentioned, we realized that a new conception of the State had to be formed,
which in itself became a part of our new conception of life in general.
In the first volume of this book I have
already dealt with the term VÖLKISCH, and I said then that this term has not a
sufficiently precise meaning to furnish the kernel around which a closely
consolidated militant community could be formed. All kinds of people, with all
kinds of divergent opinions, are parading about at the present moment under the
device VÖLKISCH on their banners. Before I come to deal with the purposes and
aims of the National Socialist Labour Party I want to establish a clear
understanding of what is meant by the concept VÖLKISCH and herewith explain its
relation to our party movement. The word VÖLKISCH does not express any clearly
specified idea. It may be interpreted in several ways and in practical
application it is just as general as the word 'religious', for instance. It is
difficult to attach any precise meaning to this latter word, either as a
theoretical concept or as a guiding principle in practical life. The word
'religious' acquires a precise meaning only when it is associated with a
distinct and definite form through which the concept is put into practice. To
say that a person is 'deeply religious' may be very fine phraseology; but, generally
speaking, it tells us little or nothing. There may be some few people who are
content with such a vague description and there may even be some to whom the
word conveys a more or less definite picture of the inner quality of a person
thus described. But, since the masses of the people are not composed of
philosophers or saints, such a vague religious idea will mean for them nothing
else than to justify each individual in thinking and acting according to his
own bent. It will not lead to that practical faith into which the inner
religious yearning is transformed only when it leaves the sphere of general
metaphysical ideas and is moulded to a definite dogmatic belief. Such a belief
is certainly not an end in itself, but the means to an end. Yet it is a means
without which the end could never be reached at all. This end, however, is not merely
something ideal; for at the bottom it is eminently practical. We must always
bear in mind the fact that, generally speaking, the highest ideals are always
the outcome of some profound vital need, just as the most sublime beauty owes
its nobility of shape, in the last analysis, to the fact that the most
beautiful form is the form that is best suited to the purpose it is meant to
serve.”
Adolf Hitler.
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