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Mein Kampf.
“In
political matters feeling often decides more correctly than
reason.”1a
“
. . . all effective propaganda must be limited to
a very few points and must harp on these in slogans
until the last member of the public understands what you want him
to understand by your slogan.” 1b
LE BON
GHENT
CHOMSKY
“In the
night of October 13, the English gas attack on the
southern front before Ypres burst loose; they used yellow-cross
gas, whose effects were still unknown to us as far as
personal experience was concerned. In this same night I myself was
to become acquainted with it. . . a
number of us passed out . . . A few
hours later, my eyes had turned into glowing coals
. . . the greatest villainy of the
century.”1c
“As I
listened to Gottfried Feder’s first lecture about the ‘breaking
of interest slavery,’ I knew at once that this was a
theoretical truth which would inevitably be of immense
importance for the future of the German people. The sharp
separation of stock exchange capital from the
national economy offered the possibility of opposing
the internationalization of the German economy without
at the same time menacing the foundations of an independent
national self-maintenance by a struggle against all capital.
The development of Germany was much too clear in my eyes for me
not to know that the hardest battle would have to be fought,
not against hostile nations, but against international capital.”1d
HERZL
POUND
“A
grave economic symptom of decay was the slow disappearance of the
right of private property, and the gradual transference of
the entire economy to the ownership of stock companies.
Now for the first time labor had sunk to the level of an object of
speculation for unscrupulous Jewish business men . . .
The stock exchange began to triumph and prepared slowly but
surely to take the life of the nation into its guardianship and
control.”1e*
TACITUS
“
. . . [T]he
Jew is not the attacked but the attacker
. . ."1f
TACITUS
HERZL
CHOMSKY
“
. . . [T]he
Jew and his newspapers always lie
. . ."1g
TACITUS
GHENT
EDWARD AYOUB'S CRITIQUE OF
HITLER'S POLITICAL
PHILOSOPHY
COMING SOON
For an understanding of
the nature and roots of Judeophobia, see Schafer.
For an analysis of the "us" vs. "them" complex, see
Pagels. For a
general investigation of Anti-Semitism, see
Sartre. For
philosophical utterances on Judaism, see
Buber. For a Jewish
human rights perspective, see
The
Simon Wiesenthal Center. For a comparative analysis of major
religions, see
Religion.
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Adolf Hitler.
Mein Kampf. Translated by
Ralph Manheim. Introduction by Konrad Heiden. Boston, MA: The
Houghton Mifflin Company, 1943, 1971. Verlag Frz. Eher Nachf, G.M.B.H.,
1925 and 1927.
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Hitler: Speeches and Proclamations,
1932-1945--The Chronicle of a Dictatorship (4
Volume Set).
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Adolf Hitler.
Hitler: Speeches and Proclamations, 1932-1945--The Chronicle
of a Dictatorship (4 Volume Set).
Max Domarus. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, Inc.,
2004.
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*
Italics in the original.
1
Adolf Hitler.
Mein Kampf. Translated by
Ralph Manheim. Introduction by Konrad Heiden. Boston, MA: The
Houghton Mifflin Company, 1943, 1971. Verlag Frz. Eher Nachf, G.M.B.H.,
1925 and 1927.
VOLUME ONE: A RECKONING
a V.
The World War, at
173.
b VI. War Propaganda, at 181.
c VII. The Revolution, at 201-202.
d VIII. The Beginning of My Political Activity, at 213.
e X. Causes of the Collapse, at 235.
f XI. Nation and Race, at 324.
g XII. The First Period of Development of the
National Socialist German Workers' Party, at 351.
MK-BOOKS-HITLER-20041226.
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