Volume
Two: The National Socialist
Movement
CHAPTER
1
PHILOSOPHY
AND PARTY
ON
FEBRUARY 24, 1920, the first great public demonstration of our
young movement took place. In the Festsaal of the Munich Hofbräuhaus
the twenty-five theses of the new party's program were submitted
to a crowd of almost two thousand and every single point was
accepted amid jubilant approval.
With
this the first guiding principles and directives were issued
for a struggle which was to do away with a veritable mass of
old traditional conceptions and opinions and with unclear, yes,
harmful, aims. Into the rotten and cowardly bourgeois world
and into the triumphant march of the Marxist wave of conquest
a new power phenomenon was entering, which at the eleventh hour
would halt the chariot of doom.
It
was self-evident that the new movement could hope to achieve
the necessary importance and the required strength for this
gigantic struggle only if it succeeded from the very first day
in arousing in the hearts of its supporters the holy conviction
that with it political life was to be given, not to a new election
slogan, but to a new philosophy of fundamental significance.
We
must bear in mind from what wretched viewpoints so-called 'party
programs' are normally patched together and from time to
time refurbished or remodeled. We must submit the driving motives
particularly of these bourgeois 'program-commissions'
to our magnifying glass, in order to achieve the necessary understanding
for the evaluation of these programmatical monstrosities.
It
is always one sole concern which impels men to set up new programs
or to change existing ones: concern for the next election. As
soon as it dawns on these parliamentary 'jugglers' that the
beloved people are again revolting and would like to slip out
of the harness of the old party cart, they begin to repaint
the shafts. Then come the stargazers and party astrologers,
the so-called 'experienced," shrewd' men, old parliamentarians
as a rule, who in their 'rich period of apprenticeship' can
recall analogous cases when the patience of the masses had burst,
and who now sense that something similar is again menacingly
close. And so they take up the old prescriptions, form a 'commission,'
go about listening to the voice of the beloved people, sniff
at the products of the press, and thus slowly scent what the
dear broad masses would like to have, what they detest and what
they hope for. Every professional group, even every class of
employees, is studied with the greatest precision and their
most secret wishes investigated. Even the 'bad slogans' of the
dangerous opposition then suddenly become ripe for examination,
and, not seldom to the greatest amazement of their original
inventors and disseminators, turn up, quite innocently and naturally,
in the old parties' treasury of knowledge.
And
so the commissions come together and 'revise' the old program
and frame a new one (and in so doing the gentlemen change their
convictions as a soldier in the field changes his shirt, which
is when the old one is full of lice!), in which everybody gets
his share. The peasant gets protection for his agriculture,
the industrialist protection for his product, the consumer protection
for his purchase, the teachers' salaries are raised, the civil
servants' pensions are improved, widows and orphans are to be
taken care of most liberally by the state, trade is promoted,
tariffs are to be reduced, and taxes are pretty much, if not
altogether, done away with. Occasionally it transpires that
some group has been forgotten after all, or that some demand
circulating among the people has not been heard of. Then anything
there is room for is patched in with the greatest haste, until
the framers can hope with a clear conscience that the army of
run-of-the-mill petty bourgeois with their women have been pacified
and are simply delighted. Thus inwardly armed with confidence
in God and the unshakable stupidity of the voting citizenry,
the politicians can begin the fight for the 'remaking' of the
Reich as they call it.
Then,
when election day is past and the parliamentarians have held
their last mass meeting in five years, to turn from the training
of the plebs to their higher and more agreeable tasks, the program
commission again dissolves and the fight for the remodeling
of things again takes the form of a struggle for daily bread:
which in parliament is known as attendance fees.
Every
morning Mr. People's deputy betakes himself to the exalted House,
and even if he doesn't go in all the way, he at least goes as
far as the anteroom where the attendance lists are kept. Aggressively
serving the people, he there enters his name and as well-deserved
reward accepts a small remuneration for these continuous and
exhausting exertions.
After
four years, or otherwise during critical weeks when the dissolution
of the parliamentary bodies begins to loom closer and closer,
an unconquerable urge suddenly comes over the gentlemen. Just
as a caterpillar cannot help turning into a butterfly, these
parliamentary larvae leave their parliamentary cocoons and,
endowed with wings, fly out among the beloved people. Again
they talk to their voters, speak of the enormous work they have
done and the malignant stubbornness of their opponents, but
the incomprehensible masses, instead of gratefully applauding,
sometimes hurl vulgar, even bitter, epithets at their heads.
If this ingratitude on the part of the people rises to a certain
degree, only a single means can help: the party's sheen must
be brushed off, the program needs improvement, the commission
comes back to life, and the swindle begins again from the beginning.
In view of the granite stupidity of our humanity, we have no
need to be surprised at the outcome. Led by their press and
dazzled by a new and alluring program, the 'bourgeois' as well
as the 'proletarian' voting cattle return to the common stable
and again vote for their old misleaders.
Thus,
the man of the people and the candidate of the working classes
turns himself back into the parliamentary caterpillar and again
fattens on the foliage of state life, and again after four years
turns back into a gleaming butterfly.
There
is scarcely anything more depressing than to observe this whole
process in the light of sober reality, to be obliged to witness
this constantly repeated deception.
From
such spiritual soil the bourgeois camp, you may be assured,
cannot draw the strength to carry on the struggle with the organized
power of Marxism.
And
of this the gentlemen never think seriously. In view of all
the admitted narrow-mindedness and mental inferiority of these
parliamentary medicine-men of the white race, they themselves
cannot seriously imagine that by way of Western democracy they
can fight against a doctrine for which democracy, along with
everything connected with it, is at best a means used to paralyze
the adversary and to create a free path for its own activity.
Though at present a part of the Marxists shrewdly try to pretend
that they are inseparably linked with the principles of democracy,
do not forget if you please that in the critical hour these
gentlemen didn't care a damn about a majority decision in the
Western-democratic sense! This was in the days when the bourgeois
parliamentarians saw the security of the Reich guaranteed by
the monumental small-mindedness of a superior number, while
the Marxists, with a band of bums, deserters, party bosses,
and Jewish journalists, abruptly seized power, thus giving democracy
a resounding slap in the face. So it really takes the credulous
mind of one of these parliamentary medicine-men of bourgeois
democracy to imagine that now or in the future the brutal determination
of those interested in and supporting that world plague could
be exorcised merely by the magic formulas of a Western parliamentarianism.
The
Marxists will march with democracy until they succeed in indirectly
obtaining for their criminal aims the support of even the national
intellectual world, destined by them for extermination. If today
they came to the conviction that from the witches' cauldron
of our parliamentary democracy a majority could be brewed, which
- and even if only on the basis of its legislating majority
- would seriously attack Marxism, the parliamentary jugglery
would come to an end at once. The banner-bearers of the Red
International would then, instead of addressing an appeal to
the democratic conscience, emit a fiery call to the proletarian
masses, and their struggle at one stroke would be removed from
the stuffy air of our parliamentary meeting halls to the factories
and the streets. Democracy would be done for immediately; what
the mental dexterity of those people's apostles in the parliaments
had failed to do, the crowbar and sledgehammer of incited proletarian
masses would instantly succeed in doing, as in the fall of 1918:
they would drive it home to the bourgeois world how insane it
is to imagine that they can oppose Jewish world domination with
the methods of Western democracy.
As
I have said, it requires a credulous mind to bind oneself, in
facing such a player, by rules which for him are only good for
bluff or his own profit, and are thrown overboard as soon as
they cease to be to his advantage.
Since
with all parties of a so-called bourgeois orientation in reality
the whole political struggle actually consists in nothing but
a mad rush for seats in parliament, in which convictions and
principles are thrown overboard like sand ballast whenever it
seems expedient, their programs are naturally tuned accordingly
and - inversely, to be sure - their forces also measured by
the same standard. They lack that great magnetic attraction
which alone the masses always follow under the compelling impact
of towering great ideas, the persuasive force of absolute belief
in them, coupled with a fanatical courage to fight for them.
At
a time when one side, armed with all the weapons of a philosophy,
a thousand times criminal though it may be, sets out to storm
an existing order, the other side, now and forever can offer
resistance only if it clads itself in the forms of a new faith,
in our case a political one, and for a weak-kneed, cowardly
defensive substitutes the battle-cry of courageous and brutal
attack. And so, if today our movement gets the witty reproach
that it is working toward a 'revolution,' especially
from the so-called national bourgeois ministers, say of the
Bavarian Center' the only answer we can give one of political
twerps is this: Yes, indeed' we are trying to make up for what
you in your criminal stupidity failed to do. By the principles
of your parliamentary cattle-trading, you helped to drag the
nation into the abyss; but we, in the form of attack and by
setting up a new philosophy of life and by fanatically and indomitably
defending its principles, shall build for our people the steps
on which it will some day climb back into the temple of freedom.
And
so, in the founding period of our movement, our first concern
had always to be directed toward preventing the host of warriors
for an exalted conviction from becoming a mere club for the
advancement of parliamentary interests.
The
first precautionary measure was the creation of a program which
aimed at a development which by its very inner greatness seemed
apt to scare away the small and feeble spirits of our present
party politicians.
How
correct was our conception of the necessity of programmatic
aims of the sharpest stamp could be seen most clearly from those
catastrophic weaknesses which finally led to the collapse of
Germany.
From
the realization of these weaknesses a new state conception,
which in itself in turn is an essential ingredient of a new
world conception, would inevitably take form.
*...............*...............*
In
the first volume I have dealt with the word 'folkish,' in so
far as I was forced to establish that this term seems inadequately
defined to permit the formation of a solid fighting community.
All sorts of people, with a yawning gulf between everything
essential in their opinions, are running around today under
the blanket term 'folkish.' Therefore, before I proceed to the
tasks and aims of the National Socialist German Workers' Party,
I should like to give a clarification of the concept 'folkish,'
as well as its relation to the party movement.
The
concept 'folkish' seems as vaguely defined, open to as
many interpretations and as unlimited in practical application
as, for instance, the word 'religious,' and it is very hard
to conceive of anything absolutely precise under this designation,
either in the sense of intellectual comprehension or of practical
effects. The designation 'religious' only becomes tangibly conceivable
in the moment when it becomes connected with a definitely outlined
form of its practice. It is a very lovely statement and usually
apt, to describe a man's nature as 'profoundly religious.' Perhaps
there are a few people who feel satisfied by such a very general
description, to whom it can even convey a definite, more or
less sharp, picture of that soul-state. But, since the great
masses consist neither of philosophers nor of saints, such a
very general religious idea will as a rule mean to the individual
only the liberation of his individual thought and action, without,
how ever, leading to that efficacy which arises from religious
inner longing in the moment when, from the purely metaphysical
infinite world of ideas, a clearly delimited faith forms. Assuredly,
this is not the end in itself, but only a means to the end;
yet it is the indispensably necessary means which alone makes
possible the achievement of the end. This end, however, is not
only ideal, but in the last analysis also eminently practical.
And in general we must clearly acknowledge the fact that the
highest ideals always correspond to a deep vital necessity,
just as the nobility of the most exalted beauty lies in the
last analysis only in what is logically most expedient.
By
helping to raise man above the level of bestial vegetation,
faith contributes in reality to the securing and safeguarding
of his existence. Take away from present-day mankind its education-based,
religious-dogmatic principles - or, practically speaking, ethical-moral
principles - by abolishing this religious education, but without
replacing it by an equivalent, and the result will be a grave
shock to the foundations of their existence. We may therefore
state that not only does man live in order to serve higher ideals,
but that, conversely, these higher ideals also provide the premise
for his existence. Thus the circle closes.
Of
course, even the general designation 'religious' includes various
basic ideas or convictions, for example, the indestructibility
of the soul, the eternity of its existence, the existence of
a higher being, etc. But all these ideas, regardless how convincing
they may be for the individual, are submitted to the critical
examination of this individual and hence to a fluctuating affirmation
or negation until emotional divination or knowledge assumes
the binding force of apodictic faith. This, above all, is the
fighting factor which makes a breach and opens the way for the
recognition of basic religious views.
Without
clearly delimited faith, religiosity with its unclarity and
multiplicity of form would not only be worthless for human life,
but would probably contribute to general disintegration.
The
situation with the term 'folkish' is similar to that with the
term 'religious.' In it, too, there lie various basic realizations.
Though of eminent importance, they are, however, so unclearly
defined in form that they rise above the value of a more or
less acceptable opinion only if they are fitted into the framework
of a political party as basic elements. For the realization
of philosophical ideals and of the demands derived from them
no more occurs through men's pure feeling or inner will in themselves
than the achievement of freedom through the general longing
for it. No, only when the ideal urge for independence gets a
fighting organization in the form of military instruments of
power can the pressing desire of a people be transformed into
glorious reality.
Every
philosophy of life, even if it is a thousand times correct and
of highest benefit to humanity, will remain without significance
for the practical shaping of a people's life, as long as its
principles have not become the banner of a fighting movement
which for its part in turn will be a party as long as its activity
has not found completion in the victory of its ideas and its
party dogmas have not become the new state principles of a people's
community.
But
if a spiritual conception of a general nature is to serve as
a foundation for a future development, the first presupposition
is to obtain unconditional clarity with regard to the nature,
essence, and scope of this conception, since only on such a
basis can a movement be formed which by the inner homogeneity
of its convictions can develop the necessary force for struggle.
From general ideas a political program must be stamped, from
a general philosophy of life a definite political faith. The
latter, since its goal must be practically attainable, will
not only have to serve the idea in itself, but will also have
to take into consideration the means of struggle which are available
and must be used for the achievement of this idea. The abstractly
correct spiritual conception, which the theoretician has to
proclaim, must be coupled with the practical knowledge of the
politician. And so an eternal ideal, serving as the guiding
star of mankind, must unfortunately resign itself to taking
the weaknesses of this mankind into consideration, if it wants
to avoid shipwreck at the very outset on the shoals of general
human inadequacy. To draw from the realm of the eternally true
and ideal that which is humanly possible for small mortals,
and make it take form, the search after truth be coupled with
knowledge of the people's psyche.
This
transformation of a general, philosophical, ideal conception
of the highest truth into a definitely delimited, tightly organized
political community of faith and struggle, unified in spirit
and will, is the most significant achievement, since on its
happy solution alone the possibility of the victory of an idea
depends. From the army of often millions of men, who as individuals
more or less clearly and definitely sense these truths, and
in part perhaps comprehend them, one man must step forward who
with apodictic force will form granite principles from the wavering
idea-world of the broad masses and take up the struggle for
their sole correctness, until from the shifting waves of a free
thought-world there will arise a brazen cliff of solid unity
in faith and will.
The
general right for such an activity is based on necessity, the
personal right on success.
*...............*...............*
If
from the word 'folkish' we try to peel out the innermost kernel
of meaning, we arrive at the following:
Our
present political world view, current in Germany, is based in
general on the idea that creative, culture-creating force must
indeed be attributed to the state, but that it has nothing to
do with racial considerations, but is rather a product of economic
necessities, or, at best, the natural result of a political
urge for power. This underlying view, if logically developed,
leads not only to a mistaken conception of basic racial forces,
but also to an underestimation of the individual. For a denial
of the difference between the various races with regard to their
general culture-creating forces must necessarily extend this
greatest of all errors to the judgment of the individual. The
assumption of the equality of the races then becomes a basis
for a similar way of viewing peoples and finally individual
men. And hence international Marxism itself is only the transference,
by the Jew, Karl Marx, of a philosophical attitude and conception,
which had actually long been in existence, into the form of
a definite political creed. Without the subsoil of such generally
existing poisoning, the amazing success of this doctrine would
never have been possible. Actually Karl Marx was only the one
among millions who, with the sure eye of the prophet, recognized
in the morass of a slowly decomposing world the most essential
poisons, extracted them, and, like a wizard, prepared them into
a concentrated solution for the swifter annihilation of the
independent existence of free nations on this earth. And all
this in the service of his race.
His
Marxist doctrine is a brief spiritual extract of the philosophy
of life that is generally current today. And for this reason
alone any struggle of our so-called bourgeois world against
it is impossible, absurd in fact, since this bourgeois world
is also essentially infected by these poisons, and worships
a view of life which in general is distinguished from the Marxists
only by degrees and personalities. The bourgeois world is Marxist,
but believes in the possibility of the rule of certain groups
of men (bourgeoisie), while Marxism itself systematically plans
to hand the world over to the Jews.
In
opposition to this, the folkish philosophy finds the importance
of mankind in its basic racial elements. In the state it sees
on principle only a means to an end and construes its end as
the preservation of the racial existence of man. Thus, it by
no means believes in an equality of the races, but along with
their difference it recognizes their higher or lesser value
and feels itself obligated, through this knowledge, to promote
the victory of the better and stronger, and demand the subordination
of the inferior and weaker in accordance with the eternal will
that dominates this universe. Thus, in principle, it serves
the basic aristocratic idea of Nature and believes in the validity
of this law down to the last individual. It sees not only the
different value of the races, but also the different value of
individuals. From the mass it extracts the importance of the
individual personality, and thus, in contrast to disorganizing
Marxism, it has an organizing effect. It believes in the necessity
of an idealization of humanity, in which alone it sees the premise
for the existence of humanity. But it cannot grant the right
to existence even to an ethical idea if this idea represents
a danger for the racial life of the bearers of a higher ethics;
for in a bastardized and niggerized world all the concepts of
the humanly beautiful and sublime, as well as all ideas of an
idealized future of our humanity, would be lost forever.
Human
culture and civilization on this continent are inseparably bound
up with the presence of the Aryan. If he dies out or declines,
the dark veils of an age without culture will again descend
on this globe.
The
undermining of the existence of human culture by the destruction
of its bearer seems in the eyes of a folkish philosophy the
most execrable crime. Anyone who dares to lay hands on the highest
image of the Lord commits sacrilege against the benevolent creator
of this miracle and contributes to the expulsion from paradise.
And
so the folkish philosophy of life corresponds to the innermost
will of Nature, since it restores that free play of forces which
must lead to a continuous mutual higher breeding, until at last
the best of humanity, having achieved possession of this earth,
will have a free path for activity in domains which will lie
partly above it and partly outside it.
We
all sense that in the distant future humanity must be faced
by problems which only a highest race, become master people
and supported by the means and possibilities of an entire globe,
will be equipped to overcome.
*..............*...............*
It
is self-evident that so general a statement of the meaningful
content of a folkish philosophy can be interpreted in thousands
of ways. And actually we find hardly a one of our newer political
formations which does not base itself in one way or another
on this world view. And, by its very existence in the face of
the many others, it shows the difference of its conceptions.
And so the Marxist world view, led by a unified top organization,
is opposed by a hodge-podge of views which even as ideas are
not very impressive in face of the solid, hostile front. Victories
are not gained by such feeble weapons! Not until the international
world view - politically led by organized Marxism - is confronted
by a folkish world view, organized and led with equal unity,
will success, supposing the fighting energy to be equal on both
sides, fall to the side of eternal truth.
A
philosophy can only be organizationally comprehended on the
basis of a definite formulation of that philosophy, and what
dogmas represent for religious faith, party principles are for
a political party in the making.
Hence
an instrument must be created for the folkish world view which
enables it to fight, just as the Marxist party organization
creates a free path for internationalism.
This
is the goal pursued by the National Socialist German Workers'
Party.
That
such a party formulation of the folkish concept is the precondition
for the victory of the folkish philosophy of life is proved
most sharply by a fact which is admitted indirectly at least
by the enemies of such a party tie. Those very people who never
weary of emphasizing that the folkish philosophy is not the
'hereditary estate' of an individual, but that it slumbers or
'lives' in the hearts of God knows how many millions, thus demonstrate
the fact that the general existence of such ideas was absolutely
unable to prevent the victory of the hostile world view, classically
represented by a political party. If this were not so, the German
people by this time would have been bound to achieve a gigantic
victory and not be standing at the edge of an abyss. What gave
the international world view success was its representation
by a political party organized into storm troops; what caused
the defeat of the opposite world view was its lack up to now
of a unified body to represent it. Not by unlimited freedom
to interpret a general view, but only in the limited and hence
integrating form of a political organization can a world view
fight and conquer.
Therefore,
I saw my own task especially in extracting those nuclear ideas
from the extensive and unshaped substance of a general world
view and remolding them into more or less dogmatic forms which
in their clear delimitation are adapted for holding solidly
together those men who swear allegiance to them. In other words:
From the basic ideas of a general folkish world conception
the National Socialist German Workers' Party takes over the
essential fundamental traits, and from them, with due consideration
of practical reality, the times, and the available human material
as well as its weaknesses, forms a political creed which, in
turn, by the strict organizational integration of large human
masses thus made possible, creates the precondition for the
victorious struggle of this world view.
........
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