German anti-capitalism (Original Version)
"I could understand everything about it. That they [the workers] were unlucky with their fortune, cursing at destiny which had often stricken them so heavily; that they hated the entrepreneurs who occured to them as heartless executors of their fate; that they railed against the authorities that seemed to have no understanding of their situation; that they were demonstrating against the food prices and gathering in the streets - all of this one could understand regardless of reason. But what had to remain incomprehensible was the boundless hatred they bore towards their own nation, how they dispraised its grandeur, how they contaminated its history and how they dragged Great Men in the mud.
This struggle against the own kind, the own nest, the own homeland, was as senseless as inapprehensible. It was unnatural."
Adolf Hitler: Mein Kampf, 1936:64
This struggle against the own kind, the own nest, the own homeland, was as senseless as inapprehensible. It was unnatural."
Adolf Hitler: Mein Kampf, 1936:64
Daniel Kulla - Aug 9, 01:24
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