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Hitler's Rise to Power Is a Warning
Lev Navrozov
Thursday, Aug. 19, 2004
In August 1920, Hitler’s party became known as the National Socialist German Workers' Party. The 84th anniversary of the Nazi Party deserves those observations missing in Western post-World War II histories of Germany of the first half of the 20th century, yet which may be relevant today.

Why and how did Hitler establish dictatorship in a Western democracy and the world’s best-educated country?

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In his 500-page biography of Hitler, “The Psychopathic [!] God [!] Adolf Hitler,” Robert Waite, professor of modern German history at Williams College, explains Hitler’s rise to power: Hitler was psychopathic – to put it simply, insane – but to a majority of the German people he was God because they were also psychopathic. It is not clear how this explains other “right-wing” dictatorships over most of Europe, from Italy and Spain to Hungary and Romania.

In elections to the Reichstag in 1932, Hitler’s party received more votes than any other and hence the greatest number of seats. So Hitler became – legally, constitutionally, democratically – Reichschancellor (prime minister).

But did those who voted for Hitler’s party in 1932 do so because they and Hitler himself were psychopathic?

In 1918 the Communists were so powerful in Germany that it came to be feared that they would seize power, even without the aid of Soviet troops, as they had done in Bavaria, for example. At the same time, under the Treaty of Versailles, Germany was defenseless against Stalin’s invasion.

Why did not Stalin invade Germany? This question is discussed even today, and there is no convincing answer. But if the military experts cannot answer it today, 72 years later, how could those who voted for Hitler’s party in 1932 be sure that Stalin would NOT invade Germany in alliance with the German Communists, who had become Stalinists after Stalin’s advent to power in Soviet Russia?

What awaited the German middle class in Stalin’s Germany? Goebbels showed SOVIET newsreels that eulogized the “liquidation” of 10 million prosperous farmers and uncountable millions of urban “small businessmen.” The German middle class voted for Hitler as its savior from death in Stalin’s “corrective labor camps,” or even before Stalin’s firing squads.

Professor Waite regards the voting for Hitler insane and Hitler himself psychopathic. But those who voted for Hitler regarded him as the only sane German statesman promising and able to abrogate unilaterally the Treaty of Versailles and thus save Germany from Stalin.

Nine years later, they also regarded Hitler’s invasion of Stalin’s Russia as a pre-emptive war. Did not Churchill call for the invasion of Russia in 1918 in order to destroy “the bacillus of Bolshevism”? Surely by 1941 the bacillus had become much stronger and more virile due to Stalin’s growing military might!

When Professor Waite’s volume appeared in its first edition (1977) he did not (want to) know that Stalin’s successors were developing post-nuclear weapons. Or that Mao’s successors would begin to do so in 1986. Professor Waite assumes that he and Americans in general are a normal healthy nation because they have been blind to these dangers, while the Germans in 1932 who feared Stalin’s invasion were pathological.

So, what am I driving at? To prove that those who voted for Hitler in 1932 did the right thing? No! What I want to show is how easily the fear of a danger leads a democracy to dictatorship.

Hitler became the Reichschancellor owing to a democratic vote in a democracy. So far so good. But taking advantage of the power thus gained, he began to demolish democracy until he became the dictator in a dictatorship, just as Stalin in Soviet Russia.

He launched the war against Soviet Russia with a dictator’s boldness. Democracies suffer from willful blindness, passivity, irresolution. But dictatorships suffer from grandiose recklessness. Hitler’s war on Russia was reckless, and after the rout of his troops at Moscow in the winter of 1941-42, he himself privately declared that the war had been lost. So the enormous casualties “at the Russian front” and the hinterland under Allied bombs were to be in vain.

After the defeat of the winter of 1941-42, Hitler decided (correctly) that now his subordinates would begin to betray him to “the Anglo-Saxons.” To prevent this, he resorted to what is known in the criminal world as “the blood bond”: the chieftain of a criminal gang involves members of the gang in a crime so heinous that they cannot expect anything but death sentences, and hence will not denounce their chieftain to the police to save their own skins.

Hitler pretended that he did not even know about the blood bond massacre: the extermination of 12 million civilians, including 6 million Jews.

This was “the biggest crime” in the civilian history of the West and can be compared only with the extermination by the Mongols of all Tatar males except children in order to produce a Mongol-Tatar nation. That is, when Hitler lost the war, Germany, the country that gave the world most of its great music, had been disgraced as no Western country ever before.

East Germany, with part of Berlin, became Soviet: Hitler had promised to defend Germany against Stalin, but Stalin came into the possession of Eastern Europe owing to Hitler’s war.

In short, Hitler’s dictatorship was born of the well-justified fear of Stalin’s invasion of defenseless Germany and of the blindness of the German democracy to the danger. But it left Germany as a war wrack and ruin, perceived internationally as a (fortunately dead) monster.

Hitler had disgraced not only Germany but also the West as a whole, for had not Germany been, before Hitler’s dictatorship, the cultural pride of the West where even under the Kaiser the Jew Einstein had held the most prestigious scientific posts?

Let us face it: The pre-1933 democracy of Germany (Weimar Republic) was unable to cope with the danger of Stalin’s invasion of Germany. So the German democracy refused to notice it. Hence the vote for Hitler’s party in 1932. But Hitler’s dictatorship failed to keep Stalin out of East Germany and brought about grave losses, disasters, and the heinous crime against humanity.

Today’s Islamic terrorism is the lesser danger to the democratic West than “the China threat” – as enormous as the threat of Stalin’s invasion was for Germany in 1932. Today’s Westerners may decide, in order to cope with such threats, to do what those voters in Germany decided to do in 1932. Oh, the appearances will be different, but the essence may be similar.

Thus, a leader so elected will never be called “Fuehrer,” as Hitler is called in histories published in the English-speaking countries after WWII to show how different the Germans were in 1932 – they voted for a Fuehrer, not a leader! How psychopathic! “Our” leader will be called a leader!

Incidentally, the German word “Fuehrer” has wider meanings in Germany than do the English word “leader” in English-speaking countries. For example, “driver’s license” is, in German, “Fuehrerschein.”

* * * * *

For more information about Drexler’s Foresight Institute and its lobbying in Congress, see www.foresight.org

To learn more about the Chris Phoenix report, suggesting a “nano Manhattan Project,” go to crnano.org.

For information about the Center for the Survival of Western Democracies, Inc., including how you can help, please e-mail me at navlev@cloud9.net.

The link to my book online is www.levnavrozov.com. You can also request our webmaster@levnavrozov.com to send you by e-mail my outline of my book.

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