particularly exercise strict control over the press; for its influence
on these people is by far the strongest and most penetrating, since
it is applied, not once in a while, but over and over again. In the
uniformity and constant repetition of this instruction lies its
tremendous power. If anywhere, therefore, it is here that the state
must not forget that all means must serve an end; it must not let
itself be confused by the drivel about socalled 'freedom of the
press' and let itself be talked into neglecting its duty and denying
the nation the food which it needs and which is good for it; with
ruthless determination it must make sure of this instrument of
popular education, and place it in the service of the state and the
nation.
But what food did the German press of the preWar period dish
out to the people? Was it not the worst poison that can even be
imagined? Wasn't the worst kind of pacifism injected into the
heart of our people at a time when the rest of the world was
preparing to throttle Germany, slowly but surely? Even in
peacetime didn't the press inspire the minds of the people with
doubt in the right of their own state, thus from the outset limiting
them in the choice of means for its defense? Was it not the
German press which knew how to make the absurdity of
'Western democracy' palatable to our people until finally,
ensnared by all the enthusiastic tirades, they thought they could
entrust their future to a League of Nations? Did it not help to
teach our people a miserable immorality? Did it not ridicule
morality and ethics as backward and pettybourgeois, until our
people finally became 'modern'? Did it not with its constant
attacks undermine the foundations of the state's authority until a
single thrust sufficed to make the edifice collapse? Did it not
fight with all possible means against every effort to give unto the
state that which is the state's? Did it not belittle the army with
constant criticism, sabotage universal conscription, demand the
refusal of military credits, etc., until the result became inevitable?
The socalled liberal press was actively engaged in digging the
grave of the German people and the German Reich. We can pass
by the lying Marxist sheets in silence; to them lying is just as
vitally necessary as catching mice for a cat; their function is only
to break the people's national and patriotic backbone and make
them ripe for the slave's yoke of international capital and its
masters, the Jews.
And what did the state do against this mass poisoning of the
nation? Nothing, absolutely nothing. A few ridiculous decrees, a
few fines for villainy that went too far, and that was the end of it.
Instead, they hoped to curry favor with this plague by flattery, by
recognition of the 'value' of the press, its 'importance,' its
'educational mission,' and more such nonsenseas for the Jews,
they took all this with a crafty smile and acknowledged it with
sly thanks.
The reason, however, for this disgraceful failure on the part of
the state was not that it did not recognize the danger, but rather in
a cowardice crying to high Heaven and the resultant
halfheartedness of all decisions and measures. No one had the
courage to use thoroughgoing radical methods, but in this as in
everything else they tinkered about with a lot of halfway
prescriptions, and instead of carrying the thrust to the heart, they
at most irritated the viperwith the result that not only did
everything remain as before, but on the contrary the power of the
institutions which should have been combated increased from
year to year.
The defensive struggle of the German government at that time
against the pressmainly that of Jewish originwhich was slowly
ruining the nation was without any straight line, irresolute and
above all without any visible goal. The intelligence of the privy
councilors failed completely when it came to estimating the
importance of this struggle, to choosing means or drawing up a
clear plan. Planlessly they fiddled about; sometimes, after being
bitten too badly, they locked up one of the journalistic vipers for
a few weeks or months, but they left the snakes' nest as such
perfectly unmolested.
Truethis resulted partly from the infinitely wily tactics of the
Jews, on the one hand, and from a stupidity and innocence such
as only privy councilors are capable of, on the other. The Jew
was much too clever to allow his entire press to be attacked
uniformly. No, one part of it existed in order to cover the other.
While the Marxist papers assailed in the most dastardly way
everything that can be holy to man; while they infamously
attacked the state and the government and stirred up large
sections of the people against one another, the bourgeois
democratic papers knew how to give an appearance of their
famous objectivity, painstakingly avoided all strong words, well
knowing that empty heads can judge only by externals and never
have the faculty of penetrating the inner core, so that for them the
value of a thing is measured by this exterior instead of by the
content; a human weakness to which they owe what esteem they
themselves enjoy.
For these people the Frankfurter Zeitung was the embodiment of
respectability. For it never uses coarse expressions, it rejects all
physical brutality and keeps appealing for struggle with
'intellectual' weapons, a conception, strange to say, to which
especially the least intelligent people are most attached. This is a
result of our halfeducation which removes people from the
instinct of Nature and pumps a certain amount of knowledge into
them, but cannot create full understanding, since for this industry
and good will alone are no use; the necessary intelligence must
be present, and what is more, it must be inborn. The ultimate
wisdom is always the understanding of the instinct 'that is: a
man must never fall into the lunacy of believing that he has really
risen to be lord and master of Naturewhich is so easily induced
by the conceit of halfeducation; he must understand the
fundamental necessity of Nature's rule, and realize how much his
existence is subjected to these laws of eternal fight and upward
struggle. Then he will feel that in a universe where planets
revolve around suns, and moons turn about planets, where force
alone forever masters weakness, compelling it to be an obedient
slave or else crushing it, there can be no special laws for man.
For him, too, the eternal principles of this ultimate wisdom hold
sway. He can try to comprehend them; but escape them, never.
And it is precisely for our intellectual demimonde that the Jew
writes his socalled intellectual press. For them the Frankfurter
Zeitung and the Berliner Tageblatt are made; for them their tone
is chosen, and on them they exercise their influence. Seemingly
they all most sedulously avoid any outwardly crude forms, and
meanwhile from other vessels they nevertheless pour their poison
into the hearts of their readers. Amid a Gezeires 2 Of fine sounds
and phrases they lull their readers into believing that pure science
or even morality is really the motive of their acts, while in reality
it is nothing but a wily, ingenious trick for stealing the enemy's
weapon against the press from under his nose. The one variety
oozes respectability, so all softheads are ready to believe them
when they say that the faults of others are only trivial abuses
which should never lead to an infringement of the 'freedom of the
press'their term for poisoning and lying to the people. And so
the authorities shy away from taking measures against these
bandits, for they fear that, if they did, they would at once have
the ' respectable ' press against them, a fear which is only too
justified. For as soon as they attempt to proceed against one of
these shameful rags, all the others will at once take its part, but
by no means to sanction its mode of struggle, God forbidbut
only to defend the principle of freedom of the press and freedom
of public opinion; these alone must be defended. But in the face
of all this shouting, the strongest men grow weak, for does it not
issue from the mouths of 'respectable' papers?
This poison was able to penetrate the bloodstream of our people
unhindered and do its work, and the state did not possess the
power to master the disease. In the laughable halfmeasures
which it used against the poison, the menacing decay of the
Reich was manifest. For an institution which is no longer
resolved to defend itself with all weapons has for practical
purposes abdicated. Every halfmeasure is a visible sign of inner
decay which must and will be followed sooner or later by
outward collapse.
I believe that the present generation, properly led, will more
easily master this danger. It has experienced various things which
had the power somewhat to strengthen the nerves of those who
did not lose them entirely. In future days the Jew will certainly
continue to raise a mighty uproar in his newspapers if a hand is
ever laid on his favorite nest, if an end is put to the mischief of
the press and this instrument of education is put into the service
of the state and no longer left in the hands of aliens and enemies
of the people. But I believe that this will bother us younger men
less than our fathers. A thirtycentimeter shell has always hissed
more loudly than a thousand Jewish newspaper vipersso let
them hiss!
A further example of the halfheartedness and weakness of the
leaders of preWar Germany in meeting the most important vital
questions of the nation is the following: running parallel to the
political, ethical, and moral contamination of the people, there
had been for many years a no less terrible poisoning of the health
of the national body. Especially in the big cities, syphilis was
beginning to spread more and more, while tuberculosis steadily
reaped its harvest of death throughout nearly the whole country.
Though in both cases the consequences were terrible for the
nation, the authorities could not summon up the energy to take
decisive measures.
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