Party.' The name of the movement to be founded would from the
very beginning have to offer the possibility of approaching the
broad masses; for without this quality the whole task seemed
aimless and superfluous. Thus we arrived at the name of ' Social
Revolutionary Party'; this because the social views of the new
organization did indeed mean a revolution.
But the deeper ground for this lay in the following: however
much I had concerned myself with economic questions at an
earlier day, my efforts had remained more or less within the
limits resulting from the contemplation of social questions as
such. Only later did this framework broaden through examination
of the German alliance policy. This in very great part was the
outcome of a false estimation of economics as well as unclarity
concerning the possible basis for sustaining the German people
in the future. But all these ideas were based on the opinion that
capital in any case was solely the result of labor and, therefore,
like itself was subject to the correction of all those factors which
can either advance or thwart human activity; and the national
importance of capital was that it depended so completely on the
greatness, freedom, and power of the state, hence of the nation,
that this bond in itself would inevitably cause capital to further
the state and the nation owing to its simple instinct of self
preservation or of reproduction. This dependence of capital on
the independent free state would, therefore, force capital in turn
to champion this freedom, power, strength, etc., of the nation.
Thus, the task of the state toward capital was comparatively
simple and clear: it only had to make certain that capital remain
the handmaiden of the state and not fancy itself the mistress of
the nation. This point of view could then be defined between two
restrictive limits: preservation of a solvent, national, and
independent economy on the one hand, assurance of the social
rights of the workers on the other.
Previously I had been unable to recognize with the desired clarity
the difference between this pure capital as the end result of
productive labor and a capital whose existence and essence rests
exclusively on speculation. For this I lacked the initial
inspiration, which had simply not come my way.
But now this was provided most amply by one of the various
gentlemen lecturing in the abovementioned course: Gottfried
Feder.
For the first time in my life I heard a principled discussion of
international stock exchange and loan capital.
Right after listening to Feder's first lecture, the thought ran
through my head that I had now found the way to one of the most
essential premises for the foundation of a new party.
In my eyes Feder's merit consisted in having established with
ruthless brutality the speculative and economic character of stock
exchange and loan capital, and in having exposed its eternal and
ageold presupposition which is interest. His arguments were so
sound in all fundamental questions that their critics from the start
questioned the theoretical correctness of the idea less than they
doubted the practical possibility of its execution. But what in the
eyes of others was a weakness of Feder's arguments, in my eyes
constituted their strength.
It is not the task of a theoretician to determine the varying
degrees in which a cause can be realized, but to establish the
cause as such: that is to say: he must concern himself less with
the road than with the goal. In this, however, the basic
correctness of an idea is decisive and not the difficulty of its
execution. As soon as the theoretician attempts to take account of
socalled 'utility' and 'reality' instead of the absolute truth, his
work will cease to be a polar star of seeking humanity and
instead will become a prescription for everyday life. The
theoretician of a movement must lay down its goal, the politician
strive for its fulfillment. The thinking of the one, therefore, will
be determined by eternal truth, the actions of the other more by
the practical reality of the moment. The greatness of the one lies
in the absolute abstract soundness of his idea, that of the other in
his correct attitude toward the given facts and their advantageous
application; and in this the theoretician's aim must serve as his
guiding star. While the touchstone for the stature of a politician
may be regarded as the success of his plans and actsin other
words, the degree to which they become realitythe realization of
the theoretician's ultimate purpose can never be realized, since,
though human thought can apprehend truths and set up crystal
clear aims, complete fulfillment will fail due to the general
imperfection and inadequacy of man. The more abstractly correct
and hence powerful the idea will be, the more impossible
remains its complete fulfillment as long as it continues to depend
on human beings. Therefore, the stature of the theoretician must
not be measured by the fulfillment of his aims, but by their
soundness and the influence they have had on the development of
humanity. If this were not so, the founders of religion could not
be counted among the greatest men of this earth, since the
fulfillment of their ethical purposes will never be even
approximately complete. In its workings, even the religion of
love is only the weak reflection of the will of its exalted founder;
its significance, however, lies in the direction which it attempted
to give to a universal human development of culture, ethics, and
morality.
The enormous difference between the tasks of the theoretician
and the politician is also the reason why a union of both in one
person is almost never found. This is especially true of the so
called 'successful' politician of small format, whose activity for
the most part is only an 'art of the possible,' as Bismarck rather
modestly characterized politics in general. The freer such a
'politician' keeps himself from great ideas, the easier and often
the more visible, but always the more rapid, his successes will
be. To be sure, they are dedicated to earthly transitoriness and
sometimes do not survive the death of their fathers. The work of
such politicians, by and large, is unimportant nor posterity, since
their successes in the present are based solely on keeping at a
distance all really great and profound problems and ideas, which
as such would only have been of value for later generations.
The execution of such aims, which have value and significance
for the most distant times, usually brings little reward to the man
who champions them and rarely finds understanding among the
great masses, who for the moment have more understanding for
beer and milk regulations than for farsighted plans for the future,
whose realization can only occur far hence, and whose benefits
will be reaped only by posterity.
Thus, from a certain vanity, which is always a cousin of
stupidity, the great mass of politicians will keep far removed
from all really weighty plans for the future, in order not to lose
the momentary sympathy of the great mob. The success and
significance of such a politician lie then exclusively in the
present, and do not exist for posterity. But small minds are little
troubled by this; they are content.
With the theoretician conditions are different. His importance
lies almost always solely in the future, for not seldom he is what
is described by the world as 'unworldly.' For if the art of the
politician is really the art of the possible, the theoretician is one
of those of whom it can be said that they are pleasing to the gods
only if they demand and want the impossible. He will almost
always have to renounce the recognition of the present, but in
return, provided his ideas are immortal, will harvest the fame of
posterity.
In long periods of humanity, it may happen once that the
politician is wedded to the theoretician. The more profound this
fusion, however, the greater are the obstacles opposing the work
of the politician. He no longer works for necessities which will
be understood by the first best shopkeeper, but for aims which
only the fewest comprehend. Therefore, his life is torn by love
and hate. The protest of the present which does not understand
the man, struggles with the recognition of posterityfor which he
works.
For the greater a man's works for the future, the less the present
can comprehend them; the harder his fight, and the rarer success.
If, however, once in centuries success does come to a man,
perhaps in his latter days a faint beam of his coming glory may
shine upon him. To be sure, these great men are only the
Marathon runners of history; the laurel wreath of the present
touches only the brow of the dying hero.
Among them must be counted the great warriors in this world
who, though not understood by the present, are nevertheless
prepared to carry the fight for their ideas and ideals to their end.
They are the men who some day will be closest to the heart of the
people; it almost seems as though every individual feels the duty
of compensating in the past for the sins which the present once
committed against the great. Their life and work are followed
with admiring gratitude and emotion, and especially in days of
gloom they have the power to raise up broken hearts and
despairing souls.
To them belong, not only the truly great statesmen, but all other
great reformers as well. Beside Frederick the Great stands Martin
Luther as well as Richard Wagner.
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 selfmaintenance 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. In Feder's lecture I sensed a powerful slogan for this
coming struggle.
And here again later developments proved how correct our
sentiment of those days was. Today the knowitalls among our
bourgeois politicians no longer laugh at us: today even they, in so
far as they are not conscious liars, see that international stock
exchange capital was not only the greatest agitator for the War,
but that especially, now that the fight is over, it spares no effort
to turn the peace into a hell.
The fight against international finance and loan capital became
the most important point in the program of the German nation's
struggle for its economic independence and freedom.
As regards the objections of socalled practical men, they can be
answered as follows: All fears regarding the terrible economic
consequences of the ' breaking of interest slavery ' are
superfluous; for, in the first place, the previous economic
prescriptions have turned out very badly for the German people,
and your positions on the problems of national selfmaintenance
remind us strongly of the reports of similar experts in former
times, for example, those of the Bavarian medical board on the
question of introducing the railroad. It is well known that none of
the fears of this exalted corporation were later realized: the
travelers in the trains of the new 'steam horse ' did not get dizzy,
the onlookers did not get sick, and the board fences to hide the
new invention from sight were given uponly the board fences
around the brains of all socalled 'experts' were preserved for
posterity.
In the second place, the following should be noted: every idea,
even the best, becomes a danger if it parades as a purpose in
itself, being in reality only a means to one. For me and all true
National Socialists there is but one doctrine: people and
fatherland.
What we must fight for is to safeguard the existence and
reproduction of our race and our people, the sustenance of our
children and the purity of our blood, the freedom and
independence of the fatherland, so that our people may mature
for the fulfillment of the mission allotted it by the creator of the
universe.
Every thought and every idea, every doctrine and all knowledge,
must serve this purpose. And everything must be examined from
this point of view and used or rejected according to its utility.
Then no theory will stiffen into a dead doctrine, since it is life
alone that all things must serve.
Thus, it was the conclusions of Gottfried Feder that caused me to
delve into the fundamentals of this field with which I had
previously not been very familiar.
I began to study again, and now for the first time really achieved
an understanding of the content of the Jew Karl Marx's life effort.
Only now did his Capital become really intelligible to me, and
also the struggle of the Social Democracy against the national
economy, which aims only to prepare the ground for the
domination of truly international finance and stock exchange
capital.
But also in another respect these courses were of the greatest
consequence to me.
One day I asked for the floor. One of the participants felt obliged
to break a lance for the Jews and began to defend them in lengthy
arguments. This aroused me to an answer. The overwhelming
majority of the students present took my standpoint The result
was that a few days later I was sent into a Munich regiment as a
socalled 'educational officer.'
Discipline among the men was still comparatively weak at that
time. It suffered from the aftereffects of the period of soldiers'
councils. Only very slowly and cautiously was it possible to
replace voluntary obediencethe pretty name that was given to
the pigsty under Kurt Eisnerby the old military discipline and
subordination. Accordingly, the men were now expected to learn
to feel and think in a national and patriotic way. In these two
directions lay the field of my new activity.
I started out with the greatest enthusiasm and love. For all at
once I was offered an opportunity of speaking before a larger
audience; and the thing that I had always presumed from pure
feeling without knowing it was now corroborated: I could 'speak.'
My voice, too, had grown so much better that I could be
sufficiently understood at least in every corner of the small squad
rooms.
No task could make me happier than this, for now before being
discharged I was able to perform useful services to the institution
which had been so close to my heart: the army.
And I could boast of some success: in the course of my lectures I
led many hundreds, indeed thousands, of comrades back to their
people and fatherland. I 'nationalized' the troops and was thus
also able to help strengthen the general discipline.
Here again I became acquainted with a number of likeminded
comrades, who later began to form the nucleus of the new
movement.
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