particular problem.
Therefore there remained only two possible ways. Either to
recommend our own party members to leave the trades unions in
which they were enrolled or to remain in them for the moment,
with the idea of causing as much destruction in them as possible.
In general, I recommended the latter alternative.
Especially in the year 192223 we could easily do that. For,
during the period of inflation, the financial advantages which
might be reaped from a trades union organization would be
negligible, because we could expect to enroll only a few
members owing to the undeveloped condition of our movement.
The damage which might result from such a policy was all the
greater because its bitterest critics and opponents were to be
found among the followers of the National Socialist Party.
I had already entirely discountenanced all experiments which
were destined from the very beginning to be unsuccessful. I
would have considered it criminal to run the risk of depriving a
worker of his scant earnings in order to help an organization
which, according to my inner conviction, could not promise real
advantages to its members.
Should a new political party fade out of existence one day
nobody would be injured thereby and some would have profited,
but none would have a right to complain. For what each
individual contributes to a political movement is given with the
idea that it may ultimately come to nothing. But the man who
pays his dues to a trade union has the right to expect some
guarantee in return. If this is not done, then the directors of such
a trade union are swindlers or at least careless people who ought
to be brought to a sense of their responsibilities.
We took all these viewpoints into consideration before making
our decision in 1922. Others thought otherwise and founded
trades unions. They upbraided us for being shortsighted and
failing to see into the future. But it did not take long for these
organizations to disappear and the result was what would have
happened in our own case. But the difference was that we should
have deceived neither ourselves nor those who believed in us.