Page 37 - The Chief Culprit
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14 y e Chief Culprit
Let’s examine the dates. In August of 1923, Stalin decided that “German Communists,
by themselves, will have to seize power in Germany.” After this, in October, high-ranking
Soviet officials were sent to Germany, and one of Stalin’s agents conducted talks with the
Nazis and discussed cooperative actions. In other words, the Soviets were saying on the one
hand, “Dear Nazis, please help the Communists take power in Germany.” On the other
hand, they were saying “Let the Communists rule Germany by themselves.”
is is a familiar Communist maneuver, and it was Stalin’s personal trademark.
Communists took power in Russia in alliance with other parties. en they destroyed their
allies after they became useless. Stalin personally acted in the same fashion. He eliminated his
political adversaries by using his allies, and then eliminated the allies.
e Communist and Nazi parties did attempt a joint takeover in Germany in 1923.
Communist propaganda wants us to believe that in 1923, there was no conspiracy between
Communists and Nazis. However, on November 8, 1923, in Munich Hitler and a group of
armed followers tried to arrest the government of Bavaria. Hitler declared that the revolution
had begun, that the Bavarian and Weimar governments were demolished. A new “govern-
ment” was formed immediately. On the night of November 8, a group with Ernst Roehm
at its head took control of the headquarters of the military district. Attempts to take over
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other infrastructure and government facilities were put down by the army and the police. On
November 9 Hitler proclaimed a demonstration of his supporters. A clash occurred between
the demonstrators and the armed police; sixteen of Hitler’s supporters and three police of-
ficers were killed.
e attempted takeover was crushed by force. Hitler and his closest associates fled,
but were soon captured, stood trial, and were sent to serve prison terms in the Landsberg
fortress. It was from this prison cell that Hitler wrote Mein Kampf. Later, when he came to
power, Hitler declared his fallen associates national heroes, and named the dates of the rebel-
lion, November 8–9, as the most important German national holiday. An interesting note:
the book Mein Kampf is dedicated to Hitler’s sixteen fallen comrades, killed on November
9, 1923. But in the huge text (the first volume alone consists of almost six hundred pages in
small print) Hitler writes nothing about the events of November 8–9. Hitler wrote the book
in a prison cell, but does not mention why and how he came to be behind bars. For some
reason, Hitler conceals all that preceded these events. Instead of a detailed explanation, the
last page briefly states: “I will not venture here into discussions about events which led us to
November 8, 1923.” at is all.
is seems strange. e book is titled “My Struggle,” and the author describes him-
self, his party, and his struggle for influence over the masses and for power. e events of
November 8–9, 1923, are the culmination point of this struggle, after which Hitler’s party
was outlawed and he was imprisoned. At the time Hitler wrote his book, nothing more im-
portant had happened in his life or in the life of his party than the events of those two days.
And yet he omits a description of these most important events.
In fact, he had something to hide. Hitler’s failed revolution coincided in a most peculiar
fashion with the failed Communist revolution. ere are several coincidences, and they are
astonishing. e date of the revolution was set in Moscow and kept under the utmost secrecy.
But Hitler decided to conduct his coup on the same day, under the same red flag, shouting
the same slogans calling for the expropriation of non-workers’ income, the nationalization of
industrial conglomerates, and the confiscation of German industrialists’ war profits. Hitler’s