Cause of the Nazi Holocaust?
New book: Was Hitler a Leftist?
Author Book Page: Books by Charles Moscowitz
Cause of the Nazi Holocaust?
Conventional understanding of the cause of the Nazi Holocaust generally stops short by focusing only on the anti-Semitism of Adolf Hitler and the Nazi Party, but such a focus, while valid, evades a more fundamental and instructive factor.
In his new book, Was Hitler a Leftist?, Chuck Morse argues that Nazism was left-progressive and, specifically, that the leftist Soviet Union was the primary mentor of Nazism.
“Philosophically both socialist experiments, Nazism or National Socialism, and Communism or International Socialism sprang from the same Marxist root,” argues Morse, who is also the author of The Nazi Connection to Islamic Terrorism, published by WND Books in 2010. “Both regimes,” notes Morse, “resurrected the spirit of Robespierre and the 1793 French Reign of Terror. Both sought to overthrow the social order that promoted property, family, religion and individual identity itself with a collectivist agenda that called for a new and transformed mankind. The Nazi idea of transformation was biological, a Darwinian program of breeding toward the creation of an evolved species they called the ubermench. The Communist transformation was the outright abolition of all institutions that stood in the way of absolute equality.”
V.I. Lenin came to power in Russia (1917) where he established the first totalitarian regime since ancient times. Targeting specific groups for annihilation, Lenin presided over the unprecedented murders of 4-5 million human beings years before Hitler joined the Nazi Party. Lenin’s program of state-sponsored murder was carried out by the Cheka, his own secret army. The Checka would inspire the Nazi creation of the Gestapo decades later. There is evidence that the head of the Nazi Gestapo, Heinrich Mueller, reported to Lenin’s successor, Josef Stalin. Lenin established the Gulag system of concentration camps in 1918, a system imitated by the Nazis where theirs was overseen by the same alleged Soviet mole Mueller.
There is evidence to suggest that Hitler’s right hand man, Martin Bormann, considered Hitler’s alter ego and Prime Minister, also reported to Stalin.
Bormann was a major architect of the Holocaust against the Jews, and he was Adolf Eichmann’s superior. Nazi propaganda chief Josef Goebbels had been a Marxist in his formative years, and his methods of propaganda exactly mirrored the Soviet style of disinfrmatzia. Was Hitler a Leftist? includes evidence indicating that Hitler likely started out as a Marxist and possibly was a Communist. The founding platform of the Nazi Party, drafted under Hitler’s influence, reads like a communist manifesto.
Lenin’s liquidations and genocides were largely covered up by the western establishment which either turned a blind eye or justified Soviet terror as, to paraphrase pro-Soviet New York Times reporter Walter Duranty, cracking a few eggs to make an omelet. Most average Europeans, particularly those in Eastern and central Europe, were fully cognizant of the Soviet terror and of Soviet attempts to export their revolution. Communist revolutionary Benito Mussolini, reacting to the revulsion Europeans felt toward the greatest terror to have darkened their continent since the bubonic plague, responded by fashioning a Third Way. His movement preserved enough of a fig-leaf of capitalism and western notions of democracy to offer him an opportunity to take power in Italy and move his nation to the left.
Understanding the leftist nature of Nazism, the collaboration between the Nazis and the Soviet Communists which led to the formal alliance between the two socialist behemoths that triggered World War II and an examination of the post-war Soviet directed cover-up of the alliance is instructive, not only in terms of understanding the Holocaust, but also of understanding our own times.
In his new book, Was Hitler a Leftist?, Chuck Morse argues that Nazism was left-progressive and, specifically, that the leftist Soviet Union was the primary mentor of Nazism.
“Philosophically both socialist experiments, Nazism or National Socialism, and Communism or International Socialism sprang from the same Marxist root,” argues Morse, who is also the author of The Nazi Connection to Islamic Terrorism, published by WND Books in 2010. “Both regimes,” notes Morse, “resurrected the spirit of Robespierre and the 1793 French Reign of Terror. Both sought to overthrow the social order that promoted property, family, religion and individual identity itself with a collectivist agenda that called for a new and transformed mankind. The Nazi idea of transformation was biological, a Darwinian program of breeding toward the creation of an evolved species they called the ubermench. The Communist transformation was the outright abolition of all institutions that stood in the way of absolute equality.”
V.I. Lenin came to power in Russia (1917) where he established the first totalitarian regime since ancient times. Targeting specific groups for annihilation, Lenin presided over the unprecedented murders of 4-5 million human beings years before Hitler joined the Nazi Party. Lenin’s program of state-sponsored murder was carried out by the Cheka, his own secret army. The Checka would inspire the Nazi creation of the Gestapo decades later. There is evidence that the head of the Nazi Gestapo, Heinrich Mueller, reported to Lenin’s successor, Josef Stalin. Lenin established the Gulag system of concentration camps in 1918, a system imitated by the Nazis where theirs was overseen by the same alleged Soviet mole Mueller.
There is evidence to suggest that Hitler’s right hand man, Martin Bormann, considered Hitler’s alter ego and Prime Minister, also reported to Stalin.
Bormann was a major architect of the Holocaust against the Jews, and he was Adolf Eichmann’s superior. Nazi propaganda chief Josef Goebbels had been a Marxist in his formative years, and his methods of propaganda exactly mirrored the Soviet style of disinfrmatzia. Was Hitler a Leftist? includes evidence indicating that Hitler likely started out as a Marxist and possibly was a Communist. The founding platform of the Nazi Party, drafted under Hitler’s influence, reads like a communist manifesto.
Lenin’s liquidations and genocides were largely covered up by the western establishment which either turned a blind eye or justified Soviet terror as, to paraphrase pro-Soviet New York Times reporter Walter Duranty, cracking a few eggs to make an omelet. Most average Europeans, particularly those in Eastern and central Europe, were fully cognizant of the Soviet terror and of Soviet attempts to export their revolution. Communist revolutionary Benito Mussolini, reacting to the revulsion Europeans felt toward the greatest terror to have darkened their continent since the bubonic plague, responded by fashioning a Third Way. His movement preserved enough of a fig-leaf of capitalism and western notions of democracy to offer him an opportunity to take power in Italy and move his nation to the left.
Understanding the leftist nature of Nazism, the collaboration between the Nazis and the Soviet Communists which led to the formal alliance between the two socialist behemoths that triggered World War II and an examination of the post-war Soviet directed cover-up of the alliance is instructive, not only in terms of understanding the Holocaust, but also of understanding our own times.
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