Word: kampf
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...Americans who are not too squeamish to learn from the enemy, Author Earle quotes a passage from Mein Kampf that U.S. readers might do well to memorize: "The question of regaining Germany's power is not, perhaps, How can we manufacture arms?, but, How can we produce that spirit which enables a people to bear arms? Once this spirit dominates a people, the will finds a thousand ways, each of which ends with arms!" For those who could not find this spirit, or found it repellent, Americans in their homelier days posed the alternatives in plain English: Root...
...shown that he falls far short of being the "Protector of Islam." In less than a generation of Italian rule, the Moslems in Eritrea have decreased from over a million to 400,000. And Hitler's prestige is not raised by his contemptuous references to the Arabs in "Mein Kampf...
...rest of the poem Noyes does nothing but hate Hitler in a fairly incoherent, uninteresting manner. The slim volume may well be stacked against "Mein Kampf" by history as evidence that irrationality calls forth rebuttal in kind and that war never fails to bring out the worst features of mankind along with a few of the better ones. By picturing this war as a kind of Holy Crusade which high school histories record but which the world has never seen, and by prodding the passions of the multitudes (with good publicity, "If Judgment Comes" can run "White Cliffs" a close...
Fortnight before, Hitler's "shadow"-the young World War I infantryman and Air Force pilot who had got caught in the 1923 Munich beer-hall Putsch and had gone to jail with Hitler and had helped him write Mein Kampf in prison-had traveled to Augsburg and decorated Willy Messerschmitt at the Messerschmitt aircraft factory for services to the Fatherland. Three days later Hess had sat on the dais of Berlin's Kroll Opera House, arms folded and beetle-brows lowered, while his frenzied colleague of 21 hard years of struggle had crowed over the victory...
...most colonial experts outside Germany, the Nazis' colonial drum used to sound pretty limp from banging, was not a very compelling instrument. Even Adolf Hitler in Mein Kampf loudly disclaimed colonial ambitions, insisted rather on the European expansion of the Reich. He knew perfectly well, for instance, that all the African colonies which the Allies took from Germany after World War I had cost Germany far more than they were worth, had accounted for only one two-hundredth of Germany's trade, had attracted less than 20,000 German colonizers...