Liberal
socialists are all about name calling. They call conservatives NAZIs because we
are logical. We object to their crazy, suicidal schemes, so we must be evil.
Liberal socialists like to support policies that will bankrupt us and allow
them to “transform” the US into a one-part socialist republic like Venezuela.
Read A Pile Of Top Nazis Talking About How They Love Leftist
Marxism. From the moment
they enter the political fray, young right-wingers are told, ‘You own the
Nazis.’ Much of the historical record says exactly the opposite. By Paul
Jossey, 9/11/18, The Federalist.
The Nazis were leftists. This statement
is blasphemy to the academic-media complex, since everyone knows the Nazis were
degenerate right-wingers fueled by toxic capitalism and racism. But evidence Adolf Hitler’s gang
were men of the left, while debatable, is compelling.
The dispute on Nazi origins resurfaced
through the confluence of brawling alt-right and Antifa fringe movements and
recent alternative histories by Dinesh D’Souza and others.
The vitriol and lack of candor it produces from supposedly
fact-driven academics and media is disturbing, if unsurprising. They stifle
dissent on touchy subjects to maintain their narrative and enforce cultural
hegemony.
However uncomfortable to opinion
shapers, alternative views of the Third Reich exist and were written by the
finest minds of their time. Opinions from the period perhaps carry more weight
because they are unburdened by the aftermath of the uniquely heinous Nazi
crimes.
“The Road to Serfdom,” by F. A. Hayek, is one such tract.
Published in 1944, it remains a classic for young people on the political right
discovering their intellectual roots. A sort of academic “1984,” it warns of
socialism’s tendency toward planned states and totalitarianism.
One aspect of the book can shock the
conscience. Hayek describes Nazism as a “genuine socialist movement” and thus
left-wing by modern American standards. Indeed, the Austrian-born Hayek wrote
the book from his essay, “Nazi-Socialism,” which countered prevailing opinion
at the London School of Economics, where he taught. British elites regarded
Nazism as a virulent capitalist reaction against enlightened socialism—a view
that persists today.
The shock comes from academic and
cultural orthodoxy on National Socialism. From the moment they enter the
political fray, young right-wingers are told, “You own the Nazis.” At best, the
left concedes it owns communism. This comforts a little, because even if far
higher in body count, communism supposedly rebukes the scourge of racism. But
it’s all a lie.
Socialists Occur in All Parties. This
debate incurs the instant problem of ideological labels. They are malleable and
messy and partisans constantly distort them. They also change over time.
President Trump’s particular political brand muddies the scene further, in rhetoric
if less in policy.
These Definitions Put Nazis Firmly on the Left. By these definitions, the Nazis were firmly on the left. National Socialism was a collectivist authoritarian movement run by “social justice warriors.” This brand of “justice” benefited only some based on immutable characteristics, which perfectly aligns with the modern brand.
The Nazi ideal embraced identity politics based on the primacy of the people, or volk, and invoked state-based solutions for every possible problem. It was nation-based socialism—the nation being especially important to those who bled in the Great War.
Hayek’s Definitely Not the Only One. Yet the evidence the Nazis were leftists goes well beyond the views of this one scholar. Philosophically, Nazi doctrine fit well with the other strains of socialism ripping through Europe at the time. Hitler’s first “National Workers’ Party” meeting while he was still an Army corporal featured the speech “How and by What Means is Capitalism to be Eliminated?”
Also, Adolf Hitler Loved Karl Marx. It wasn’t only theoretical. Hitler repeatedly praised Marx privately, stating he had “learned a great deal from Marxism.” The trouble with the Weimar Republic, he said, was that its politicians “had never even read Marx.” He also stated his differences with communists were that they were intellectual types passing out pamphlets, whereas “I have put into practice what these peddlers and pen pushers have timidly begun.”
Nazi and Communist Hatred of Each Other Was Brotherly.
We see parallels today. Antifa and the alt-right are both collectivist groups vying for supremacy among “their” people. Although there likely won’t be much personnel crossover, in policy their differences shrink.
Other Reasons Hitler Didn’t Pursue Socialism Even More.
When All Else Fails, Cry Racism. Despite the thoroughly collectivist Nazi ideology, one aspect settles the left-right debate for American leftists: racism. Leftists adamantly believe the right swims in racism. They discover racial dog whistles and grievances in everything from hotel toiletries to eclipses. Now, the Nazis were undoubtedly racists. But in context of socialist movements of their day, racism was the norm; there were no exceptions.
Racism Is Endemic in Socialism’s Roots. This racial view was mainstream socialist thinking through the Second World War. It manifested in eugenics, a left-wing idea popular on both sides of the Atlantic, with proponents such as Planned Parenthood founder Margret Sanger. It ended finally in the Holocaust, which was eugenics writ large in the most evil way. Watson states, “The idea of ethnic cleansing was orthodox socialism for a century and more.” No German socialist in the 1930s or earlier ever sought to deny Hitler’s right to call himself a socialist on grounds of racial policy.
Rabid Nationalism Is Also a Socialist Hallmark. Related to the racist claim is that Nazis’ nationalism excludes them from the left. But arguably the most nationalist countries today are Cuba, China, North Korea, and Venezuela. All are militarized, and nobody considers them right-wing. Even Stalin ruled as a nationalist.
Not Liking the Truth Doesn’t Make It False. The debate on Nazi origins has surfaced mainly because right-leaning authors like D’Souza have forced the issue.
Historians’ reaction has
been swift. For obvious reasons, the left hates this debate. The “Nazi” slur is
as old as the Nazis themselves. People who see themselves morally superior
based in part on racial attitudes don’t like examining the odious racial
history of their intellectual forebears.
“Conservative” and especially “liberal”
have changed over time and have different meanings in the United States and
Europe. Hayek himself, who had a more European view of conservatism, was wary
of labels. He spurned both “conservative” and “libertarian,” and dedicated
his most famous book “to the socialists of all parties.”
For precision, I refrain from using
“conservative” or “liberal” unless through quotation and use “left” and “right”
as generally accepted in modern America.
The right consists of free-market
capitalists, who think the individual is the primary political unit, believes
in property rights, and are generally distrustful of government by
unaccountable agencies and government solutions to social problems. They view
family and civil institutions, such as church, as needed checks on state power.
These people don’t think government
should force a business to provide employee birth control or think law should
coerce bakers to make cakes against their conscience. They think the solution
to bad speech is more speech, and the solution to gun violence is more guns.
These people talk about freedom—the method of individual decisions. (The
counterexample might be gay marriage but that is a positive right—“give me
something”—instead of a negative right—“leave me alone.”).
The left believes the opposite. They
distrust the excesses and inequality capitalism produces. They give primacy to
group rights and identity. They believe factors like race, ethnicity, and sex
compose the primary political unit. They don’t believe in strong property
rights.
They believe it is the government’s
responsibility to solve social problems. They call for public intervention to
“equalize” disparities and render our social fabric more inclusive (as they
define it). They believe the free market has failed to solve issues like
campaign finance, income inequality, minimum wage, access to health care, and righting past injustices. These
people talk about “democracy”—the method of collective decisions.
As Hayek stated in 1933, the year the
Nazis took power: “It is more than probable that the real meaning of the German
revolution is that the long dreaded expansion of communism into the heart of
Europe has taken place but is not recognized because the fundamental similarity
of methods and ideas is hidden by the difference in phraseology and the
privileged groups.”
Nazism and socialism competed with the
Enlightenment-based individualism of John Locke, Adam Smith, Montesquieu, and
others who profoundly influenced the American founding and define the modern
American right at its best. These thinkers fit easily with Hayek’s Austrian
School of Economics, which opposed both the imperialist German Historical
School and the Marxists.
Hayek knew what he was talking about. He
was a 20th-century intellectual giant. His collected works include 19 books; he
won the Nobel Prize in economics and Presidential Medal of Freedom, and held
the honor of Maggie Thatcher’s “favorite intellectual guru.” But Hayek is only one man. The
intelligentsia fiercely attacked him as reactionary throughout his life.
Perhaps he was wrong.
The Nazi charter published
a year later and coauthored by Hitler is socialist in almost every aspect. It
calls for “equality of rights for the German people”; the subjugation of the
individual to the state; breaking of “rent slavery”; “confiscation of war
profits”; the nationalization of industry; profit-sharing in heavy industry;
large-scale social security; the “communalization of the great warehouses and
their being leased at low costs to small firms”; the “free expropriation of
land for the purpose of public utility”; the abolition of “materialistic” Roman
Law; nationalizing education; nationalizing the army; state regulation of the
press; and strong central power in the Reich. It was also racist and
anti-immigrant.
The
Nazi charter coauthored by Hitler is socialist in almost every aspect. In some
areas, the Nazis followed their charter faithfully. They treated children as
property of the state from the earliest age and indoctrinated them at
government schools and clubs. The individual had limited rights outside
the volk. German lives
were for the betterment of the people and state. One’s group identity
determined his rights and social hierarchy.
No checks on state power existed. The
cross played no role compared to the swastika. Hitler’s musings on the church,
while at times ambiguous, were mostly negative. “Once I have settled my other
problems,” he occasionally declared, “I’ll have my reckoning with the church.
I’ll have it reeling on the ropes.”
When told of Schutzstaffel (SS) Chief
Heinrich Himmler’s flirtation with the occult, Hitler fumed: “What nonsense!
Here we have at last reached an age that has left all mysticism behind it, and
now he wants to start that all over again. We might just as well have stayed
with the church. At least it had tradition. To think that I may some day be
turned into an SS saint! Can you imagine it? I would turn over in my grave…”
These attitudes shouldn’t be surprising
given that the socialist thinkers who provided the theoretical basis for Nazism
abhorred English “commercialism” and “comfort.” As Hayek described, “From 1914
onward there arose from the ranks of Marxist socialism one teacher after
another who led, not the conservatives and reactionaries, but the hardworking
laborer and idealist youth into the National Socialist fold.” These “teachers”
included professor Werner Sombart, professor Johan Plenge, socialist politician
Paul Lensch, and intellectuals Oswald Spengler and Arthur Moeller van den
Bruck.
It wasn’t just privately that Hitler’s
fealty for Marx surfaced. In “Mein Kampf,” he states that without his racial
insights National Socialism “would really do nothing more than compete with
Marxism on its own ground.” Nor did Hitler eschew this sentiment once reaching
power. As late as 1941, with the war in bloom, he stated “basically National
Socialism and Marxism are the same” in a speech published by the Royal
Institute of International Affairs.
Nazi propaganda minister and resident
intellectual Joseph Goebbels wrote in his diary that the Nazis would install
“real socialism” after Russia’s defeat in the East. And Hitler favorite Albert
Speer, the Nazi armaments minister whose memoir became an international
bestseller, wrote that Hitler viewed Joseph Stalin as a kindred spirit,
ensuring his prisoner of war son received good treatment, and even talked of
keeping Stalin in power in a puppet government after Germany’s eventual
triumph. His views on Great Britain’s Winston Churchill and the United States’s
Franklin Delano Roosevelt were decidedly less kind.
Despite this, there’s a persistent claim
that Nazis and communists hated each other, and mention that the Nazis
persecuted socialists and oppressed trade unions. These things are true, but
prove little. The camps’ hatred stemmed from familiarity. It was internecine,
the nastiest kind.
The Nazis and communists were not only
in a struggle for street-war supremacy, but also recruits. These recruits were
easily turned, because both sides were fighting for the same men.
Hayek recalls the relative ease with which a young communist could be converted into
a Nazi or vice versa was generally known in Germany, best of all to the
propagandists of the two parties. Many a University teacher during the 1930s
has seen English or American students return from the Continent uncertain
whether they were communists or Nazis and certain they hated Western liberal civilization.
. . . To both, the real enemy, the man with whom they had nothing in common and
whom they could not hope to convince is the liberal of the old type.
One way Nazi propagandists exploited
this ideological match was the communist red. They used the color on purpose.
As Hitler states in “Mein Kampf,” “We chose red for out posters [and flag]
after particular and careful deliberation . . . so as to arouse [potential
communist recruits’] attention and tempt them to come to our meetings.” And
Stalinist Russia didn’t exactly promote trade unions.
Nazi leadership and recruiters weren’t
the only ones to see similarities between themselves and communists. George
Orwell remarked, “Internally, Germany has a good deal in common with a
socialist state.” Max Eastman, an old friend of Vladimir Lenin, described
Stalin’s brand of communism as “super fascist.”
After several years on the continent,
British writer F.A. Voight concluded, “Marxism has led to Fascism and National
Socialism because in all essentials it is Fascism and National Socialism.”
Peter Drucker, author of the acclaimed book, “The End of Economic Man,” stated, “The complete collapse of the
belief in the attainability of freedom and equality through Marxism has forced
Russia to travel the same road toward a totalitarian, purely negative,
non-economic society of unfreedom and inequality which Germany has been
following.”
Hitler
saw the Russian experiment as right in spirit and wrong in execution. The term “alt-right” denotes distinctness
from the American right. Richard Spencer, the coiner of that term,
speaks like a left-wing progressive, advocating a white utopia
supplied through government: “No individual has a right outside of a collective
community.” Another alt-rightfigure, Jason Kessler,
is a Barack Obama voter and “Occupy” participant.
Critics argue the Nazis didn’t fulfill
all their socialist goals after 1933. Some industrialists supported Hitler’s
rise. Others, who saw no other choice, eventually acquiesced. They were early
adopters of the Washington adage, “If you’re not at the table, you’re on the
menu.” Also, the Nazi Party’s foremost left—the SA brownshirts led by Hitler
rival Ernst Rohm—were eliminated in the Blood Purge of June 30, 1934. But none
of this changes Nazi attitudes toward these interlopers.
We can find clues to Hitler’s practical
stance on economic questions from the writings of his confidant, Otto Wagener.
In texts only translated in the 1980s, Wagener explains that Hitler saw the
Russian experiment as right in spirit and wrong in execution. Removing
production from the industrial class had spewed unnecessary blood.
Industrialists could be controlled and used without slowing the economy or impeding
social progress. His task was to convert socialists without killing the
entrepreneur and managerial classes.
Other practical reasons exist. Hitler
needed the industrialists. He undoubtedly had world domination in mind by the
time he took power, which would require utmost industrial might. He also
had a failing economy to revive, and removing production ownership would have
likely been disastrous.
Nazism
was a ‘middle class’ socialism that tolerated private enterprise as long as it
paid homage and stayed in its lane.
Hitler was also disdainful of
bureaucrats, the occupation of his hated father. Perhaps most importantly,
state control of economics just wasn’t that important to him. Rearming,
purifying the volk,
indoctrinating children, teaching schoolboys to throw grenades, and building infrastructure to someday invade neighbors were
Hitler’s priorities. Nazism was a “middle class” socialism that tolerated
private enterprise as long as it paid homage and stayed in its lane.
This lack of overt hostility didn’t mean
the Nazis welcomed the bourgeoisie or the industrialists. Hitler described the bourgeoisie as “worthless for any noble human endeavor,
capable of any error of judgment, failure of nerve and moral corruption.” In
1931, as the Nazis gained power in elections, Goebbels wrote an editorial
warning about these newcomer “Septemberlings,” the bourgeoisie intellectuals
who believed they could wrest the party what from they considered the
“demagogue” old guard.
Distrust of these outsiders also
continued through the Nazi reign. At the beginning of Nazi control, some party
members entered businesses, declared themselves in charge, and gave themselves
large salaries and other perks (a practice quickly stopped). As armaments
minister, Speer had an up-close view of German industry and party tension.
Early in the war, Hitler had assured him
he could run his department without regard to party membership, as it was “well
known” the industrial technical class did not affiliate with the party. When he
defended industry as not “knowingly lying to us, stealing from us, or otherwise
trying to damage our war economy,” an icy reception from party members
followed.
As shown by George Watson, author of “The Lost Literature of Socialism,” racism and socialism also swum
together. Marx may have extolled the workers of the world to unite, but that didn’t
mean he thought all races could join. This view was codified in Friedrich
Engels’ essay, “The Hungarian Struggle,” published in the January-February 1849
issue of Marx’s journal, Neue
Rheinische Zeitung.
According to Watson, “The Marxist theory of history required and demanded
genocide for reasons implicit in its claim that feudalism was already giving
place to capitalism, which must in its turn be superseded by socialism. Entire
races would be left behind after a workers’ revolution, feudal remnants in a
socialist age; and since they could not advance two steps at a time, they would
have to be killed.” According to Engels, they were “racial trash.” Marx
himself, sounding every bit the Hitler mentor in 1853, wrote,
“The classes and the races, too weak to master the new conditions of life, must
give way.”
English socialist intellectual Beatrice
Webb lamented that British visitors in Ukraine had been allowed to
view a passing cattle car full of starving subversives. “The English,” she
said, “are always so sentimental” about such matters. This makes sense when one
views socialism as defending the rights of one group—the citizens of basically
homogeneous countries.
According to Watson, “It is notable that
no German socialist in the 1930s or earlier ever sought to deny Hitler’s right
to call himself a socialist on grounds of racial policy. In an age when the
socialist tradition of genocide was familiar, that would have sounded merely
absurd.” In America and England as well, the left’s ascendency during the first
progressive movement was full of racists, including Woodrow Wilson, Sanger, and
writers H.G. Wells and Jack London.
We see more recent examples of left
racism and ethnic cleansing in unusual places. Leftist hero Che Guevara wrote,
in his 1952 memoir, “The Negro is indolent and lazy and spends his money on
frivolities, whereas the European is forward-looking, organized and
intelligent.” Except for “quiet manner,” find the difference between Hitler and
avowed Marxist Pol Pot upon the latter’s 1998 death in The New York
Times’ obituary:
Pol Pot
conducted a rule of terror that led to the deaths of nearly a quarter of
Cambodia’s seven million people, by the most widely accepted estimates, through
execution, torture, starvation and disease.
His smiling
face and quiet manner belied his brutality. He and his inner circle of
revolutionaries adopted a Communism based on Maoism and Stalinism, then carried
it to extremes: They and their Khmer Rouge movement tore apart Cambodia in an
attempt to ‘purify’ the country’s agrarian society and turn people into
revolutionary worker-peasants.
Nor was anti-Semitism a right-wing
malady. Stalin was anti-Semitic, as was Marx, despite his Jewish heritage.
Anti-Semitism is still quite alive on the left, with figures like Linda Sarsour, Louis Farrakhan, and Jeremy Corbyn in the United Kingdom.
A newer claim from
the professoriate says because Churchill ran on nationalizing programs in 1945
when Labour’s Clement Atlee beat him, the Nazis weren’t actually leftists. This
completely misunderstands wartime Britain. By 1945, Britain had been mobilized
for six years.
As author Bruce Caldwell states, “The
common sacrifices that the war necessitated bred a feeling that all should
share more equally in the reconstruction to come. Universal medical provision
was itself virtually a fact of life during the first years of the war,
certainly for anyone injured by aerial bombing or whose work was tied to the
war effort—and whose work was not in way or another?”
This sentiment spurred Downing Street to
undertake a report on the post-war Britain’s welfare state. The so-called
Beveridge Report included proposals for family allowance, comprehensive social
insurance, universal health care, and requirement for full employment. It
debuted in 1942 and sold 500,000 copies! Even Churchill wasn’t going to stem
that tide. In fact, no one disturbed the consensus until Thatcher burst on the
scene in the mid-1970s.
People
who see themselves morally superior based in part on racial attitudes don’t
like examining the odious racial history of their intellectual forebears. But
the left’s umbrage doesn’t mean they’re right, and neither does their ability
to pile on dissenters through cultural and media hegemony. In fact, it might
mean the opposite.
In
1981, 364 preeminent British economists wrote in disgust at
Thatcher’s economic proposals. It read in part, “There is no basis in economic
theory or supporting evidence for the Government’s beliefs . . . Present
politics will deepen the depression, erode the industrial base of our economy and
threaten its social and political stability.”
In the long run, to paraphrase the
famous economist John Maynard Keynes, all these academics died, and no one
remembers them.
The more vehemently the left, particularly academics, argue their dissociation
with the Nazis, the more it becomes clear they protest “too much.”
Indeed, the failure here is as much one of academic prejudice as any
willful wish to avoid truth.
Anyone interested in this question
shouldn’t take my word. But neither should he or she listen uncritically
to leftist historians with a vested interest in their
views. Interested readers should draw their own conclusions from current
scholars and those of the time not so burdened by the place Nazis occupy in the
American psyche. If you are on the right, you may realize you’ve been carrying
an excruciating intellectual cross that isn’t yours.
Paul H. Jossey is a campaign finance attorney and
adjunct fellow at the Center for Competitive Politics.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA
Tea Party Leader
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