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Adolf Hitler

  • Darimahas quoted2 years ago
    The plough is then the sword; and the tears of war will produce the daily bread for the generations to come.

    Red: Violence related

  • Darimahas quoted2 years ago
    First, I became a nationalist.
    Second, I learned to understand and grasp the true meaning of history.
  • Darimahas quoted2 years ago
    This was 'TheTime of Germany's Deepest Humiliation', Which is referred to again and again by Hitler.
  • Darimahas quoted2 years ago
    I was determined to become 'something'—but certainly not a civil servant.

    I love how he made up his mind when he was just a teenage boy. I wish I had his certainty.

  • Darimahas quoted2 years ago
    Obstacles are placed across our path in life, not to be boggled at but to be surmounted.

    yellow: motivational quotes

  • Darimahas quoted2 years ago
    These two perils were Marxism and Judaism.
  • Darimahas quoted2 years ago
    His own fight for existence kills his sensibility for the misery of those who have been left behind.
  • Darimahas quoted2 years ago
    I can fight only for something that I love. I can love only what I respect. And in order to respect a thing I must at least have some knowledge of it.
  • Krom Anthony Reinhoffhas quoted2 months ago
    But all that I heard had the effect of arousing the strongest antagonism in me. Everything was disparaged - the nation, because it was held to be an invention of the ‘capitalist’ class (how often I had to listen to that phrase!); the Fatherland, because it was held to be an instrument in the hands of the bourgeoisie for the exploitation of’ the working masses; the authority of the law, because that was a means of holding down the proletariat; religion, as a means of doping the people, so as to exploit them afterwards; morality, as a badge of stupid and sheepish docility. There was nothing that they did not drag in the mud.
    At first I remained silent; but that could not last very long. Then I began to take part in the discussion and to reply to their statements. I had to recognize, however, that this was bound to be entirely fruitless, as long as I did not have at least a certain amount of definite information about the questions that were discussed.
  • Antonio Brownhas quoted12 days ago
    For the first time, and as yet only in quite a vague way, the question began to present itself: Is there a difference - and if there be, what is it -between the Germans who fought that war and the other Germans? Why did not Austria also take part in it? Why did not my father and all the others fight in that struggle? Are we not the same as the other Germans? Do we not all belong together
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