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Topic: Germany is ready for the republication of Mein Kampf - page 2. (Read 2037 times)

sr. member
Activity: 462
Merit: 251
I'm not against it, there should be no censorship, but I don't think it will find a lot of readers apart from maybe neonazi kids and university students.

i can remember we were reading some parts of mein kampf in history classes, im kinda looking forward to read everything.

it is a good way to show people what a madman hitler was and that his believes are just crazy.

That's it. The only way for a person to form an opinion on something is to get to know it first.
legendary
Activity: 2464
Merit: 1145
i can remember we were reading some parts of mein kampf in history classes, im kinda looking forward to read everything.

it is a good way to show people what a madman hitler was and that his believes are just crazy.
legendary
Activity: 1890
Merit: 1086
Ian Knowles - CIYAM Lead Developer
If it is anywhere near as boring as Ayn Rand's stuff then I don't think I'd bother even trying to wade through it.

Cheesy
donator
Activity: 668
Merit: 500
The book that was banned for nearly a century gets a release



Some of the biggest-selling books of all time are also the most unread. Who actually finished A Brief of History of Time?
Yup. And?
How many have read the Bible in its entirety?
You've gotta be kidding me.  My life has value, but thanks anyway.
Or, for that matter, the Koran?
See above.
Mein Kampf fits easily into this category of blockbusting tomes whose spines have never been cracked. Dictated by Adolf Hitler to Rudolf Hess while the two men were imprisoned in Landsberg, in the wake of the Nazis’ failed coup in Munich in November 1923, Mein Kampf – which translates as “My Struggle” – would, over the next two decades, be bought or given to over 12 million Germans.

Some excerpts

 “The Judaization of our spiritual life and the mammonization of our mating impulse sooner or later befouls our entire new generation,” Hitler writes in his chapter on the causes of the German defeat in 1918, “for instead of vigorous children of natural feeling, only the miserable specimens of financial expedience come forth.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/11441691/Germany-is-ready-for-the-republication-of-Mein-Kampf.html
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/world-war-two/9224512/Bavaria-to-release-Adolf-Hitlers-Mein-Kampf.html
If they're banning it, it's because it says something they don't like.

It really is that simple.

Welcome to the world of adults.
legendary
Activity: 2884
Merit: 1115
Leading Crypto Sports Betting & Casino Platform
The book that was banned for nearly a century gets a release



Some of the biggest-selling books of all time are also the most unread. Who actually finished A Brief of History of Time? How many have read the Bible in its entirety? Or, for that matter, the Koran?

Mein Kampf fits easily into this category of blockbusting tomes whose spines have never been cracked. Dictated by Adolf Hitler to Rudolf Hess while the two men were imprisoned in Landsberg, in the wake of the Nazis’ failed coup in Munich in November 1923, Mein Kampf – which translates as “My Struggle” – would, over the next two decades, be bought or given to over 12 million Germans.

Some excerpts

 “The Judaization of our spiritual life and the mammonization of our mating impulse sooner or later befouls our entire new generation,” Hitler writes in his chapter on the causes of the German defeat in 1918, “for instead of vigorous children of natural feeling, only the miserable specimens of financial expedience come forth.”

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/germany/11441691/Germany-is-ready-for-the-republication-of-Mein-Kampf.html
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/history/world-war-two/9224512/Bavaria-to-release-Adolf-Hitlers-Mein-Kampf.html
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