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		 It is a sign of the 
		speed at which events are moving that Hurst and Blackett’s unexpurgated 
		edition of Mein Kampf, published only a year ago, is edited from a 
		pro-Hitler angle. The obvious intention of the translator’s preface and 
		notes is to tone down the book’s ferocity and present Hitler in as 
		kindly a light as possible. For at that date Hitler was still 
		respectable. He had crushed the German labour movement, and for that the 
		property-owning classes were willing to forgive him almost anything. 
		Both Left and Right concurred in the very shallow notion that National 
		Socialism was merely a version of Conservatism. Then suddenly it turned 
		out that Hitler was not respectable after all. As one result of this, 
		Hurst and Blackett’s rendition was reissued in a new jacket explaining 
		that all profits would be devoted to the Red Cross. 
		 Nevertheless, simply 
		on the internal evidence of Mein Kampf, it is difficult to believe that 
		any real change has taken place in Hitler’s aims and opinions. When one 
		compares his utterances of a year or so go with those made fifteen years 
		earlier, a thing that strikes one is the rigidity of his mind, the way 
		in which his world-view doesn’t develop. It is the fixed vision of a 
		monomaniac and not likely to be much affected by the temporary 
		manoeuvres of power politics. Probably, in Hitler’s own mind, the 
		Russo-German Pact represents no more than an alteration of time-table. 
		The plan laid down in Mein Kampf was to smash Russia first, with the 
		implied intention of smashing England afterwards. Now, as it has turned 
		out, England has got to be dealt with first, because Russia was the more 
		easily bribed of the two. But Russia’s turn will come when England is 
		out of the picture-that, no doubt, is how Hitler sees it.  
		
  
		Whether it will turn out that way is of course 
		a different question. Suppose that Hitler’s programme could be put into 
		effect. What he envisages, a hundred years hence, is a continuous state 
		of 250 million germans with plenty of “living room” (i.e. stretching to 
		Afghanistan or thereabouts), a horrible brainless empire in which, 
		essentially, nothing ever happens except the training of young men for 
		war and the endless breeding of fresh cannon-fodder. How was it that he 
		was able to put this monstrous vision cross? 
		
  
		It is easy to say that at one stage of his 
		career he was financed by the heavy industrialists, who saw in him the 
		man who would smash the Socialists and Communists. They would not have 
		backed him, however, if he had not talked a great movement into 
		existence already. Again, the situation in Germany, with its seven 
		million unemployed, was obviously favourable for demagogues. But Hitler 
		could not have succeeded against his many rivals if it had not been for 
		the attraction of his own personality, which one can feel even in the 
		clumsy writing of Mein Kampf, and which is no doubt overwhelming when 
		one hears his speeches. The fact is that there is something deeply 
		appealing about him. One feels it again when one sees his 
		photographs and I recommend especially the photograph at the beginning 
		of Hurst and Blackett’s edition, which shows Hitler in his early 
		Brownshirt days.
  
		It is a pathetic, dog-like face, the face of a 
		man suffering under intolerable wrongs. In a rather more manly way it 
		reproduces the expression of innumerable pictures of Christ crucified, 
		and there is little doubt that that is how Hitler sees himself. The 
		initial, personal cause of his grievance against the universe can only 
		be guessed at; but at any rate the grievance is here. He is the martyr, 
		the victim, Prometheus chained to the rock, the self-sacrificing hero 
		who fights single-handed against impossible odds. If he were killing a 
		mouse he would know how to make it seem like a dragon. One feels, as 
		with Napoleon, that he is fighting against destiny, that he can’t win, 
		and yet that he somehow deserves to. The attraction of such a pose is of 
		course enormous; half the films that one sees turn upon some such theme. 
		 Also he has grasped 
		the falsity of the hedonistic attitude to life. Nearly all western 
		thought since the last war, certainly all “progressive” thought, has 
		assumed tacitly that human beings desire nothing beyond ease, security 
		and avoidance of pain. In such a view of life there is no room, for 
		instance, for patriotism and the military virtues. The Socialist who 
		finds his children playing with soldiers is usually upset, but he is 
		never able to think of a substitute for the tin soldiers; tin pacifists 
		somehow won’t do. Hitler, because in his own joyless mind he feels it 
		with exceptional strength, knows that human beings don’t only want 
		comfort, safety, short working-hours, hygiene, birth-control and, in 
		general, common sense; they also, at least intermittently, want struggle 
		and self-sacrifice, not to mention drums, flags and loyalty-parades. 
		However they may be as economic theories, Fascism and Nazism are 
		psychologically far sounder than any hedonistic conception of life. The 
		same is probably true of Stalin’s militarised version of Socialism. All 
		three of the great dictators have enhanced their power by imposing 
		intolerable burdens on their peoples. 
		 Whereas Socialism, and 
		even capitalism in a more grudging way, have said to people “I offer you 
		a good time,’’ Hitler has said to them “I offer you struggle, danger and 
		death,” and as a result a whole nation flings itself at his feet. 
		Perhaps later on they will get sick of it and change their minds, as at 
		the end of the last war. After a few years of slaughter and starvation 
		“Greatest happiness of the greatest number” is a good slogan, but at 
		this moment “Better an end with horror than a horror without end” is a 
		winner. Now that we are fighting against the man who coined it, we ought 
		not to underrate its emotional appeal. 
		 George Orwell (March, 
		1940)
  Received by email April 
		2013. 
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