• @yesman
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    141 month ago

    I tried to read MK once, it was impenetrable. If you’re not intimately familiar with continental politics from the F/P war through Wiemar, most of it will sail noiselessly above your head.

    I read in a history once that the joke in Nazi Germany was that Mine Kamph was like the Bible; everyone owned a copy, but nobody read it.

    • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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      1 month ago

      Yes, it was known to be impenetrable in the German Reich, but Germans thought it looked nice on their shelves and would occasionally read a two-sentence passage from it. Giggling optional.

      Hitler wrote it by pacing up and down in his prison cell ranting while Goebbels Rudolph Heß took notes (or recorded it, but I don’t remember if he had a tape recorder, and didn’t have a steganographer AFAIK. So yeah it smacks of radicalized old man ramblings much like Trump’s rally speeches.

      • @[email protected]
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        21 month ago

        This is incorrect. Hitler didn’t even meet Goebbels before 1925, people assumed he dictated to Rudolf Heß. It could also be that he wrote it himself on a typewriter.

        • Uriel238 [all pronouns]
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          11 month ago

          Both men were incarcerated in Landsberg Prison, where Hitler soon began work on his memoir, Mein Kampf (“My Struggle”), which he dictated to fellow prisoners Hess and Emil Maurice. --Wikipedia on Rudolph Heß

          You got it right. My reference was a past read of The Devil’s Disciples: Hitler’s Inner Circle by Anthony Read, and I forgot which specific dude was at the typewriter.

    • @shalafi
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      21 month ago

      I tried decades ago. It was utterly senseless and the writing so poor I wouldn’t credit a thing the author had to say.