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Eagle Maung Maung - Hitler's Death Note

Eagle Maung Maung - Hitler's Death Note

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Introduction by Professor H. R. Trevor Roper

More solid documents have recently been discovered about Adolf Hitler. These documents are Hitler's political will, which is of great historical interest. It is a general reflection of his thoughts on the war that was already lost to him. It is a final window into the dark hall. In other words, it is a very dangerous, shocking, disgusting, and indeed terrifying and powerful feeling that arose in Hitler's mind.

Hitler's spirit was powerful. We cannot deny this. His spirit was cruel. It was cruel. It was inhuman. It was as harmless as it was terrifying. It was filled with the poison of the bitter seeds of the past. However, if we look back at the events of that past, which were so obvious and so disgusting, we can see that Hitler's spirit was also incredibly powerful. It was as clear as it was distorted. It created the future as it made the past ugly. To deny (as some people say) the greatness of Hitler's spirit, and to say that he was merely a natural phenomenon in the wake of social change, seems to me to be a very absurd statement. If we cannot accept that Hitler regarded himself as a unique and great figure in the course of history, that he regarded himself as the only one to be compared to in human history, and that he believed himself to be born to change the course of world history in his lifetime, then we must admit that he did what no one else in world history had ever done. He planned a great revolution from beginning to end. He carried it out. He built a great world empire from nothing. Other great revolutions have gradually devoured the individuals who emerged from the revolution. Only Hitler was never devoured, but he devoured them again. He was also mad* for his revolution. Mirabeau**

(* Roussea - Rousseau. Born in 1712, died in 1778.

The great French political philosopher. ** Mirabeau - Mirabeau. Born in 1749 and died in 1794. He was a famous eloquent and eloquent leader of the French Revolution.) Yes. He could also be called Robespierre. It would not be wrong to call him Napoleon. He was Marx for his revolution. He was Lenin. He was Trotsky. He was Stalin. In morals and in attitude, he was far inferior to the above-mentioned men, but he did what they did not do. He controlled and organized his revolution step by step. By looking at this alone, we can clearly understand the great power of his spirit, which he exercised in a strange way.

He may be a uniquely hateful figure in the course of history, but he is at least a uniquely important figure. We cannot ignore him, we cannot ignore him.

Three times in the history of the Nazi revolution, Hitler's "round table speeches" have provided us with insight into his inner thoughts, and these now solid documents are the third. They have been given us, one after the other, at the most crucial moments of history. The first time was in 1932-33, when the Nazis staged a coup d'état in Germany. During those days, Hitler was excited by the prospect of seizing power and exercising it. Once he had seized it, he was determined never to relinquish it. At that time, he discussed the aims and methods of his rule with his political associates, the "insiders."

(Robespierre - French political leader who was born in 1758 and died in 1794. He was the president of the Committee of Public Safety during the French Revolution and ordered the execution of many people by beheading.)

He spoke clearly. At that time, the traditional conservatives in Germany and elsewhere were willing to accept Hitler as their own. They considered him a dictator who had emerged from history, but a dictator of the right-wing. Although Hitler spoke only to his closest associates, his frank statements have now proven the conservatives wrong. In these statements, he described in shocking detail the vast revolution that he intended to unleash on the world, unleashing brutal and destructive acts of terror to spread his power. As far as we know, these statements were not recorded in official records, but were preserved as unofficial records. One of Hitler's close associates, the conservative Hermann Rothschild*, was horrified to hear of Hitler's radical and radical plans. However, after he broke away from the "destructive revolution"**, he published his notes in a book in 1939 under the title Hitler's Table Talks. No one now doubts the authenticity of the information in this book, but at the time, unfortunately, no one believed it. Many people even said that such a plan was absurd. They considered it to be the author's fabrications.

(* Hermann Rausching - Hermann Rausching. November 1938)

Hitler was captured by the Germans from the province of Danzig.

An aspiring politician and senator.

** Revolution of Destruction.)

As far as I have heard, even Neville Chamberlain, who was considered to be a very good friend of Hitler, said that he did not believe one bit of Ross Channing's account. In other words, it was just as many people did not believe the plans in My Attempts, which Hitler himself had clearly and unequivocally announced.

About eight years after the coup, Hitler's inner self resurfaced for the second time.

By 1941, Hitler had carried out almost all the details of the plan he had told Roschening. At that time (when he told Roschening) he had just succeeded in a coup in Germany, and now he was on the verge of an even greater victory. He was on the verge of a world empire. Because by 1941 all resistance to Hitler in Europe had been crushed.

The verdict of 1918** has been reversed. From the North Cape to the Isle of Wight, from Danzig to the Pyrenees, Hitler's armies are winning victories everywhere. At last all the armed forces of Europe are united under the leadership of the victorious revolutionary Germans. These forces are now advancing against a great and isolated country, which Hitler himself respected.

(* Chamberlain - served as British Prime Minister from 1947 to 1940.

He was deeply infamous for his concessions to Hitler in the Munich Agreement (September 1930).

** Germany, which was defeated in 1918 after World War I, followed

(It means the Treaty of Versailles, which was signed to enforce it.)

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