Traditional Anglicanism in America
Sarah Hey
A Chapter From a Fifth Grade Biology Textbook for German Girls, 1942



Calvin College's website has an extensive web compendium called the German Propaganda Archive.

It is a valuable teaching tool, not only of what leads to the cultural downfall of a country, but also of the power and cold utilitarianism that rhetoric can be used for.

Here is an excerpt, but do go browse through that entire chapter, and then take a look at the rest of the archives.

The instinctual state of the ants corresponds to the leadership state among mankind; however, the principles of a perfect insect state give people cause to think. They have preserved bees and ants in the struggle for survival and thereby proved their validity. We earlier noted the following truths about ants:

The work of the individual has only one purpose: to serve the whole group.
Major accomplishments are possible only by the division of labor.
Each bee risks its life without hesitation for the whole.
Individuals who are not useful or are harmful to the whole are eliminated.
The species is maintained by producing a large number of offspring.
It is not difficult for us to see the application of these principles to mankind: We also can accomplish great things only by a division of labor. Our whole economy demonstrates this principle. The ethnic state must demand of each individual citizen that he does everything for the good of the whole, each in his place and with his abilities (Principle 1).

He who loves his people proves it only by the sacrifices he is prepared to make for it. (Mein Kampf, p. 474).

If a person acts against the general interest, he is an enemy of the people and will be punished by the law (Principle 4). A look at our history proves that we as a people must defend our territory to preserve our existence.

The world does not exist for cowardly nations. (Mein Kampf, p. 105)

Military service is the highest form of education for the Fatherland (Principle 3).

The task of the army in the ethnic state is not to train the individual in marching, but to serve as the highest school for education in service of the Fatherland. (Mein Kampf, p. 459).





Posted March 25, 2008 at 9:00 am
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