Amaryan
15-07-2006, 19:32
In the Bible we find the text, 'That which is neither hot nor cold will I spew out of my mouth.' This utterance of the great Nazarene has kept its profound validity until the present day. He who would pursue the golden mean must surrender the hope of achieving the great and the greatest aims. Until the present day the half-hearted and the lukewarm have remained the curse of Amaryan...
To the half-heartedness and weakness of the parties in Parliament was added the half-heartedness of Governments... Everything stood under the sign of half-heartedness and Luke warmness, even the fight for existence in the Third World War and still more the conclusion of peace. And now the continuation of the half-hearted policy of those days holds the field. The people, inwardly united in the hard struggle-in the trenches there were neither parties nor Confessions-has been torn asunder through the economics of profiteers and knaves. Appeasement and the settlement of differences would certainly soon be there if only one were to hang the whole crew. But profiteers and knaves are, of course, 'Citizens of the State,' and what is more important still; they are adherents of the religion, which is hallowed by the Talmud.
Even today we are the least loved people on earth. A world of foes is ranged against us and the Amaryan must still today make up his mind whether he intends to be a free solder or a white slave. The only possible conditions under which the United States of Amaryan can develop at all must therefore be: the unification of all Amaryans in the World, education towards a national consciousness, and readiness to place the whole national strength without exception in the service of the nation.
No economic policy is possible without a sword, no industrialization without power. Today we have no longer any sword grasped in our fist-how can we have a successful economic policy?
Three years ago I declared in this same room that the collapse of the Amaryan national consciousness must carry with it into the abyss the economic life of Amaryan as well. For liberation something more is necessary than an economic life policy, something more than industry: If a people is to become free it needs pride and willpower, defiance, greed, greed, and once again greed...
The spirit comes not down from above, that spirit which is to purify Amaryan, which with its iron besom is to purify the great sty of democracy. To do that is the task of our Movement. The Movement must not rust away in Parliament, it must not spend itself in superfluous battles of words, but the banner with the Star and Stripes will be hoisted over the whole of Amaryan on the day which shall mark the liberation of our whole people.
Heil the new Aryan Nation
Adolf Busch, Chancellor
To the half-heartedness and weakness of the parties in Parliament was added the half-heartedness of Governments... Everything stood under the sign of half-heartedness and Luke warmness, even the fight for existence in the Third World War and still more the conclusion of peace. And now the continuation of the half-hearted policy of those days holds the field. The people, inwardly united in the hard struggle-in the trenches there were neither parties nor Confessions-has been torn asunder through the economics of profiteers and knaves. Appeasement and the settlement of differences would certainly soon be there if only one were to hang the whole crew. But profiteers and knaves are, of course, 'Citizens of the State,' and what is more important still; they are adherents of the religion, which is hallowed by the Talmud.
Even today we are the least loved people on earth. A world of foes is ranged against us and the Amaryan must still today make up his mind whether he intends to be a free solder or a white slave. The only possible conditions under which the United States of Amaryan can develop at all must therefore be: the unification of all Amaryans in the World, education towards a national consciousness, and readiness to place the whole national strength without exception in the service of the nation.
No economic policy is possible without a sword, no industrialization without power. Today we have no longer any sword grasped in our fist-how can we have a successful economic policy?
Three years ago I declared in this same room that the collapse of the Amaryan national consciousness must carry with it into the abyss the economic life of Amaryan as well. For liberation something more is necessary than an economic life policy, something more than industry: If a people is to become free it needs pride and willpower, defiance, greed, greed, and once again greed...
The spirit comes not down from above, that spirit which is to purify Amaryan, which with its iron besom is to purify the great sty of democracy. To do that is the task of our Movement. The Movement must not rust away in Parliament, it must not spend itself in superfluous battles of words, but the banner with the Star and Stripes will be hoisted over the whole of Amaryan on the day which shall mark the liberation of our whole people.
Heil the new Aryan Nation
Adolf Busch, Chancellor