Deutschland Konigreich
17-12-2005, 09:08
http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/4/49/Gendarmenmarkt_in_Berlin-wiki-2.jpg
"Long Awaited, your newly elected Chancellor of Germany!" echoed the speakers in Berlin. Gendarmenmarkt Square was crowded with Germans, who were eager to attend the first speech by the Chancellor.
Drapes of German colors were hung on the towers of the great cathedrals. The Schauspielhaus Conert Hall is hosting an afternoon concert filled German folk music.
"Wilhelm Heiden!" as cries from his supporters oversshoot the speakers.
Wilhelm Heiden was a young ambitous man in his 30's. His sucess in politics, and his ideas drove the people mad, madly in love with him. Germany has slowed down in pace drastically in terms of the economy, and the lifestyle. The Europe around them has created some sort of a unified vacuum.
After a motion of no confidence was formally put through parliament by the favored The German National People's Party, with Wilhelm Heidan as the candidate, late-Chancellor Kurt von Schleicher resigns. Although he resigns, he is still favored among the many in his attempts to incorporate Christianity in education. However, the government was weak, and it's attempts to flourish with the rest of Europe failed. It is time for change.
"Fellow-citizens of the The Holy Republic of Germany:
In compliance with a custom as old as the government itself, I appear before you to address you briefly, and to take, in your presence, the oath prescribed by the Constitution of Germany, to be taken by the Chancellor "before he enters on the execution of this office.
This is the period of four years which I asked the German people to grant me for the purpose of putting my work to the test and submitting it to their judgement. Hence at the present moment nothing could be more opportune than for me to render you an account of all the successes that have been achieved and the progress that has been made during these four years, for the welfare of the German people. But within the limits of the short statement I have to make it would be entirely impossible to enumerate all the remarkable results that have been reached during a time which may be looked upon as probably the most astounding epoch in the life of our people.
The elements of confusion and dissolution which are making themselves felt in German life, in the concept of life itself and the will to national self-preservation, cannot be eradicated by a mere change of government. More than enough of those changes have already taken place without bringing about any essential betterment of the distress that exists in Germany. All these Cabinet reconstructions brought some positive advantage only to the actors who took part in the play; but the results were almost always quite negative as far as the interests of the people were concerned. As time has gone on the thought and practical life of our people have been led astray into ways that are unnatural to them and injurious. One of the causes which brought about this condition of affairs must be attributed to the fact that the structure of our State and our methods of government were foreign to our own national character, our historical development and our national needs.
The parliamentary-democratic system is inseparable from the other symptoms of the time. A critical situation cannot be remedied by collaborating with the causes of it but by a radical extermination of these causes. Hence under such conditions the political struggle must necessarily take the form of a revolution.
But we know that all our efforts would have been in vain if we did not have the loyal cooperation of hundreds of thousands of political leaders, innumerable officials and countless soldiers and officers, who did their work under the inspiration of the ideal of our national resurgence. And above all we must acknowlege that our success could not have been attained if we were not backed up by the united front of the whole people.
On this historic occasion I must once again thank all those millions of unknown Germans, from every class and caste, profession and trade and from all the farmsteads, who have given their hearts, their lives and their sacrifices, for the new Germany. And all of us, gentlemen and members of the parliament, hereby join together in tendering our thanks to the women of Germany, to the millions of those German mothers who have given their children to the Republic. During these four years every mother who has presented a child to the nation has contributed by her pain and her joy to the happiness of the whole people. When I think of that healthy youth which belongs to our nation, then my faith in the future becomes a joyful certainty. And it is with a profund [sic] feeling that I realise the significance of the simple word which Ulrich von Huten wrote when he picked up his pen for the last time — Deutschland."
As a cry of joy downed the word, Deutschland, the Chancellor walked down from the podium as thousands waved and cheered him off, as he and several armed guards walked into the service cars. It was a beginning of a new era, and Germany will rise again.
"Long Awaited, your newly elected Chancellor of Germany!" echoed the speakers in Berlin. Gendarmenmarkt Square was crowded with Germans, who were eager to attend the first speech by the Chancellor.
Drapes of German colors were hung on the towers of the great cathedrals. The Schauspielhaus Conert Hall is hosting an afternoon concert filled German folk music.
"Wilhelm Heiden!" as cries from his supporters oversshoot the speakers.
Wilhelm Heiden was a young ambitous man in his 30's. His sucess in politics, and his ideas drove the people mad, madly in love with him. Germany has slowed down in pace drastically in terms of the economy, and the lifestyle. The Europe around them has created some sort of a unified vacuum.
After a motion of no confidence was formally put through parliament by the favored The German National People's Party, with Wilhelm Heidan as the candidate, late-Chancellor Kurt von Schleicher resigns. Although he resigns, he is still favored among the many in his attempts to incorporate Christianity in education. However, the government was weak, and it's attempts to flourish with the rest of Europe failed. It is time for change.
"Fellow-citizens of the The Holy Republic of Germany:
In compliance with a custom as old as the government itself, I appear before you to address you briefly, and to take, in your presence, the oath prescribed by the Constitution of Germany, to be taken by the Chancellor "before he enters on the execution of this office.
This is the period of four years which I asked the German people to grant me for the purpose of putting my work to the test and submitting it to their judgement. Hence at the present moment nothing could be more opportune than for me to render you an account of all the successes that have been achieved and the progress that has been made during these four years, for the welfare of the German people. But within the limits of the short statement I have to make it would be entirely impossible to enumerate all the remarkable results that have been reached during a time which may be looked upon as probably the most astounding epoch in the life of our people.
The elements of confusion and dissolution which are making themselves felt in German life, in the concept of life itself and the will to national self-preservation, cannot be eradicated by a mere change of government. More than enough of those changes have already taken place without bringing about any essential betterment of the distress that exists in Germany. All these Cabinet reconstructions brought some positive advantage only to the actors who took part in the play; but the results were almost always quite negative as far as the interests of the people were concerned. As time has gone on the thought and practical life of our people have been led astray into ways that are unnatural to them and injurious. One of the causes which brought about this condition of affairs must be attributed to the fact that the structure of our State and our methods of government were foreign to our own national character, our historical development and our national needs.
The parliamentary-democratic system is inseparable from the other symptoms of the time. A critical situation cannot be remedied by collaborating with the causes of it but by a radical extermination of these causes. Hence under such conditions the political struggle must necessarily take the form of a revolution.
But we know that all our efforts would have been in vain if we did not have the loyal cooperation of hundreds of thousands of political leaders, innumerable officials and countless soldiers and officers, who did their work under the inspiration of the ideal of our national resurgence. And above all we must acknowlege that our success could not have been attained if we were not backed up by the united front of the whole people.
On this historic occasion I must once again thank all those millions of unknown Germans, from every class and caste, profession and trade and from all the farmsteads, who have given their hearts, their lives and their sacrifices, for the new Germany. And all of us, gentlemen and members of the parliament, hereby join together in tendering our thanks to the women of Germany, to the millions of those German mothers who have given their children to the Republic. During these four years every mother who has presented a child to the nation has contributed by her pain and her joy to the happiness of the whole people. When I think of that healthy youth which belongs to our nation, then my faith in the future becomes a joyful certainty. And it is with a profund [sic] feeling that I realise the significance of the simple word which Ulrich von Huten wrote when he picked up his pen for the last time — Deutschland."
As a cry of joy downed the word, Deutschland, the Chancellor walked down from the podium as thousands waved and cheered him off, as he and several armed guards walked into the service cars. It was a beginning of a new era, and Germany will rise again.